The Galactic Mapping Project & Historical Archive of Exploration

Just visited this system Cheae Euq WY-H c23-0 and on the first moon of the primary I found this And was wondering If it could be considered a POI. Maybe name it the Witches Brew
PIC 2.jpg
PIC 1.jpg
PIC 3 Landed.jpg
PIC 4 Ejectile matter.jpg
PIC 5 Ejectile matter.jpg
PIC 6 Ejectile matter.jpg
 
Last edited:
They're fun to find, but there are 1000s of known 2 ELW systems at this point. If they were dual, ringed, binary....
Binary you say? ... And here I was thinking that this wouldn't be notable enough, lol!
Found one in the core, no idea if I could manage to pull up the system, name again^^
 
My second submision. Again not sure whether it even qualifies. If not, no worries.
Name:Fogg's Rooftop Lab
Game map search ref:EDSM: Oushairgh DF-R d4-14 [#489786183723]
Description:The system has a neutron star (arrival star) and a red dwarf. The red dwarf is orbited by nine planets (two of which have a singel moon each). The nine planets are all terraformable, five of them are High Metal Content Bodies and the other four are Water Worlds. I discovered it on May 23rd, 2019.
There are no visual striking features otherwise except the view on the galaxy, since the system is about 3,500 lys above the galactic plane (and roughly 1,000 lys above the nebula Cat's Perch, an existing EDSM POI).
Regarding the name: "Martyn J. Fogg (born 3 July 1960) is a British physicist and geologist, an expert on terraforming." Source: Wikipedia
Screenshot reference:
132759
 
Does anyone know the record for how many stars an earthlike and waterworld have been found orbiting? I've got an ABCD earthlike and an ABCD waterworld here (in different orbits too, not orbiting eachother).
 
Does anyone know the record for how many stars an earthlike and waterworld have been found orbiting? I've got an ABCD earthlike and an ABCD waterworld here (in different orbits too, not orbiting eachother).

This isn't an exhaustive answer, but some quick numbers:

Out of 165,910 ELWs on record:

ELWs orbiting "ABCD" (or more) stars, containing that specific partial string (but not "BCDE", for instance) etc: 219

ELWs orbiting "BCDE"+ is 53

ELWs orbiting "ABCDE"+ is 23

ELWs orbiting "ABCDEF"+ is 0.

For a more complete answer I'd have to script something up, pattern matching against all ELWs. But in any case, it looks like orbiting 4+ stars at once is still reasonably rare for ELWs.
 
For a more complete answer I'd have to script something up, pattern matching against all ELWs. But in any case, it looks like orbiting 4+ stars at once is still reasonably rare for ELWs.

No need, what you' ve provided here is great, thanks! So it's fairly rare then (a waterworld AND ELW in the same system that are both ABCD must be even rarer). When I get to a station (whenever that'll be) and submit it I'll post it on this thread.
 
No need, what you' ve provided here is great, thanks! So it's fairly rare then (a waterworld AND ELW in the same system that are both ABCD must be even rarer). When I get to a station (whenever that'll be) and submit it I'll post it on this thread.

Yes, I myself found an ABCD ELW and it was accepted, and ELW+WW in one system is even rare, so go ahead and post.
 
Yes, I myself found an ABCD ELW and it was accepted, and ELW+WW in one system is even rare, so go ahead and post.
An ELW+WW combo is only rare if you mean that the water world is the moon of the ELW. Otherwise, plenty of ELW-bearing systems have separate water worlds.
That said, as I noted in my list earlier in this thread, ELWs co-orbiting four stars are quite rare. So, congrats to malenfant on your find!
 
An ELW+WW combo is only rare if you mean that the water world is the moon of the ELW. Otherwise, plenty of ELW-bearing systems have separate water worlds.
That said, as I noted in my list earlier in this thread, ELWs co-orbiting four stars are quite rare. So, congrats to malenfant on your find!

I meant ELW+WW that both orbit 4+ stars
 
What's the opinion on notable stellar phenomenon (Lagrange clouds etc)?

These seem to be exceptionally rare. Since the ED release that included them, I've only found one - and I've probably done at least 2000 jumps since then (all the way to Beagle Point, now half the way around the Outer Arm). Certainly much rarer than even things like spectacularly ringed ELWs, of which I've discovered at least a couple recently.
 
What's the opinion on notable stellar phenomenon (Lagrange clouds etc)?

These seem to be exceptionally rare. Since the ED release that included them, I've only found one - and I've probably done at least 2000 jumps since then (all the way to Beagle Point, now half the way around the Outer Arm). Certainly much rarer than even things like spectacularly ringed ELWs, of which I've discovered at least a couple recently.

Phenomenas are quite rare but still not enough to note each and every of them. Most of them are located in nebulas or high mass systems though there are some exceptions. If you found smth outstanding or unique like pollonium crystals (I know they are not a stellar phenomenon, just as an instance) or mollusks habitat, it will likly get accepted. Other than that, well you can try anyways but I feel it won't. Btw, EDSM has its own modified codex so you can find biospots and phenomena without using GMP
 
Back
Top Bottom