He could've fallen silent because someone is close.
Ah. Fair enough.
Maybe he meant the Sap 8 Core Containers then.
The old missions (since they haven't been seen for a while?) said that "we believe are being used to store data". Maybe the data, once acquired, will lead there.
He could've fallen silent because someone is close.
Having been the one who wrote the article ... I'd say don't look for clues in it. I deliberately kept the article as generic as possible because that's the best strategy for getting them to actually publish.
The number one reason I submitted was to shine a light on Turkwinif's achievement.
... The number two reason was to see if "Formidine Rift" was something we in the galaxy are supposed to know about. Kahina had to break into a database to get info on the Rift. This confirms that the concept of the Rift is well known throughout the galaxy. It's just the location and whatever the old lady saw that are classified.
And a very good post it is, you see it's this bit "to arrive at Rho Cassiopeiae. The class F hypergiant star is notable for being visible to the naked eye from Earth and being positioned in a particularly difficult to reach area of what explorers refer to as the "Formidine Rift.""
you see if this was wrong or a contradiction to what FD have in plan it would not have made it onto the Galnet, going by what MB said about submissions to Galnet.
Don't know if that's really all the way through the Formidine but I think i'll see if I can get to your end point from Virph sector on the New Outer Arm which is only 6000 lyr's from there which is nearly next door in these parts.
Careful you don't fall into an erroneous assumption. The text of the GalNet article does not necessarily confirm that the Formidine Rift is where we think it is. It only confirms that we (explorers) call the area around Rho Cassiopeiae the Formidine Rift. It could actually be on the other side of the galaxy and the article still wouldn't be false.
Does anyone know if Rho Cass is the only "real" star in that region? Or maybe the only named one?
Does anyone know if Rho Cass is the only "real" star in that region? Or maybe the only named one?
Well, that region should also contain the Cas - A remnant/progenitor core, but I could not find it**.
I scanned the neutron stars in the region where it should be but nothing special there. Or I missed it.
It fitted the clues rather nicely, in particular to the "most enlightening / Cambridge visit / Core of the problem / 7 veils*" clues(?)
And contrary to the Tycho remnant, there should be some neutron star left (as it has been observed IRL).
I have yet to find a better fit for the clues.
*as Cas - A was discovered by radio-astronomy by a Cambridge group in 1947, Cas - A being the brightest
radio source out of the the solar system.
**Finding neutron stars in such sparse and large area is really tricky, and it is quite possible that I missed it
even with a triple survey of the area.
Well, that region should also contain the Cas - A remnant/progenitor core, but I could not find it**.
I scanned the neutron stars in the region where it should be but nothing special there. Or I missed it.
It fitted the clues rather nicely, in particular to the "most enlightening / Cambridge visit / Core of the problem / 7 veils*" clues(?)
Interesting!
Although there wouldn't be much chance for life.
taken from Wikipedia on Cas A
The expansion shell has a temperature of around 50 million degrees Fahrenheit (30 megakelvins), and is expanding at 4000−6000 km/s
@ LuckyLuke : Do you plan to do a Survey over there ?
It would be good to have an other pair of eyeballs to investigate this on-site.
He could've fallen silent because someone is close.
PS: Anyone have noticed there are stars absurdly outside the galaxy? for example: CSI+40-16027 (lots of KLy over the plane)