Universal Cartographics Galactic Record Breakers

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WATER WORLD WITH THE HIGHEST SURFACE PRESSURE
Col 285 Sector RU-O d6-30 7 WITH A PRESSURE OF 3,916.53 ATMOSPHERES CMDR Natalie Portman

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HEAVIEST CLASS III GAS GIANT
Col 285 Sector RU-O d6-30 11 WITH 2,784.6396 EARTH MASSES CMDR Natalie Portman

CLASS III GAS GIANT WITH THE MOST MOONS
Col 285 Sector RU-O d6-30 11 WITH 10 MOONS CMDR Natalie Portman

HEAVIEST SINGLE RING
Col 285 Sector RU-O d6-30 11 WITH A MASS OF 4,255,170,428,928 MT CMDR Natalie Portman


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OLDEST Y-TYPE STAR
Col 285 Sector RU-O d6-30 10 AT 1,950 MILLION YEARS CMDR Natalie Portman

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LARGEST CLASS I GAS GIANT
Col 285 Sector KC-M b23-1 2 WITH A RADIUS OF 76,951Km CMDR Natalie Portman

HEAVIEST CLASS I GAS GIANT
Col 285 Sector KC-M b23-1 2 WITH 584.1143 EARTH MASSES CMDR Natalie Portman

WATER WORLD WITH THE HIGHEST SURFACE PRESSURE
Col 285 Sector RU-O d6-30 7 WITH A PRESSURE OF 3,916.53 ATMOSPHERES CMDR Natalie Portman

HEAVIEST CLASS III GAS GIANT
Col 285 Sector RU-O d6-30 11 WITH 2,784.6396 EARTH MASSES CMDR Natalie Portman

CLASS III GAS GIANT WITH THE MOST MOONS
Col 285 Sector RU-O d6-30 11 WITH 10 MOONS CMDR Natalie Portman

HEAVIEST SINGLE RING
Col 285 Sector RU-O d6-30 11 WITH A MASS OF 4,255,170,428,928 MT CMDR Natalie Portman

OLDEST Y-TYPE STAR
Col 285 Sector RU-O d6-30 10 AT 1,950 MILLION YEARS CMDR Natalie Portman

ADDED to the books

YOUNGEST T-TAURI STAR SIFI IX-S B31-6 WITH 5 MILLION YEARS

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ICY PLANET WITH THE MOST MOONS SIFI EB-F D11-31 AB 4 WITH 9 MOONS

HEAVIEST ICY PLANET
SIFI EB-F D11-31 AB 4 178.0175 EARTH MASSES

LARGEST ICY PLANET
SIFI EB-F D11-31 AB 4 WITH A RADIUS OF 25,812 KM

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YOUNGEST T-TAURI STAR
SIFI UP-M C21-3 A WITH 0 MILLION YEARS
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Can I have largest moon around a Type 3 gas giant that also has a water world in the system plus a neutron star within 2,000 ly?
 
More record claims from me.

SMALLEST WOLF-RAYET STAR
WR 136 with a solar radius of 3.5982 - CMDR Zenith Ddraiglas

HEAVIEST WOLF-RAYET STAR
WR 136 with 1.9531 solar masses - CMDR Zenith Ddraiglas

COLDEST WOLF-RAYET STAR
WR 136 with a surface temperature of 39,412K- CMDR Zenith Ddraiglas

OLDEST WOLF-RAYET STAR
WR 136 at 9,672 million years - CMDR Zenith Ddraiglas

WOLF-RAYET STAR WITH THE MOST BODIES
WR 136 with 36 bodies - CMDR Zenith Ddraiglas

Screenshot_0197.pngScreenshot_0198.pngScreenshot_0199.pngScreenshot_0200.pngScreenshot_0201.png
 
Well i got one that i think might be worth entering. Single star system with the most planetary bodies (not counting moons) ie planets and gas giants.

COL 359 SECTOR RP-M B9-4 ------------> 19 planets, oddly enough all these planets and only 2 moons. System was also incredibly packed with 10 planets within 500 ls from the star, and furthest planet from the star being at 3.5k ls and an orbital period of 13.191,6 days.

http://postimg.org/image/5qi2bkxav/


http://postimg.org/image/arpgcy4rb/


http://postimg.org/image/8lv5ig1av/


http://postimg.org/image/nf9t3791z/



Sorry i posted the photos like this but i have no idea how you guys are uploading your photos like that. My screenshots were saved in .bmp format.
 
