"Daedalus" | |||
---|---|---|---|
Star Trek: Enterprise episode | |||
Episode no. | Episode 86 | ||
Directed by | David Straiton | ||
Written by | Ken LaZebnik Michael Bryant |
||
Production code | 410 | ||
Original air date | January 14, 2005 | ||
Guest stars | |||
Episode chronology | |||
|
|||
List of Star Trek: Enterprise episodes |
"Daedalus" is the name of the 86th episode from the television series Star Trek: Enterprise. "Daedalus" first aired on January 14, 2005, on the American television network UPN. The episode takes its title from the Greek mythological figure Daedalus who was the first person who could fly, by constructing artificial wings.
This episode should not be confused with the identically titled Star Trek: Enterprise novel, Daedalus, by Dave Stern, which was published in 2003 and followed by a sequel, Daedalus' Children, in 2004.
The plot involves the inventor of the transporter.
The inventor of the transporter, Emory Erickson, comes aboard Enterprise for a risky experiment.
The crew welcomes aboard Emory Erickson, the inventor of the transporter device, set to conduct a series of experiments to test a radical upgrade to the technology. However, once Enterprise reaches the test site, Archer realizes that his old family friend has lied and is using the ship to search for his son, lost years before in a transporter mishap.
Meanwhile, T'Pol begins to reexamine her Vulcan heritage in the wake of her mother's death.
Emory discusses Sub Quantum Teleportation around a table with Captain Archer. Trip assists Emory with the Teleporter upgrade, but after being dismissed by Emory after the successful transporter test, which sent a probe 40,000 km to collect data, the farthest anything has been teleported up to this point, Trip confides in Archer that many of Emory's upgrades and modifications to the ships power systems were not part of his Transporter test. A photonic ghost kills a crewman, then reappears. Archer, T'Pol and security engage and T'Pol gets burned by the ghost, but the scans indicate that it is Emory's son. Archer agrees to help Emory lock on to his son and reassemble his signal which has been trapped in an empty bubble of quantum space, where the first transporter tests were conducted. His son is recovered, but dies soon after.
|
|
|