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 - Galactic Exploration Catalog - 
Revision for Lantern of Oephaik

Previous Revision, by Arakash [2024-09-15 11:47:59]Selected revision, by CMDR Marx [2024-09-15 14:26:25]
DISCOVERER
CMDR NurethCMDR Nureth
NAME
Lantern of OephaikLantern of Oephaik
SYSTEMNAME
Oephaik WF-M d8-2236Oephaik WF-M d8-2236
CATEGORY
Sights and ScenerySights and Scenery
CATEGORY 2
REGION
Norma ArmNorma Arm
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
CALLSIGN
SUMMARY
This system offers the rare sight of a M type star dominating the sky of an rare Hot Thin Silicate Vapour Atmosphere landable.A rare Hot Thin Silicate Vapour atmosphere landable body, with a class M red dwarf star dominating its sky.
DESCRIPTION

Body D1 in this system is a rare Hot Thin Silicate Vapour atmosphere landable, there are less than 300 of these so far discovered in the galaxy as of 3310. (Less than 0.1% of all landable planets)
It sits unusually close to an M Type star, only 2.5ls away. At this distance the sun dominates the sky, almost filling half the sky of the planet.

The most memorable part of the system is the view from the surface of the planet, where the light from the star is viewed through the lens of the Silicate Vapour Atmosphere, filling it with yellow and brown light.

The Temperature on the body exceeds 1700K, meaning any trips outside SRV should be kept short.
The Gravity of the body is 1.47G, so caution is advised on approach.

Low Atmosphere

Body D 1 in this system is a rare Hot Thin Silicate Vapour atmosphere landable, of which there are less than 300 discovered in the galaxy as of 3310. It orbits unusually close to a class M red dwarf star, which is only 2.5 ls away. At this distance the sun dominates the planet's sky, filling almost half of it.

The most memorable part of the system is the view from the surface of the planet, where the light from the star is filtered through the Silicate Vapour atmosphere, giving it a yellow and brown colour.

Surface temperatures on the body exceed 1,700 K, meaning any trips on foot should be kept short.
The gravity of the body is 1.47 g, so caution is advised not just on the surface, but also on approach.

Low Atmosphere

JOURNAL
OBSERVATORY
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