Revision for The Song of Ice, Fire and Gamma Rays | ||
Previous Revision, by LCU No Fool Like One [2024-06-11 20:08:52] | → | Selected revision, by CMDR Marx [2024-06-11 20:19:35] |
DISCOVERER | ||
Sebastian Menetil | → | Sebastian Menetil |
NAME | ||
The Song of Ice, Fire and Gamma Rays | → | The Song of Ice, Fire and Gamma Rays |
SYSTEMNAME | ||
Oochosy ES-B d13-1 | → | Oochosy ES-B d13-1 |
CATEGORY | ||
Stellar Features | → | Stellar Features |
CATEGORY 2 | ||
Sights and Scenery | → | Sights and Scenery |
REGION | ||
Sanguineous Rim | → | Sanguineous Rim |
LATITUDE | ||
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LONGITUDE | ||
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CALLSIGN | ||
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SUMMARY | ||
A world of death. A massive and hot icy world that orbits around its parent white dwarf star closely, sometimes crossing the edge of the jet. | → | A massive and hot icy world that orbits around its parent white dwarf star closely, sometimes going through the edge of its jet. |
DESCRIPTION | ||
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Death worlds are legendary among many commanders, especially explorers. The mystery of how one can walk on their surface on foot while being blasted by the jet, when the ship itself would melt, has yet to be solved. The planet itself is also rather peculiar. It's a massive icy world. weighing more than 20 earth masses with a gravity of 2.2G. It is also surprisingly hot, sporting a whopping 577K average surface temperature, which is high for an icy world. The views from the planet can be rather scenic, as there's also a red dwarf in a system that is mere 98 light seconds away, with both stellar objects often visible in the sky at the same time. | → | Death worlds are famous among many Commanders, especially explorers: this term is often used for planets which's surfaces are blasted by the jets of a nearby white dwarf star. The mystery of how one can walk on these planets with only their spacesuit for protection, while their ship itself takes catastrophic damage from being blasted by the jet, has yet to be solved. This specific planet (A 1) is also rather peculiar. It's a massive icy world, weighing more than 20 Earth Masses, with a surface gravity of 2.2 g. It is also surprisingly hot for its type, sporting a whopping 577 K average surface temperature. The views from the surface can be rather scenic, as there's also a red dwarf star in a system that is a mere 98 light seconds away. Both stars, the white dwarf and the red dwarf, are often visible in the sky at the same time. |
JOURNAL | ||
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OBSERVATORY | ||
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