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 The Devil's Dancefloor

Previous Revision, by CMDR dkO [2022-12-05 02:06:52]Selected revision, by CMDR Marx [2022-12-05 14:58:39]
DISCOVERER
monevmonev
NAME
The Devil's DancefloorThe Devil's Dancefloor
SYSTEMNAME
Eeshorks BA-A g2179Eeshorks BA-A g2179
CATEGORY
Sights and ScenerySights and Scenery
CATEGORY 2
Tourist BeaconsTourist Beacons
REGION
Norma ArmNorma Arm
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
CALLSIGN
SUMMARY
This system contains a black hole and four neutron stars, and is considered extra special as four of the five bodies are in two sets of binaries orbiting each other very closely.This system houses a black hole and four neutron stars, with four of the five bodies in close binary pairs. There is also a tourist beacon here.
DESCRIPTION

Tourist Spot 0711

The system was first discovered during a joint expedition by three well known scientists in the field of gravitational physics: Grace Gutierrez, Rondall Hudon, and Lennox McFadden, back in July of 3303.

alt text

It contains a black hole and four neutron stars, and is considered extra special by researchers studying gravitational waves as four of the five bodies that make up the system are organised in two sets of binaries orbiting eachother very closely.

alt text

They orbit so closely that the AB pair orbit each other in approximately two hours (The Swing Couple), with both pairs orbiting each other in an area less than 250Ls across.

alt text

The A star of the sytem is a black hole measuring 10.6 solar masses.

alt text

Bodies B, C and D are each microsecond pulsars with spins aligned by orbits so tight a ship may find itself in the ejecta cones of both pulsars at the same time!

alt text

The fifth and last body of the system is another neutron star at a range of 342,000Ls which the members of the discovering expedition refer to as "The Wallflower"

alt text

alt text

This system houses a black hole and four neutron stars, with four of the five bodies in close binary pairs. There is also a tourist beacon here, #711, named the "Devil's Dancefloor". The following text is broadcasted by the beacon:

The system was first discovered during a joint expedition by three well known scientists in the field of gravitational physics: Grace Gutierrez, Rondall Hudon, and Lennox McFadden, back in July of 3303.

It contains a black hole and four neutron stars, and is considered extra special by researchers studying gravitational waves as four of the five bodies that make up the system are organised in two sets of binaries orbiting eachother very closely.

They orbit so closely that the AB pair orbit each other in approximately two hours (The Swing Couple), with both pairs orbiting each other in an area less than 250Ls across.

The A star of the sytem is a black hole measuring 10.6 solar masses.

Bodies B, C and D are each microsecond pulsars with spins aligned by orbits so tight a ship may find itself in the ejecta cones of both pulsars at the same time!

The fifth and last body of the system is another neutron star at a range of 342,000Ls which the members of the discovering expedition refer to as "The Wallflower"

A small correction: the system was discovered by CMDR Monev, who was chartered by the three people mentioned in the text above. See Monev's journal entry 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.