Tuesday, March 11 2025 04:37 AEST

Matt

The Trek Files Are Coming

He was the first guest on what was to be a podcasting adventure. He’s now joined me five times including today to discuss all sorts of things, so I thought

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Looking Back At 2017

Each year you make resolutions to yourself of things you want to accomplish before another orbit of the sun lands you back in the same spatial coordinates, but you never

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Eternal Night Retrospective

2018 marks fifteen years since this website began and it’s time to expand on the content I’m supplying. You’re going to start seeing a lot of fresh content, as well

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Axanar Redux Is Back

Back in February, a fan of Axanar decided to re-edit the Prelude mockumentary to omit Alec Peters and insert the original actor Steve Ihnat. It was hailed as a very

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A Vulcan Hello To Discovery

Official Star Trek has spent 12 years, 4 months and 11 days in hibernation… but it’s time to boldly go once more into the final frontier with a modern take

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Countering The Narrative

It’s been almost twelve months since Axamonitor’s Carlos Pedraza last spoke solely on the topic of that fan production on The Trekzone Spotlight. Of course, we’re talking about the infamous

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A Perth Getaway

When your financial institution gives you free return domestic airfares to anywhere in Australia and the year is almost up… what do you do? Well, I go looking for places

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Four Years of Podcasting

Started in 2003 as a high school IT project, TREKZONE.org was the beginning of an adventure I didn’t know I wanted to have. But ten years later, with a resurgent

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The Latest Posts

The Slowest Rotating ‘Cosmic Lighthouse’ Yet Discovered

Distant neutron stars typically spin a full 360 degrees within seconds. However, a new type of ‘radio transient object’ – so called as they are detected in radio waves – has emerged that rotate much more slowly. In the time it takes this cosmic lighthouse to rotate you could watch Interstellar twice before it completes a full spin.

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Mapping Ripples In A Cosmic Ocean

An international study led by Australian astronomers has created the most detailed maps of gravitational waves across the universe to date in three new research papers. The study also produced the largest ever galactic-scale gravitational wave detector and found further evidence of a “background” of these invisible yet incredibly fast ripples in space that can help unlock some major mysteries of the universe.

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How Saturn’s Rings Might Be Keeping A Youthful Appearance

Even though Saturn’s rings appear clean and young, they may be as old as the planet itself according to international researchers. It was previously thought that impacts with small rocky debris travelling through space – called micrometeoroids – would dirty and darken the rings over time, but in 2004 the Cassini spacecraft revealed the rings to be clean and bright suggesting that they are not very old.

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