Revision for Sky Lens | ||
Previous Revision, by LCU No Fool Like One [2022-08-04 13:39:50] | → | Selected revision, by LCU No Fool Like One [2022-08-04 13:43:24] |
DISCOVERER | ||
JJGoldberg | → | JJGoldberg |
NAME | ||
Sky Lens | → | Sky Lens |
SYSTEMNAME | ||
Schee Bli AA-A h143 | → | Schee Bli AA-A h143 |
CATEGORY | ||
Sights and Scenery | → | Sights and Scenery |
CATEGORY 2 | ||
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REGION | ||
Ryker's Hope | → | Ryker's Hope |
LATITUDE | ||
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LONGITUDE | ||
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CALLSIGN | ||
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SUMMARY | ||
A system with three black holes, where the distortion caused by the gravitational effect of the BHs is particularly intense and can be seen from the surface of multiple landable bodies | → | A system with three black holes, where the distortion caused by the gravitational effect of the BHs is particularly intense and can be seen from the surface of multiple landable bodies |
DESCRIPTION | ||
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A peculiar looking system, with three black holes apparently ignoring the laws of gravitational pull between themselves and keeping two M, one Y and one L star in a nifty stellar dance. The L star has twelve rocky satellites, of which nine are landable. On six of these, rare Stratum and Bacteria species can be found. However, the greatest thrill for an explorer is the sight of the effect that the black holes combined cause in the sky, as viewed from multiple landables (the image shows the view from body 2f, with the reddish taint stemming from the ammonia atmosphere, but others offer similar scenery). The CMDR that first stumbled on this discovery was just searching for biological species, and noticed the magnificent sky above by coincidence. Word goes that his ship's crew kept waiting for him for several hours, wondering what might have happened on the surface... | → |
A peculiar looking system, with three black holes seeming to ignore the laws of gravitational pull between themselves and keeping two M, one Y and one L star in a nifty stellar dance. The L star has twelve rocky satellites, of which nine are landable. On six of these, rare Stratum and Bacteria species can be found. However, the greatest thrill for an explorer is the sight of the effect that the black holes combined create in the sky, as viewed from multiple landable bodies. The image above shows the view from body 2 f, with the reddish taint stemming from the ammonia atmosphere, but others offer similar scenery. The CMDR that first stumbled on this discovery was just searching for biological species, and noticed the magnificent sky above by coincidence. Word goes that his ship's crew kept waiting for him for several hours, wondering what might have happened on the surface... |
JOURNAL | ||
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OBSERVATORY | ||
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