NGC 6188 Sector LC-V c2-28 (Morgan's Rock / NGC 6188) [#7783319541250]
Loyaliteit:
Onafhankelijk
Regering:
Anarchie
Economie:
Extraction
Veiligheid:
Anarchy
Bewoners:
26.515
Beherende factie:
The Consortium
(ALIAS\STATE\Public Holiday)
This system is located at:
1706.1875
/ -87.625
/ 4057.15625
Galactische coordinaten:
R: 4.402,189 / l: 337,191 / b: -1,141
Equatoriale coordinaten:
Correcte klim: 16h 41m 17,297s /
Afwijking: -48° 6'59,033''
Reserve niveau: Perfect
Bewoonbare zone:
Metal-rich body (2 to 7 ls), Earth-like world (111 to 167 ls), Water world (91 to 353 ls), Ammonia world (231 to 628 ls), Terraformable (87 to 173 ls)
Geschatte waarde: 278.458 cr
This system was visited for the first time on EDSM by Majkl.
Het Galactisch Cartografie Project heeft het Morgan's Rock / NGC 6188 genoemd.
2314 ships passed through NGC 6188 Sector LC-V c2-28 space, including 4 ships in the last 7 days.
1 ship passed through NGC 6188 Sector LC-V c2-28 space in the last 24 hours.
Breakdown:
Krait Phantom - 1
The Consortium (Public Holiday) | 90,600 % | ||
Interstellar Mining Corp (None) | 9,400 % |
Astrophotography by by CMDR Sahb
Morgan's Rock is an asteroid base inside the small NGC 6188 nebula. It is controlled by the Interstellar Mining Corporation, with 26,000 staff on site. All concourse and ship services are available except for outfitting and a shipyard. This is the closest station to Hawking's Gap and the last stop for those going to Eta Carina Nebula 4000ly away. The identity of the station's namesake, 'Morgan,' is unknown.
Reference: Link
NGC 6188 is an emission nebula in the southern constellation Ara, located about four thousand light years coreward of Sol. It also has reflection nebulosity due to the associated open cluster, NGC 6193. It is an active, star forming nebula, with some recently formed stars that are only a few million years in age. These stars continue to sculpt the nebula and contribute to the glow with intense solar ultraviolet radiation. The recent star formation was probably triggered by supernova explosions from previous generations of massive stars within.
Astrophotography by CMDR IkerzTheMage