| Revision for Gaze of the Blue | ||
| Previous Revision, by CMDR Marx [2026-02-11 13:58:20] | → | Selected revision, by PhoenixBlue [2026-02-11 18:41:19] |
| 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, a hardy species of extremophiles that can grow even at incredibly high temperatures, and tolerate high gravity too. These 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 be careful when disembarking to sample the anemones, as the temperature overwhelm any pilot's suit in a matter of minutes. | → | 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, a hardy species of extremophiles that can grow even at incredibly high temperatures and tolerate high gravity. These 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 be careful when disembarking to sample the anemones, as the temperature will overwhelm any pilot's suit in a matter of minutes. |
| JOURNAL | ||
| → | ||
| OBSERVATORY | ||
| → | ||