Revision for Semotus Beacon | ||
Previous Revision, by Richard Fluiraniz M. [2022-11-20 22:11:59] | → | Selected revision, by Richard Fluiraniz M. [2022-11-20 22:39:51] |
DISCOVERER | ||
CMDR Ishum | → | CMDR Ishum |
NAME | ||
Semotus Beacon | → | Semotus Beacon |
SYSTEMNAME | ||
Oevasy SG-Y d0 | → | Oevasy SG-Y d0 |
CATEGORY | ||
Historical | → | Historical |
CATEGORY 2 | ||
→ | ||
REGION | ||
The Abyss | → | The Abyss |
LATITUDE | ||
→ | ||
LONGITUDE | ||
→ | ||
CALLSIGN | ||
→ | ||
SUMMARY | ||
The most distant reachable star system from Sol. | → | The most distant reachable star system from Sol. |
DESCRIPTION | ||
→ | ||
This system is both the most distant system from Sol at 65,647.34 ly, and also the system furthest north of Sol at 65,630.16 ly. Semotus Beacon was first discovered by CMDR Ishum in June 3302, after the jump ranges of the original Frame Shift Drives were drastically increased through Engineering. There is another often-visited destination inside the star system itself, the moon designated as B 9 f, which is better known by the name that the first person who landed there gave it: Salomé’s Reach. (Named after the alias of Kahina Tijani Loren.) The orbit of this body takes it the farthest away from the main star, and thus, this is the most distant object from Sol that an explorer can visit and land on. Reaching Semotus Beacon requires a ship capable of making a 82.68 ly jump, which is well within the reach of what’s possible today, thanks to the use of synthesised jump boosts. The following route was found during the SHEPARD Expedition:
| → | This system is both the most distant system from Sol at 65,647.34 ly, and also the system furthest north of Sol at 65,630.16 ly. Semotus Beacon was first discovered by CMDR Ishum in June 3302, after the jump ranges of the original Frame Shift Drives were drastically increased through Engineering. Body B 9 f in 3308 There is another often-visited destination inside the star system itself, the moon designated as B 9 f, which is better known by the name that the first person who landed there gave it: Salomé’s Reach. (Named after the alias of Kahina Tijani Loren.) The orbit of this body takes it the farthest away from the main star, and thus, this is the most distant object from Sol that an explorer can visit and land on. Reaching Semotus Beacon requires a ship capable of making a 82.68 ly jump, which is well within the reach of what’s possible today, thanks to the use of synthesised jump boosts. The following route was found during the SHEPARD Expedition:
|
JOURNAL | ||
→ | ||
OBSERVATORY | ||
→ |