Hypoe Bluae RP-M d8-897 (White, Blue, Black) [#30831011649099]

Souřadnice

This system is located at: -746.21875 / -207.21875 / 32981.1875

Galaktické souřadnice R: 32 990,279 / l: 1,296 / b: -0,360
Rovníkové koordináty: Stoupání 17h 50m 4,288s / Deklinace: -28° 0'46,255''


Obyvatelná zóna:
Metal-rich body (3 to 84 ls), Earth-like world (1 315 to 1 972 ls), Water world (1 078 to 4 176 ls), Ammonia world (2 728 to 7 423 ls), Terraformable (1 024 to 2 043 ls)

Předpokládaná hodnota: 561 681 CR

Záznam letu

This system was visited for the first time on EDSM by Aurum_32 on 18. 5. 2019 15:18:21.

It was named by the Galactic Mapping Project with the name of: White, Blue, Black

29 ships passed through Hypoe Bluae RP-M d8-897 space, including 0 ship in the last 7 days.

0 ship passed through Hypoe Bluae RP-M d8-897 space in the last 24 hours.

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The sixth planet of this system is an Earth-Like World that has a -85º axial tilt, almost -90º. This kind of planet features unique day-night and seasonal cycles.

During the solstices:

  • The sun is directly overhead one of the poles. And the equator sees a continuous sunset (or sunrise), with the sun being stationary.

During the equinoxes:

  • The equator sees half day, half night, with the sun directly overhead at noon. The poles see a continuous sunset (or sunrise), with the sun moving 360 degrees around the horizon.

In between the solstices and equinoxes:

  • At the poles, just after equinox the sun either moves below the horizon or starts circling further above the horizon, until it reaches directly overhead at solstice.

  • At the equator, the sun, which was stationary at solstice, starts to make progressively larger circles (dipping below the horizon half the time). The circle expands moving progressively along the sky (crossing the midpoint at equinox). Then begins contracting on the other side after the solstice, until it reaches the other end of the sky at the next solstice and is stationary that day.

In summary:

  • Both poles have half a year of daytime and half of nighttime. However, during solstices the sun is directly overhead one of the poles while there is a full night at the other, unlike in Earth, in which the maximum elevation of the sun at the poles is ±23.4° (the Earth's axial tilt).

  • At the equator, days always last for a rotation of the planet (0.9 Earth days), but the elevation of the sun changes from just over the horizon during solstices to being overhead at noon during equinoxes.

This planet presents a mystery to planetologists and climatologists, as it is sure that its climate is as unique as its cycles. From space, we can see that its poles have large ice caps while the equator is full of water and life, implying that the equator is hotter than the poles.

The name of the planet makes reference to the planet looking like a white-blue-black tricolor flag during solstices.

This system was a winning entry in the 3307 Tourist Beacon Contest. Link.

Reference: Link