Hell's Blast Furnace: HIP 585 2

I came across this rather incredible planet on my most recent expedition:

Screenshot_0034.jpg

Basic stats:
  • Surface Temp: 7,761 K
  • Surface Pressure: 22,757,458 atmos
  • Atmosphere: 98.2 Silicates; 1.5% Iron; 0.3% Water
  • Note that the planet is tidally locked with the star, despite being in a binary orbit with planet 3

I was complaining in another thread that the renderer didn't do it justice, but looking more closely, I don't think I really understood what I was looking at. I'm still not certain:

At first glance, the planet appears to be yellow in coloration, with blotches of a darker yellow, and 50%+ cloud cover in the form of slate grey clouds with occasional high white cirrus above.
Screenshot_0037.jpg

Looking closer at the "land", it became apparent that either this land was unusually low resolution, or that it was in fact a second cloud layer below.

Screenshot_0039.jpg

It became more apparent that the yellow is a second cloud layer when I looked closely at one of the volcanoes:

Screenshot_0041.jpg

Note that although the flanks of the mountain are visible at the edge of the plume, they are partially obscured by the second layer.

In fact, this image is probably the clearest one I have of the surface, with mountains partially visible through a gap in the grey cloud layer:

Screenshot_0035.jpg


In Summary:
With a surface pressure of over 341 million pounds per square inch, and a temperature found in the lower Chromosphere of Sol, HIP 585 2 is a difficult planet to comprehend. It's atmosphere consists of an upper cirrus layer of water vapor, followed by a mid layer of silicate (blown glass vapor). A lower layer of atmosphere is also mostly silicate, but flavored with a small amount of iron vapor. The nature of the surface is unknown, but is unlikely to contain a hydrosphere of any sort, even iron, due to the immense pressures. In fact, any carbonaceous rocks found in the upper layers of the surface could spontaneously form diamonds without the deep crustal pressures and temperatures needed on ELWs.

Basically, don't ever try to land here. Even for the diamonds as big as mountains.
 
No I don't want it. I would actually be very disappointed if it ever became possible to land on this planet without overheating and being crushed into a pancake.

PS, how do I attach full res pics? I uploaded full-res jpgs, but they're tiny on my post...
 
No I don't want it. I would actually be very disappointed if it ever became possible to land on this planet without overheating and being crushed into a pancake.

What? Not even in the Scarab Mk II, with additional roll bars and triple-glased canopy? Awwww....
 
PS, how do I attach full res pics? I uploaded full-res jpgs, but they're tiny on my post...

Simply use Photo bucket and insert the photo as a direct link (on the right side of the pic you want to link) if you want it in the page

Screenshot_0094_zpshmn5c9vj.png


Fly safe and take high res pics
 
Last edited:
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the tidally locked bit of the planet actually refers to it's binary partner.

That's what I originally thought, but the orbital period is 5 days, but the rotational period is 20 days. Yet it says it's tidally locked. I haven't done the math to figure the orbital period of the binary planets around the star, but 20 days sounds about right for such a warm planet.

So, how I'm interpreting that is that the orbital period of the planet around its binary partner is 5 days, and the pair orbit the star in 20 days, and the planet is tidally locked to the star. I'd guess that the tidal forces of such a large star so close are even greater than that of a mars-sized planet in close orbit.
 
Back
Top Bottom