Things added. Unfortunately, I could not find BROWN EARTH TWIN or Vebos... hmm.
Tips for finding Earth-Like planets: Look for F, G, or K Class stars. M class habitables will almost always be tidelocked. Oceanias can, of course, also be habitable, they just have tiny amounts of land.
Nol, nope, not really, you have to work harder for that. My recommendation is to use star browser (Shift+F3) with radius of 10 to 30 light years. Sort the results by spectral class and look for the stars in the range between G and K. Most of the planets in red dwarf's systems are tidally locked and not very suitable for life, and blue stars do not allow life to develop except for worlds shielded by ice or water.
Watch for systems with life(last column), select them and check for available planets with F2. Good planet candidates aren't very rare, about 1 to 5 percent of all life-bearing worlds.
There, I've found very strange planet, as dark as it could possibly be, flying over gas giant, very high orbit inclination, with lots of suns illuminating it. The gravity is a bit higher, but the temperature and pressure is normal, and the Earth is only 18 parsec away.
400 m high icebergs at the shore with the view on gas giant.
Code
Place "Moon Temperate terra with life" { Body "HIP 62471 B4.23" Parent "HIP 62471 B4" Pos (8.259090351729614e-012, -2.496108167165598e-010, 3.699408726402786e-011) Rot (-0.08129004106154494, -0.8951403128903598, -0.03657845934360184, -0.4367811417344042) Date "2014.12.22 23:04:09.50" Vel 1.0871228e-013 Mode 2 }
It would, but the star is far too high in class- it might explode in a million years! Try F8-K4.
QuoteAerospacefag ()
radius of 10 to 30 light years
That's parsecs. Also, this planet is another slightly off one- 7 day rotation period AND it orbits an M4 star...
Tips for finding Earth-Like planets: Look for F, G, or K Class stars. M class habitables will almost always be tidelocked. Oceanias can, of course, also be habitable, they just have tiny amounts of land.
Tips for finding Earth-Like planets: Look for F, G, or K Class stars. M class habitables will almost always be tidelocked. Oceanias can, of course, also be habitable, they just have tiny amounts of land.
V. 0.97.2 has apparently arrived. So: I have to put everything in Spoiler Tags. Yay...
Tips for finding Earth-Like planets: Look for F, G, or K Class stars. M class habitables will almost always be tidelocked. Oceanias can, of course, also be habitable, they just have tiny amounts of land.
RS 8409-1828-7-1206644-813 4 "Azews" RS 8409-1828-7-1206644-65 5 "Eras" RS 8409-3584-7-8221-1196 5 "Zase" This one is orbiting a Brown dwarf RS 9409-3584-6-1034-2891 B5 "Teas" RS 8409-3584-7-8262-2284 5 "Azas" HIP 56837 5 "Zasws" Has a moon with a diameter of 1337 km!
Tips for finding Earth-Like planets: Look for F, G, or K Class stars. M class habitables will almost always be tidelocked. Oceanias can, of course, also be habitable, they just have tiny amounts of land.