Revision for Shepherd’s Haven | ||
Previous Revision, by CMDR Marx [2024-10-25 12:59:53] | → | Selected revision, by CMDR Marx [2024-10-25 13:00:54] |
DISCOVERER | ||
Fleavis | → | Fleavis |
NAME | ||
Shepherd’s Haven | → | Shepherd’s Haven |
SYSTEMNAME | ||
Gru Drye LX-A d1-41 | → | Gru Drye LX-A d1-41 |
CATEGORY | ||
Sights and Scenery | → | Sights and Scenery |
CATEGORY 2 | ||
→ | ||
REGION | ||
Inner Orion Spur | → | Inner Orion Spur |
LATITUDE | ||
→ | ||
LONGITUDE | ||
→ | ||
CALLSIGN | ||
→ | ||
SUMMARY | ||
A landable shepherd moon situated only 155 kilometers from its surface to the rings of the gas giant. | → | A landable shepherd moon situated only 155 kilometers from its surface to the rings of the gas giant. |
DESCRIPTION | ||
→ | ||
The third body in the Gru Drye LX-A d1-41 system is a Gas Giant with Water-based Life and two moons. The first moon (3 a) is only 155 km away from the giant's rings. Due to this proximity, a Commander who disembarks on the surface can see individual asteroids moving across the rings. The gas giant has two rocky rings; the largest of them has an outer radius of 206,730 km and an inner radius of 115,230 km. The moon has volcanism (Major Silicate Vapour Geysers) and a gravity of only 0.11 g. Additionally, this tidally locked moon has a rotation period of 0.7 days. Because of this, one can observe how the moon quickly orbits the rings of its parent planet. | → | The third body in the Gru Drye LX-A d1-41 system is a Gas Giant with Water-based Life and two moons. The first moon (3 a) is only 155 km away from the giant's rings. Due to this proximity, a Commander who disembarks on the surface can see individual asteroids moving across the rings. The gas giant has two rocky rings; the largest of them has an outer radius of 206,730 km and an inner radius of 115,230 km. The moon has volcanism (Major Silicate Vapour Geysers) and a gravity of only 0.11 g. Additionally, this tidally locked moon has a rotation period of 0.7 days. Because of this, one can observe within a day how the moon completes an orbit around its parent planet and its rings. |
JOURNAL | ||
→ | ||
OBSERVATORY | ||
→ |