| Revision for Twin Rubies | ||
| Previous Revision, by Richard Fluiraniz M. [2023-02-13 04:51:20] | → | Selected revision, by Richard Fluiraniz M. [2023-02-13 04:52:35] |
| DISCOVERER | ||
| → | ||
| NAME | ||
| Twin Rubies | → | Twin Rubies |
| SYSTEMNAME | ||
| Hegaa HJ-E b16-0 | → | Hegaa HJ-E b16-0 |
| CATEGORY | ||
| Sights and Scenery | → | Sights and Scenery |
| CATEGORY 2 | ||
| → | ||
| REGION | ||
| Elysian Shore | → | Elysian Shore |
| LATITUDE | ||
| → | ||
| LONGITUDE | ||
| → | ||
| CALLSIGN | ||
| → | ||
| SUMMARY | ||
| A massive landable planet orbiting two brown dwarf stars. | → | A massive landable planet orbiting two brown dwarf stars. |
| DESCRIPTION | ||
| → | ||
Body BC 1 in the system is a massive landable planet that orbits two brown dwarf stars closely. The planet has a radius of 19,383 km, a surface gravity of 2.25 g, and is tidally locked with its stars. The brown dwarfs are in a close binary orbit themselves, so the view from the planet can create gorgeous views. The system itself is some distance (855 ly) above the galactic plane as well. | → |
Body BC 1 in the system is a massive landable planet that orbits two brown dwarf stars closely. The planet has a radius of 19,383 km, a surface gravity of 2.25 g, and is tidally locked with its stars. The brown dwarfs are in a close binary orbit themselves, so the view from the planet can create gorgeous views. The system itself is some distance (855 ly) above the galactic plane as well. |
| JOURNAL | ||
| → | ||
| OBSERVATORY | ||
| → | ||