| Revision for Rolling Pearls | ||
| Previous Revision, by Gadnok [2023-03-05 23:55:03] | → | Selected revision, by Gadnok [2023-03-06 00:08:39] |
| DISCOVERER | ||
| Van Hoof | → | Van Hoof |
| NAME | ||
| Rolling Pearls | → | Rolling Pearls |
| SYSTEMNAME | ||
| Bleia Dryiae HO-F a38-1 | → | Bleia Dryiae HO-F a38-1 |
| CATEGORY | ||
| Sights and Scenery | → | Sights and Scenery |
| CATEGORY 2 | ||
| → | ||
| REGION | ||
| Inner Orion Spur | → | Inner Orion Spur |
| LATITUDE | ||
| → | ||
| LONGITUDE | ||
| → | ||
| CALLSIGN | ||
| → | ||
| SUMMARY | ||
| Class L dwarf orbited every 7 hours by two tidally locked ice worlds in close proximity, at a distance of 4.24 Ls from the star. One has a landable atmosphere while the other is chained to the sky. | → | Class L dwarf orbited every 7 hours by two tidally locked ice worlds in close proximity, at a distance of 4.24 Ls from the star. One has a landable atmosphere while the other is chained to the sky. |
| DESCRIPTION | ||
| → | ||
Upon arriving to the L class brown-dwarf Bleia Dryiae HO-F a38-1, explorers will notice their ship's sensors auto-scan two fast orbiting bodies.
These two tidally locked ice worlds sit in close proximity with each other at a distance of 4.24 Ls from the star, and with an orbital period of 6.9 hours, hence the name "Rolling Pearls".
Body 1 contains a landable thin sulphur dioxide atmosphere with nitrogen geysers and gas vents populating the surface. Coupled with the close distance to the star and Body 2 chained to the sky, Commanders are encouraged to disembark to take in the view.
Bleia Dryiae HO-F a38-1 2 having a surface pressure of 6,048.27 atmospheres assures the small pearl will remain unreachable for now, but will always be a fixture in the sky of its landable counterpart.
| → | Upon arriving to the L class brown-dwarf Bleia Dryiae HO-F a38-1, explorers will notice their ship's sensors auto-scan two fast orbiting bodies.
These two tidally locked ice worlds sit in close proximity with each other at a distance of 4.24 Ls from the star, and with an orbital period of 6.9 hours, hence the name "Rolling Pearls".
Body 1 contains a landable thin sulphur dioxide atmosphere with nitrogen geysers and gas vents populating the surface. Coupled with the close distance to the star and Body 2 chained to the sky, Commanders are encouraged to disembark to take in the view.
Bleia Dryiae HO-F a38-1 2 having a surface pressure of 6,048.27 atmospheres assures the small pearl will remain unreachable for now, but will always be a fixture in the sky of its landable counterpart.
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| JOURNAL | ||
| → | ||
| OBSERVATORY | ||
| → | ||