PSR stars anyone been out there ?

Type in galmap the search phrase - PSR ......

And let me know fellow explorers how the heck we are going to get out there [woah]
 
You mean the place that's so far below the galaxy it doesn't fit in the map without searching?
No legit way to get there. Lots of stars are out of reach, we only recently got the ability to reach the M67 cluster, and that is with no way back.
 
Last edited:
You mean the place that's so far below the galaxy it doesn't fit in the map without searching?
No legit way to get there. Lots of stars are out of reach, we only recently got the ability to reach the M67 cluster, and that is with no way back.

Even with searching they goto the planet and within a split second they vanish, yeah thats them
 
Globular clusters are, in effect, little mini-galaxies that orbit our galaxy; most of them are found in a "halo" that extends far above and below the galactic disc.

Globular clusters are not in the game (yet). I am surprised some globular cluster stars have apparently been added.
 
Nice video, but imho it looks a bit like a bugged area like a zone where we are not meant to be at all. How can you have the entire galaxy fixed in the background like that, it's a bit of a nonsense isn't it

This area - as mentioned by the OP - exists ingame, but its not reachable. I found this video - which was made in beta and not on the live servers - yesterday, so i thought its good to share, because its related to the topic ;). But yeah, its in fact nonsense because we cant actually get there.
 
You can also search for LGM-1, which is the Bell-Burnell pulsar discovered in the sixties. LGM stands for "little green men" as scientists first thought the emitted radiowave signal from outer space was artificial. The pulsar's 'true' denomination is PSR J1921+2153 or PSR B1919+21 but I'm not sure the GalMap will locate it this way.
 
You can also search for LGM-1, which is the Bell-Burnell pulsar discovered in the sixties. LGM stands for "little green men" as scientists first thought the emitted radiowave signal from outer space was artificial. The pulsar's 'true' denomination is PSR J1921+2153 or PSR B1919+21 but I'm not sure the GalMap will locate it this way.

It won't. Thanks for mentioning it, I will add it to my Big List o' Pulsars.
 
Back
Top Bottom