Star Trek: Voyager is an American science fiction television series that debuted on UPN on January 16, 1995, and ran for seven seasons until May 23, 2001. The show was the fourth live-action series in the Star Trek franchise.This is a list of actors who have appeared on Star Trek: Voyager
- Voyager Events Timelineoutlander Lists   & Timelines 2019
- Voyager Events Timelineoutlander Lists   & Timelines Of Events
The Outlander timeline begins when a young woman, Claire Randall, accidentally steps into a stone circle in the Highlands and is transported 200 years back in time. As the series continues, viewers discover that Claire will meet a few others who have discovered the secrets of the stones, and she herself will return to her own time, and back again, eventually having her daughter follow. 1752: Jamie continues to live hidden in the cave near Lallybroch. He hunts at night to try and provide food for his family but during the day he remains in the cave with only books and his thoughts to keep him occupied.
Cast[edit]
Main cast[edit]
- Kate Mulgrew as Kathryn Janeway, commanding officer of the USS Voyager and later a flag officer at Starfleet Command.
- Robert Beltran as Chakotay, Janeway's first officer and former member of the Maquis.
- Roxann Dawson as B'Elanna Torres, chief engineer and former member of the Maquis.
- Robert Duncan McNeill as Tom Paris, conn officer.
- Jennifer Lien as Kes, nurse and medical apprentice until her departure from Voyager in 2374.
- Ethan Phillips as Neelix, chef, morale officer, and later FederationAmbassador to the Delta Quadrant.
- Robert Picardo as The Doctor, chief medical officer.
- Tim Russ as Tuvok, chief security/tactical officer.
- Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine, stellar cartography and former Borg drone liberated from the Collective.
- Garrett Wang as Harry Kim, operational officer.
Recurring cast[edit]
- Simon Billig as Hogan, engineering officer and former member of the Maquis until his death in 2373.
- Josh Clark as Joe Carey, engineering officer until his death in 2378.
- Anthony De Longis as Jal Culluh, First Maje of the Kazon-Nistrim.
- John de Lancie as Q, a member of the Q-Continuum who frequently visits the USS Voyager.
- Christine Delgado as Susan Nicoletti, engineering officer.
- Brad Dourif as Lon Suder, engineering officer and former member of the Maquis until his death in 2373.
- Alexander Enberg as Vorik, engineering officer.
- Tarik Ergin as Ayala, security officer, conn officer, and former member of the Maquis.
- Martha Hackett as Seska, Cardassian operative and Kazon collaborator until her death in 2373.
- Richard Herd as Owen Paris, flag officer at Starfleet Command, officer of the Pathfinder Project, and father of Tom Paris.
- Nancy Hower as Samantha Wildman, science officer.
- Manu Intiraymi as Icheb, a former Borg drone liberated from the Collective.
- Marley S. McClean as Mezoti, a former Borg drone liberated from the Collective.
- Derek McGrath as Chell, operations officer and former member of the Maquis.
- Zoe McLellan as Tal Celes, operations officer.
- Scarlett Pomers as Naomi Wildman, daughter of Samantha Wildman.
- John Rhys-Davies as Leonardo da Vinci, a holographic recreation of Leonardo da Vinci.
- Raphael Sbarge as Michael Jonas, engineering officer and former member of the Maquis until his death in 2372.
- Dwight Schultz as Reginald Barclay, officer at Starfleet Communications and the Pathfinder Project.
- Marina Sirtis as Deanna Troi, ship's counselor on the USS Enterprise-E.
- John Tampoya as Kashimuro Nozawa, operations officer.
- Susanna Thompson as The Borg Queen, leader of the Borg Collective.
- Cody Wetherill as Rebi, a former Borg drone liberated from the Collective.
- Kurt Wetherill as Azan, a former Borg drone liberated from the Collective.
Appearances[edit]
- = Main cast (credited)
- = Recurring cast (4+)
- = Guest cast (1-3)
Actor | Character | Seasons | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
S1 | S2 | S3 | S4 | S5 | S6 | S7 | ||||||
Main Cast | ||||||||||||
Kate Mulgrew | Kathryn Janeway | Main | ||||||||||
Robert Beltran | Chakotay | Main | ||||||||||
Roxann Dawson | B'Elanna Torres | Main | ||||||||||
Robert Duncan McNeill | Tom Paris | Main | ||||||||||
Jennifer Lien | Kes | Main | Guest | |||||||||
Ethan Phillips | Neelix | Main | ||||||||||
Robert Picardo | The Doctor | Main | ||||||||||
Tim Russ | Tuvok | Main | ||||||||||
Garrett Wang | Harry Kim | Main | ||||||||||
Jeri Ryan | Seven of Nine | Main | ||||||||||
Recurring Cast | ||||||||||||
Josh Clark | Joe Carey | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||
Anthony De Longis | Jal Culluh | Guest | Recurring | Guest | ||||||||
Martha Hackett | Seska | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||
Derek McGrath | Chell | Guest | Guest | |||||||||
Simon Billig | Hogan | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||
John de Lancie | Q | Guest | Guest | |||||||||
Brad Dourif | Lon Suder | Recurring | ||||||||||
Richard Herd | Owen Paris | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||
Nancy Hower | Samantha Wildman | Recurring | ||||||||||
Scarlett Pomers | Naomi Wildman | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||
Raphael Sbarge | Michael Jonas | Recurring | ||||||||||
Dwight Schultz | Reginald Barclay | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||
Alexander Enberg | Vorik | Guest | Guest | |||||||||
John Rhys-Davies | Leonardo da Vinci | Guest | Recurring | |||||||||
Susanna Thompson | Borg Queen | Guest | ||||||||||
Manu Intiraymi | Icheb | Recurring | ||||||||||
Marley S. McClean | Mezoti | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||
Zoe McLellan | Tal Celes | Guest | ||||||||||
Marina Sirtis | Deanna Troi | Guest | ||||||||||
Cody Wetherill | Rebi | Recurring | Guest | |||||||||
Kurt Wetherill | Azan | Recurring | Guest |
See also[edit]
Voyager Events Timelineoutlander Lists   & Timelines 2019
Voyager Events Timelineoutlander Lists   & Timelines Of Events
April 6, 1929: Search for Planet X Begins
In 1902 astronomer Percival Lowell noted that the orbits of comets seemed to indicate that there was a planet beyond Neptune. Lowell had begun a search for the mysterious planet at his observatory in Arizona in 1905. He died in 1916 and willed most of his estate to the observatory. However, his wife, Constance, contested the will, and the search for “Planet X” was put on hold until 1927, when the litigation was resolved in Lowell Observatory’s favor. A new telescope was built especially for the search, which began with newly hired Lowell Observatory assistant Clyde Tombaugh exposing the first photographic plates of the newly revived search.
