spinner
x
This website is using cookies, in order to track this cookie warning and other popups, for managing login sessions, and for website analytics. We do not collect or store personally identifiable information, nor track or display advertising related information. That's Fine
 - Galactic Exploration Catalog - 
Revision for Gaulkhan's Reach

Previous Revision, by CMDR Sheehy [2022-10-26 07:11:04]Selected revision, by CMDR Marx [2022-10-26 21:06:00]
DISCOVERER
CMDR SheehyCMDR Sheehy
NAME
Gaulkhan's ReachGaulkhan's Reach
SYSTEMNAME
Fedguia UT-Z c16-10Fedguia UT-Z c16-10
CATEGORY
Planetary FeaturesPlanetary Features
CATEGORY 2
REGION
Achilles' AltarAchilles' Altar
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
CALLSIGN
SUMMARY
A shepherd moon with geysers that orbits 1,447km from its parent's rings.A shepherd moon with geysers that orbits 1,447 km from its parent's rings.
DESCRIPTION

Gaulkhan's Reach is the first shepherd moon of Fedguia UT-Z c-16-10 3. It is so close that, at 1,447km from the ring, you can watch the ring pass by.

The moon is riven with high-wall canyons and double canyons.Geysers add to the atmosphere, with opportunities for SRV exploration of the nearby rings.

Those rings contain 3 tritium hotspots, with one double tritium/grandidierite overlap. A third ring is so light it cannot be detected, but makes the first three moons shepherd moons.

The fourth moon is a landable, atmospheric world with rings and life. The high inclination allows it to overlook the parent.

The view from the fourth moon

This world was discovered on the Fatherhood's Lost in Space expedition of 3308. The world is named after the expedition trip leader who suffered at the hands of a hurricane just a day before the expedition was due to start, yet managed to rejoin the expedition a week later.

A short video tour is available (here)

Gaulkhan's Reach is the first shepherd moon of Fedguia UT-Z c-16-10 3. It is so close that, at 1,447km from the ring, you can watch the ring pass by.

The moon is riven with high-wall canyons and double canyons. Geysers add to the atmosphere, with opportunities for SRV exploration of the nearby rings.

Those rings contain 3 tritium hotspots, with one double tritium/grandidierite overlap. A third ring is so light it cannot be seen by the naked eye, but its presence makes the first three moons shepherd moons.

The fourth moon is a landable thin atmospheric world with rings and surface life. The high orbital inclination allows it to overlook the parent.

The view from the fourth moon

This world was discovered on the Fatherhood's Lost in Space expedition of 3308. The world is named after the expedition trip leader, who suffered at the hands of a hurricane just a day before the expedition was due to start, yet managed to rejoin the expedition a week later.

A short video tour is available (here)

JOURNAL
OBSERVATORY
All content is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY‑NC‑SA 3.0)

This website is not an official tool for the game Elite: Dangerous and is not affiliated with Frontier Developments. All information provided is based on publicly available information and data supplied by players, and may not be entirely accurate. 'Elite', the Elite logo, the Elite: Dangerous logo, 'Frontier' and the Frontier logo are registered trademarks of Frontier Developments plc. All rights reserved. All other trademarks and copyrights are acknowledged as the property of their respective owners.

Special thanks go to all commanders and explorers who graciously upload their data to EDDN, EDSM, and EDAstro to make all of this possible. We wouldn't exist without your data contributions. For any bug reports or feature suggestions, please visit our forum thread.