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 Shepherd's Warning

Previous Revision, by CMDR Marx [2023-06-11 15:00:36]Selected revision, by LCU No Fool Like One [2023-06-17 12:16:58]
DISCOVERER
NAME
Shepherd's WarningShepherd's Warning
SYSTEMNAME
Synuefai ZL-O b51-0Synuefai ZL-O b51-0
CATEGORY
Stellar FeaturesStellar Features
CATEGORY 2
REGION
Inner Orion SpurInner Orion Spur
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
CALLSIGN
SUMMARY
A pair of icy moon colliders, one of which (2 a) has a thin argon atmosphere.A pair of icy moon colliders, one of which (2 a) has a thin argon atmosphere.
DESCRIPTION

Red sky at night, shepherd's delight. Red sky in the morning, shepherd's warning

The shepherd moon (2 a) of the second planet has a red sky from its thin argon atmosphere. While the old saying had some relevance on Earth, in this instance the warning is of the impending collision with its sister moon.

The moons collide infrequently, with a synodic period of just over 220 days, and may occasionally narrowly miss each other as they pass.

Body 2 a also has water ice volcanism, and three biological species can be found on it:

Bacterium Verrata - Blue (3,897,000 Cr)
Fonticulua Campestris - Amethyst (1,000,000 Cr)
Fumerola Aquatis - Orange (6,284,600 Cr)

Fumerola Aquatis - Orange

The first collision will be on the 2023. Jun. 12 at 14:44 UTC, and will last approximately 24 hours.

Red sky at night, shepherd's delight. Red sky in the morning, shepherd's warning

The shepherd moon (2 a) of the second planet has a red sky from its thin argon atmosphere above 5km altitude. While the old saying had some relevance on Earth, in this instance the warning is of the impending collision with its sister moon.

Below 5km the sky appears blue and with the red only appearing as you look up.

The system hosts the first collision ever observed between a landable atmospheric planet and another body.

The moons collide infrequently, with a synodic period of just over 220 days, and may occasionally narrowly miss each other as they pass.

Body 2 a also has water ice volcanism, and three biological species can be found on it:

Bacterium Verrata - Blue (3,897,000 Cr)
Fonticulua Campestris - Amethyst (1,000,000 Cr)
Fumerola Aquatis - Orange (6,284,600 Cr)

Fumerola Aquatis - Orange

The first collision was on the Jun 12th 2023 at 13:44 UTC, and lasted nearly 24 hours.

Collision Schedule

Collision Schedule

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.