February 18, 1930: Pluto Discovered
Tombaugh took many photographs of the region of the sky where Lowell had predicted Planet X would be. He compared photos taken days apart by using a blink comparator, which superimposed the images of the two plates and blinked rapidly between them. Stars would remain stationary, but a planet would move between the time the photos were taken, and the rapid blinking of the comparator would make it rapidly move back and forth. After less than a year of searching, Tombaugh found Pluto on two plates taken in January 1930.
March 14, 1930: Pluto Gets Its Name
The discovery of Pluto was announced on March 13, 1930. The news traveled all over the world. The next day Falconer Madan, who had been the head of the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford, read the news at breakfast to his daughter, Ethel Burney, and her 11-year-old daughter, Venetia (later Venetia Phair). Venetia knew her mythology and suggested Pluto, the Roman god of the underworld. Madan loved the name and contacted his friend, astronomer Herbert Hall Turner, who contacted Lowell University. Many other names had been suggested, such as Minerva and Persephone, but Tombaugh and the other Lowell astronomers selected Pluto, which had Percival Lowell’s initials as its first two letters.
June 22, 1978: Charon Discovered
Pluto had seemed to be alone at the edge of the solar system, but U.S. Naval Observatory astronomers James Christy and Robert Harrington noticed that images they had taken of Pluto had a bump. They looked at earlier images of Pluto and noticed that the bump moved around Pluto with a period of 6.4 days. Pluto had a moon! Charon, with a diameter of about 1,208 km (751 miles), is half as big as Pluto (2,370 km [1,470 miles]). The two are sometimes called a double planet.
February 7, 1979: Pluto Crosses Neptune’s Orbit
Most planets have a roughly circular orbit, but Pluto’s is more stretched out like an ellipse. Pluto’s orbit has a higher eccentricity than the other planets’ orbits. A circle has an eccentricity of 0. Pluto, however, has an eccentricity of 0.251, which means that its orbit crosses that of Neptune, making that planet farther from the Sun from February 7, 1979, until February 11, 1999.
May 15, 2005: Nix and Hydra Discovered
Astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope discovered these two moons. Nix and Hydra are small and elongated; both are about 55 km (35 miles) long, and Hydra is the thicker of the two, 34 km (21 miles) across. These two moons wobble chaotically because they orbit in the constantly changing gravitational field of Pluto and Charon, which rotate around each other. The direction in which their rotational poles point changes drastically. Hubble was also used to find two other moons: Kerberos in 2011 and Styx in 2012.
January 19, 2006: New Horizons Launched
To explore the Pluto-Charon system, NASA designed the small New Horizons probe and put it on one of the largest rockets, the Atlas V. When it left Earth, New Horizons was the fastest spacecraft ever, zooming to the end of the solar system at a speed of more than 58,000 km (36,000 miles) per hour. With the exploration of Pluto, NASA probes would have visited every planet, but before New Horizons even got past Jupiter…
August 24, 2006: Pluto Demoted to Dwarf Planet
Pluto was always an oddity among the planets. It wasn’t small, rocky, and close to the Sun like the terrestrial planets. It wasn’t a large ball of gas like the gas giants. For decades it was unique, until, in the early 21st century, bodies the size of Pluto and Charon were discovered at the edge of the solar system in the Kuiper belt. One of them, Eris, was even larger than Pluto. Should the solar system have many more planets? What is a planet, anyway? Astronomers considered the question, and on this day the International Astronomical Union made the controversial decision that Pluto, Eris, and Ceres (the largest asteroid) would be the first three dwarf planets.
July 14, 2015: New Horizons Flies by Pluto
After nine and a half years of travel, New Horizons finally reached its destination. As it got closer, it saw unusual features on Pluto, such as a dark region near the equator dubbed the “whale” and a lighter heart-shaped region. On this day New Horizons came within 12,500 km (7,750 miles) of Pluto and 28,800 km (17,900 miles) of Charon. New Horizons was expected to continue over the following months to send information from its encounter back to Earth and get ready for its next destination, one of three possible Kuiper belt objects that it will encounter in 2018 or 2019.
March 23, 2178: One (Plutonian) Year Since Discovery
Pluto is so far from the Sun that it takes a little more than 248 Earth years to complete one orbit. Who knows—this date is so far in the future that maybe humans will be there to ring in the first Plutonian new year.