Revision for The Dandelion Anomaly | ||
Previous Revision, by Richard Fluiraniz M. [2022-05-04 21:24:03] | → | Selected revision, by CMDR Marx [2025-03-13 22:44:40] |
DISCOVERER | ||
Richard Fluiraniz m. | → | Richard Fluiraniz m. |
NAME | ||
The Dandelion Anomaly | → | The Dandelion Anomaly |
SYSTEMNAME | ||
Systimbau AA-A h63 | → | Systimbau AA-A h63 |
CATEGORY | ||
Sights and Scenery | → | Stellar Features |
CATEGORY 2 | ||
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REGION | ||
Odin's Hold | → | Odin's Hold |
LATITUDE | ||
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LONGITUDE | ||
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CALLSIGN | ||
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SUMMARY | ||
A 4 Black Hole system with multiple anomalies. A distortion of 3 black holes in the distance combined with many neighboring stars (one of them being a ringed M class) creates an astonishing effect. | → | Three close black holes generate anomalous lensing effects. |
DESCRIPTION | ||
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The Dandelion Anomaly system consists of four black holes, one ringed M class, 11 other stars, with 8 of them orbiting three black holes relatively close to each other 96k ls from the primary black hole. What is curious about the latter is that the lensing effect emits light to such a degree that it is equally or even brighter than stars closer to the bodies in the central star. One example is seen on the moon A 2 a, a planet orbiting inside the ringed M class A 2. Despite his parent body's closer proximity (figure 3.2), the anomaly emits an even brighter light (figure 3.1). Therefore, creating a planet of "Endless days" which is hit with light from both sides, never giving sleep to whoever lands on the planet. And as it thought there could be no more surprises, there is life on the anomaly relatively close to the black holes! Close to them, we have some landables with an atmosphere with modest land-based lifeforms (Figure 5 Stratum) that defy all possibilities and thrive despite the gravitational anomaly. Indeed a pretty exciting system to behold and stop. Going towards the anomaly can create a fascinating lensing effect that would surprise the most veteran explorers visiting Odin's hold. Figure 1:The anomaly from system entry. Figure 2: System Map. Figure 3.1: Anomaly daylight side Figure 3.2: A2A by its parent body (A2) daylight. These pictures (3.1 & 3.2) were taken at the same spot. Figure 5: Stratum on Systimbau AA-A h63 BCD 5 f Figure 6: The Dandelion anomaly Black holes B, C and D in 5000 ls away Figure 7: A Dandelion sunrise from A2A | → | This system houses four black holes, and the highlight is that three of them are close enough to each other that spectacular gravitational lensing effects occur. These are the B, C, D stars, roughly 130 kls away from the system's primary. Eight dwarf stars orbit the shared barycenter of this trio. However, the complex interplay of lensing effects of the three black holes somehow amplifies light to such a degree that the Dandelion Anomaly can shine even brighter from the surfaces of the nearby bodies than the dwarf stars do. For example, compare these two images, shot at the same site (on A 2 a): The lensing effects it generates, combined with the star density of the surrounding volume of space, can produce good views throughout the system. There are numerous landable bodies here, from which explorers can observe the black holes. There is even some surface life to be found: Stratum Paleas on the BCD 5 f moon, as well as Bacterium Informem on three other bodies. |
JOURNAL | ||
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OBSERVATORY | ||
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