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 - Galactic Exploration Catalog - 
Revision for Wreath of Rocks

Previous Revision, by CMDR Marx [2025-02-15 02:36:56]Selected revision, by CMDR Marx [2025-02-15 02:41:10]
DISCOVERER
FleavisFleavis
NAME
Wreath of RocksWreath of Rocks
SYSTEMNAME
Dehau EG-Y g9Dehau EG-Y g9
CATEGORY
Stellar FeaturesStellar Features
CATEGORY 2
REGION
TempleTemple
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
CALLSIGN
SUMMARY
Two stars with rings: a red dwarf and a brown dwarf star.Two stars with rings: a red dwarf and a brown dwarf star.
DESCRIPTION

This system houses two ringed stars which orbit the primary black hole as its satellites. The first one is a class M red dwarf star, with rocky rings.

A class II gas giant orbits it as its sole satellite, with rocky rings as well.

The second ringed star in the system is a class T brown dwarf star. Unlike the other two, this one has metal-rich rings, and a diverse variety of bodies orbiting it. There is a Water World (2 c) with a thin carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere (a candidate for terraforming), while its "neighbour" (2 d) is an Ammonia World. Then there's a landable moon with a thin nitrogen atmosphere, and another with a thin methane-rich atmosphere - plus other bodies with thicker atmospheres.
The farthest body of the system is a Gas Giant with Ammonia-based life.

This system houses two ringed stars which orbit the primary black hole as its satellites. The first one is a class M red dwarf star, with rocky rings. A class II gas giant orbits it as its sole satellite, with rocky rings as well.

The second ringed star in the system is a class T brown dwarf star.

Unlike the other two, this one has metal-rich rings, and a diverse variety of bodies orbiting it. There is a Water World (2 c) with a thin carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere (a candidate for terraforming), while its "neighbour" (2 d) is an Ammonia World. Then there's a landable moon with a thin nitrogen atmosphere, and another with a thin methane-rich atmosphere - plus other bodies with thicker atmospheres.
The farthest body of the system is a Gas Giant with Ammonia-based life.

JOURNAL
OBSERVATORY
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