Yay me (yeah, sorta proud of myself) - found an undiscovered star 260K+ Ls out from entry by eyeballing the skies ^.^ (yea, parallax glint in corner of eye).
Can you name the system please.![]()
Yay me (yeah, sorta proud of myself) - found an undiscovered star 260K+ Ls out from entry by eyeballing the skies ^.^ (yea, parallax glint in corner of eye).
i did something similar in Danu, though it wasn't quite as far out (somewhere around 200k LS i think) spent a good 10 minutes burning out there and when i turned in the data i only got 500 credits, ah well you win some you lose some.Hmm, DP Draconis, I think.
Has anyone had any luck finding Belts or Station/Outposts yet?
I have found several systems which have an economy type, but no stations that I can discover - most odd.
Can anyone recommend a good technique for finding planets in a newly explored system?
I just end up with the sun at the jump point and cannot for the life of me find the elusive moving dot against the starry mass ...
Can anyone recommend a good technique for finding planets in a newly explored system?
I haven't found anything using the D-scanner. Perhaps I don't know how to use it. Does it have a small range?
Are there planets in all systems?
what about space stations?
I'm sure Michael said in another thread that systems with economies but no stations were buggy. I think you should ticket the ones you've found.
This correct.
Michael
If there is an economy/population but no space station then it's a buggy system and should be ticketed:
Secondary stars also often have a distinctly different look from the backgrounds stars, with a bigger halo and more saturated colors, which also helps spotting them. And often the orbits are already known and displayed during supercruise.
Fly away from the star at full speed, perhaps to a distance of about 2,000 Ls, turn around and fly towards the star again. While you do that keep your head on a swivel, look around and check for bright white dots that start to move in front of the star background when you reach higher speeds (2c and more).
Once you've discovered and scanned the first planet and its orbit you very likely know the ecliptic plane of the system. Most of the other planets will be on that same plane around the star and you can check for moving dots a little more focused. Don't be too sure about that, though. Some planets will have an inclined orbit (caught rogue bodies from deep space, for example). They might even orbit perpendicular to the ecliptic plane of the other planets.
Also keep in mind that planets will only appear to be very bright when you look at the side of the planet that faces the star. If you approach them from behind they will be darker and harder to spot, so perform several passes from different sides of the star.
Oh, and on an unrealistic note: if you for example discovered a planet called DP Draconis 4 and a planet DP Draconis 6, then you can be sure that there is a DP Dracons 5 between those two orbits somwhere that you've missed. Well, it's not that unrealistic, because orbit analysis could show that there must be another body affecting the other two, but it's still a very good hint.![]()
The advanced discovery scanner should pick up every celestial body in a system. I have had it pick them up 40,000+ Ls from my location.. I will have to give it a look see if I don't already have the data in my navigation database.