Pha Scroi GS-I d10-64 (Minerva's Pyrope) [#2207521362651]

Coordinaten

This system is located at: -9453.84375 / 2207.25 / 24186.96875

Galactische coordinaten: R: 26.062,551 / l: 21,349 / b: 4,858
Equatoriale coordinaten: Correcte klim: 18h 12m 41,685s / Afwijking: -8° 0'55,727''


Bewoonbare zone:
Metal-rich body (67 to 207 ls), Earth-like world (3.266 to 4.899 ls), Water world (2.678 to 10.372 ls), Ammonia world (6.777 to 18.440 ls), Terraformable (2.544 to 5.076 ls)

Geschatte waarde: 554.425 cr

Verkeersrapport

This system was visited for the first time on EDSM by Rory Clague.

Het Galactisch Cartografie Project heeft het Minerva's Pyrope genoemd.

22 ships passed through Pha Scroi GS-I d10-64 space, including 0 ship in the last 7 days.

0 ship passed through Pha Scroi GS-I d10-64 space in the last 24 hours.

This J-type carbon star (rich in diatomic carbon and cyanogen containing carbon-13) was discovered in the final weeks of the Minerva-Centaurus Expedition. C-J stars are among the rarest stars in the galaxy, constituting only 10-15% of all carbon stars. They are typically dimmer than N-type carbon stars, and this particular specimen is among the coldest (2703 K) and least luminous (0.7569) C-J stars in the galaxy and at the time of its discovery held the records for these parameters. The star's dimness combined with its carbon-rich corona have created a sooty red glow visible around the system, illuminating an ancient Earth-like world. The presence of an Earth-like world in this environment would be of special interest to astrobiologists interested in the carbon-13 enriched biochemistry of the native flora and fauna. The immense age of the system (12.937 Ga) may also be of interest to researchers studying the evolution of Earth-like planets late in the life of stars with near-solar masses (0.92). The presence of an ELW in this rare star type is certainly a welcome surprise to travellers in the Far 3kpc Arm.

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Evidence of uniqueness/significance: Faintest C-J star, Coldest C-J star, Record as of 18 March 2018, Contains an Earth-like world.

Reference : LINK