

In Red Daughter of Krypton Supergirl jumps into Hyperspace to go from planet Mogo to Earth.Green Lantern: Power Ring wielders use Hyperspace to travel across the universe.JLA (1997) reveals that hyperspace, known to the White Martians as the Still Zone, to Prometheus as the Ghost Zone, and to the Queen Bee as the Honeycomb, is also the Phantom Zone used as a prison on Krypton and Limbo (as in, the place you go when you die if you weren't good or evil enough to go directly to Heaven or Hell).It is also stated in the original Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe and its subsequent variants that most characters with some form of growth draw the extra mass from there, while those who shrink store their shed mass there (until they reach a certain size limit, when they suddenly 'slip' into a different universe). Most Marvel Universe teleporters use some form of subspace to accomplish their teleportation - they jaunt to subspace, move a short distance, then come back out having covered vast distances.The Authority has a ship that exists in and travels through "The Bleed"- a seemingly endless expanse of red void that lies between (and connects?) each and every dimension for DC and Image Comics, and possibly even Marvel and Dark Horse Comics.2, where it was essentially a Dark World. Ramona specifies that it's not the same kind of subspace featured in Super Mario Bros. Scott Pilgrim: Ramona Flowers uses Subspace to get around quicker for her job as a delivery girl, and owns a Subspace handbag.Your guess as to what that means is as good as ours. Star Trek: Voyager took this to silly extremes-at least one episode referenced hypersubspace. It was used on Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine with regularity, often just to fill the Applied Phlebotinum slot for the episode. It's also the basis of FTL Radio, which makes communications possible in ships that are moving faster than light (since real-life radio transmissions can only travel at light speed). For example, generating a subspace field can alter the apparent mass of an object, allowing it to be moved more easily. Subspace was popularized by Star Trek and is a trope for a form of space that has different physical properties from normal space and allows the Enterprise crew (and the writers) to do all sorts of things that have some degree of scientific "consistency" but can't actually happen in the real world. Subspace or Hyperspace are terms used in science fiction to describe certain forms of space that can do things impossible in regular space (see also Green Rocks).


Instructional video shown to new members of the Stargate Program.
