Anomaly at Achird
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Tangle10 | Date: Friday, 27.06.2014, 21:08 | Message # 1 |
Space Pilot
Group: Users
United States
Messages: 129
Status: Offline
| This is slightly more the discovery of something weird than an AAR- a (Presumably)procedural black hole in a catalog system where none have been detected. In the Achird system, there is a single 5.4 solar mass object very close to Achird B. Achird B orbits it in 1.1 days. I'm kind of pissed off about this because I was doing a life search when I found it. Here is an image with the black hole visible as a pinprick in reality:
Anyway, this is kind of strange.
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.
Edited by Tangle10 - Friday, 27.06.2014, 21:08 |
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SpaceEngineer | Date: Saturday, 28.06.2014, 12:36 | Message # 2 |
Author of Space Engine
Group: Administrators
Russian Federation
Messages: 4800
Status: Offline
| http://en.spaceengine.org/forum/4-1946-1
List of known issues
Not real bugs, but effects caused by limitations in the engine:
- Many real binary stars rendered as single, and many single rendered as binary - SE simply have incomplete catalog of binary stars
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Tangle10 | Date: Saturday, 28.06.2014, 15:56 | Message # 3 |
Space Pilot
Group: Users
United States
Messages: 129
Status: Offline
| Well, Achird is already set as a binary, so that part's fine. I should check on another computer to see if it is the same.
edit: On both computers, Achird consists of the two stars known, 1 likely nonexistent black hole, and 3 selenas.
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.
Edited by Tangle10 - Saturday, 28.06.2014, 16:07 |
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