Revision for The Burning World | ||
Previous Revision, by CMDR Sheehy [2023-02-06 16:26:29] | → | Selected revision, by CMDR Marx [2023-03-13 12:53:40] |
DISCOVERER | ||
CMDR Sheehy | → | CMDR Sheehy |
NAME | ||
The Burning World | → | The Burning World |
SYSTEMNAME | ||
Hypaa Byio GN-A d1-17 | → | Hypaa Byio GN-A d1-17 |
CATEGORY | ||
Planetary Features | → | Planetary Features |
CATEGORY 2 | ||
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REGION | ||
Sagittarius Carina Arm | → | Sagittarius Carina Arm |
LATITUDE | ||
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LONGITUDE | ||
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CALLSIGN | ||
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SUMMARY | ||
A Class III Gas Giant with pink colouration and a highly eccentric orbit. | → | A Class III Gas Giant with pink colouration and a highly eccentric orbit. |
DESCRIPTION | ||
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This Class III Gas Giant (Hypaa Byio GN-A d1-17 A 1) with pink colouration has a highly ecentric orbit that brings it to within 5.5 light seconds of the primary star every 38.8 days. It then retreats out to over 240 light seconds. The striking pink colouring in the clouds at first appear to be similar to the green bioluminescence found in Green Gas Giants but is not visible on the night side of the planet. The Burning World is a reference to 15th and 16th century sailors who observed bioluminescence in the sea and called it "Burning Seas." Only this world really does burn at its periapsis! | → | The first planet around the main star is a Class III Gas Giant (Hypaa Byio GN-A d1-17 A 1) with pink colouration, and a highly eccentric orbit that brings it to within 5.5 light seconds of the primary star every 38.8 days. It then retreats out to over 240 light seconds. The striking pink colouring in the clouds at first appear to be similar to the green bioluminescence found in Green Gas Giants, but it is not visible on the night side of the planet. The Burning World is a reference to 15th and 16th century sailors who observed bioluminescence in the sea and called it "Burning Seas." |
JOURNAL | ||
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OBSERVATORY | ||
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