Planets with Life
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Zaddy23 | Date: Thursday, 18.09.2014, 04:49 | Message # 2 |
Space Pilot
Group: Users
Australia
Messages: 129
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| Here is my first (and so far only) gas giant with floaters.
I first noticed this when flying around and saw this one had a faint greenish tint, I then checked the F2 menu and sure enough, floaters!
Along with fezes and bowties, brown dwarves are cool.
Edited by Zaddy23 - Thursday, 18.09.2014, 04:52 |
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Billy_Mayes | Date: Thursday, 18.09.2014, 13:01 | Message # 3 |
Pioneer
Group: Users
Finland
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| Quote Zaddy23 ( ) Here is my first (and so far only) gas giant with floaters.
Weird, I've seen tons and tons of floaters, in my opinion they're even more common than other life forms.
AMD Phenom II X4 955 3.2 GHz Quad-Core - AMD Radeon HD 6950 2GB VRAM - 4GB RAM - 1680x1050 75 Hz Samsung screen
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Zaddy23 | Date: Friday, 19.09.2014, 00:56 | Message # 4 |
Space Pilot
Group: Users
Australia
Messages: 129
Status: Offline
| Quote Billy_Mayes ( ) Weird, I've seen tons and tons of floaters, in my opinion they're even more common than other life forms.
Hmm, I have come across over 100 rocky planets with life, and only once encountered floaters. (I'm playing with no mods so that might have something to do with it...)
Along with fezes and bowties, brown dwarves are cool.
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Billymario | Date: Saturday, 20.09.2014, 12:04 | Message # 5 |
Space Tourist
Group: Users
United Kingdom
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Status: Offline
| Yeah when i find 1 gas giant with floaters, all the other gas giants seem to have them, even if there cold or scorched, i believe this is a some sort of bug Added (20.09.2014, 11:04) --------------------------------------------- Also i wonder How life forms would survive on gas giants, maybe cause the atmosphere is so thick it would be like swimming in the ocean, and you get down far enough you would have a solidly gas, and maybe some underground life forms there...
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HarbingerDawn | Date: Saturday, 20.09.2014, 13:02 | Message # 6 |
Cosmic Curator
Group: Administrators
United States
Messages: 8717
Status: Offline
| Quote Billymario ( ) i wonder How life forms would survive on gas giants
All forum users, please read this! My SE mods and addons Phenom II X6 1090T 3.2 GHz, 16 GB DDR3 RAM, GTX 970 3584 MB VRAM
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Billymario | Date: Saturday, 20.09.2014, 17:14 | Message # 7 |
Space Tourist
Group: Users
United Kingdom
Messages: 26
Status: Offline
| Oh wow thats awesome, just imagine seeing one of them in real life, say if earth was a gas giant and we were that thing O.o
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Billymario | Date: Thursday, 02.10.2014, 21:19 | Message # 8 |
Space Tourist
Group: Users
United Kingdom
Messages: 26
Status: Offline
| Hey guys i have found this star, could it be a pulsar? or something like that, its spinning really fast...
Edited by Billymario - Thursday, 02.10.2014, 21:21 |
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Billymario | Date: Thursday, 02.10.2014, 21:35 | Message # 9 |
Space Tourist
Group: Users
United Kingdom
Messages: 26
Status: Offline
| also I have found this Terra
Facts about this planet
Class: Warm terra with life Life: Yes (Organic multicellular, marine, terrestrial) Diameter: 7677.448km Mass: 0.21145 ESI: 0.872 (a bit low really) Semimajor axis 0.752 AU Orbital period: 255.648 days Rotation peroid: 1.322 days Oblatness: 0.001967697 Axial tilt: 70 degrees Gravity: 0.583 Atmo Pressure: 0.940 Temp: 304.88 Kelvin (31.73 Degrees Celsius) Greenhouse eff: 30.065 Kelvin Moons: 1 (Golden 1 :D)
Also forgot to add location, here it is: RS 0-7-102703-380-114-8-1254717-1 6
Edited by Billymario - Friday, 03.10.2014, 17:29 |
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HarbingerDawn | Date: Thursday, 02.10.2014, 22:01 | Message # 10 |
Cosmic Curator
Group: Administrators
United States
Messages: 8717
Status: Offline
| Billymario, please include the planet's ID so that other people may visit it.
All forum users, please read this! My SE mods and addons Phenom II X6 1090T 3.2 GHz, 16 GB DDR3 RAM, GTX 970 3584 MB VRAM
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Stargate38 | Date: Thursday, 02.10.2014, 23:05 | Message # 11 |
Astronaut
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United States
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| Pulsars are about the size of Manhattan. That star has a diameter of about 10,000 times that.
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Billymario | Date: Friday, 03.10.2014, 17:30 | Message # 12 |
Space Tourist
Group: Users
United Kingdom
Messages: 26
Status: Offline
| Quote Stargate38 ( ) Pulsars are about the size of Manhattan.
Ah sorry, forgot xD so its just a star with a high rotation rate? (12 hours to rotate)
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pzampella | Date: Friday, 03.10.2014, 17:53 | Message # 13 |
Space Pilot
Group: Users
Venezuela
Messages: 115
Status: Offline
| Billymario, a Unknown type star is just a catalog error. I guess that SE put a random value for some parameters and that way we could explain the extremely high rotation anomaly. Or at least that's my theory!
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Billymario | Date: Saturday, 04.10.2014, 09:23 | Message # 14 |
Space Tourist
Group: Users
United Kingdom
Messages: 26
Status: Offline
| Quote pzampella ( ) Billymario, a Unknown type star is just a catalog error.
Ah ok.
Does anyone know what its rotation speed would be?
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Stargate38 | Date: Saturday, 04.10.2014, 13:48 | Message # 15 |
Astronaut
Group: Users
United States
Messages: 58
Status: Offline
| Rotation speed is pi*diameter/rotation period, so it would be 229429.844 km*pi/43199.99 s=114714922*pi/21599995=16.6846129460829109... km/s. This only works for stars with an oblateness of 0 (which includes HD 17525 A).
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