| Revision for Gaze of the Blue | ||
| Previous Revision, by PhoenixBlue [2026-02-11 02:12:45] | → | Selected revision, by PhoenixBlue [2026-02-11 02:15:02] |
| DISCOVERER | ||
| SPACENUMMHOH | → | SPACENUMMHOH |
| NAME | ||
| Gaze of the Blue | → | Gaze of the Blue |
| SYSTEMNAME | ||
| Nyauthou WO-Z e1 | → | Nyauthou WO-Z e1 |
| CATEGORY | ||
| Organic | → | Organic |
| CATEGORY 2 | ||
| → | ||
| REGION | ||
| Formorian Frontier | → | Formorian Frontier |
| LATITUDE | ||
| → | ||
| LONGITUDE | ||
| → | ||
| CALLSIGN | ||
| → | ||
| SUMMARY | ||
| Roseum bioluminescent anemones grow on the one planet in this trinary system of luminous stars. | → | Roseum bioluminescent anemones grow on the one planet in this trinary system of luminous stars. |
| DESCRIPTION | ||
| → | ||
Nyauthou WO-Z is a trinary system with B- and A-class stars locked in a close orbit about 4,600 light-seconds from the system primary. Body BC 1 orbits about 250 light-seconds from the binary pair, whose radiation broils the surface at up to 1,581 Kelvin.
These temperatures are ideal for roseum bioluminescent anemones, an extremely hardy species of extremophiles that flourish in high gravity and extremely high temperatures. Anemones glow faintly in the dark, with the roseum species emitting a faint cyan light.
Body BC 1's surface gravity is about 1.63 times Earth-normal, so pilots should exercise caution on planetary approach. Commanders should also use caution when disembarking to sample the anemones, as the temperature will quickly overwhelm any pilot's suit. | → | Nyauthou WO-Z is a trinary system with B- and A-class stars locked in a close orbit about 4,600 light-seconds from the system primary. Body BC 1 orbits about 250 light-seconds from the binary pair, whose radiation broils the surface at up to 1,581 Kelvin.
These temperatures are ideal for roseum bioluminescent anemones, an extremely hardy species of extremophiles that flourish in high gravity and extremely high temperatures. Anemones glow faintly, with the roseum species emitting a faint cyan light.
Body BC 1's surface gravity is about 1.63 times Earth-normal, so pilots should exercise caution on planetary approach. Commanders should also use caution when disembarking to sample the anemones, as the temperature will quickly overwhelm any pilot's suit. |
| JOURNAL | ||
| → | ||
| OBSERVATORY | ||
| → | ||