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Old:
Oldest Black Hole - DROJEAE AA-A H55 A - at 12,694 million years - Nutter

New:
Oldest Black Hole - GRU PHIO AA-A H74 A - at 13,163 million years - CMDR Darius Torkalar

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WOLF-RAYET STAR WITH THE MOST BODIES
WR 136 with 36 bodies - CMDR Zenith Ddraiglas

Looking at your pic's the bodies are orbiting both stars, so should I include this? I hadn't thought about this situation when I wrote the records, I think it should count as WR 136 is the main star, the current record is not good and there are another 400 billion stars so it will be beaten anyway!:)
what do you guys think?
 
Looking at your pic's the bodies are orbiting both stars, so should I include this? I hadn't thought about this situation when I wrote the records, I think it should count as WR 136 is the main star, the current record is not good and there are another 400 billion stars so it will be beaten anyway!:)
what do you guys think?

Maybe make the record title more specific, like "Single star system with a Wolf-Rayet having the most bodies". But i suppose you could count it since techincaly those objects are orbitting around both stars and not one or the other.
 
I did wonder if it would count, but I didn't see anything definitively saying that it wouldn't.
So yeah, I took a punt. If you allow it, great, If not, then fair enough. :cool:
 
Think this could be a new one - not sure whether to categorise it as Class I, or just a generic gas giant measurement:

Screenshot_0088.jpg

COLDEST (CLASS I) GAS GIANT: COL285 SECTOR SD-P A49-2 1: 12K
 
Updated book with latest records!
Well i got one that i think might be worth entering. Single star system with the most planetary bodies (not counting moons) ie planets and gas giants.

COL 359 SECTOR RP-M B9-4 ------------> 19 planets, oddly enough all these planets and only 2 moons. System was also incredibly packed with 10 planets within 500 ls from the star, and furthest planet from the star being at 3.5k ls and an orbital period of 13.191,6 days.

http://postimg.org/image/5qi2bkxav/


http://postimg.org/image/arpgcy4rb/


http://postimg.org/image/8lv5ig1av/


http://postimg.org/image/nf9t3791z/



Sorry i posted the photos like this but i have no idea how you guys are uploading your photos like that. My screenshots were saved in .bmp format.
Sorry but we don't have a record for that yet, hoping to do some work on it this weekend.
Actually I just remembered one of the reasons why we don't have that record, check pics from zenith's entry are those moon or planets around those dwarf stars, starts to get complicated when you start defining what is what
Maybe make the record title more specific, like "Single star system with a Wolf-Rayet having the most bodies". But i suppose you could count it since techincaly those objects are orbitting around both stars and not one or the other.
you see, too complicated :)
 
Think this could be a new one - not sure whether to categorise it as Class I, or just a generic gas giant measurement:

COLDEST (CLASS I) GAS GIANT: COL285 SECTOR SD-P A49-2 1: 12K

It would count for both if I had hadn't forgotten to write the entry hottest/coldest for all the gas giant:eek:, will be adding them this weekend!:D
 
Updated book with latest records!

Sorry but we don't have a record for that yet, hoping to do some work on it this weekend.
Actually I just remembered one of the reasons why we don't have that record, check pics from zenith's entry are those moon or planets around those dwarf stars, starts to get complicated when you start defining what is what
you see, too complicated :)

Understandable, seeing as there are countless thousands of different variations for these types of things. Like in mine where for example it could be a Single Star System with the most planetary bodies counting only actual planets and gas giants (not counting moons or other dwarf stars that are in the system because its "Single Star system") while there could also be another for Single Star System with the most astronomical objects ie everything from asteroids to realy big gas giants and black holes, but again not counting other dwarf stars in the system because it would be under the Single Star System category. Record titles could be exclusivist to something like planetary bodies only (planets/gas giants) or generalised to include everything.

Damn my head hurts just thinking about it, can't realy say i envy your role in figuring this stuff out xD Well i checked the book before submitting my entry and didnt see a category for it either, figured i'd give it shot and maybe even be one of the few that are the first to be entered in a brand new record title, which in itself is a record xD Lemme know if you figure it out :)

Edit: Oh i think i may have solved your "moon or planet around dwarf stars" issue. I noticed that all dwarf stars except Y class dwarfs show up on the system map as stars. Like you know, the main body and then a straight horizontal line to the bodies that orbit it. However Y class dwarfs will ALWAYS show as one of the bodies that orbits the star it's attached too just like any planet, linked to the star via the horizontal line. That could mean that you could either classify them as "hot gas giants", not quite stars but not quite gas giants either, and so still qualifiy for entries in "Single Star System" or "Most planetary bodies around a star" and such categories. And that would make the orbital bodies that orbit around Y class dwarfs to be moons, not planets.
 
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Possible youngest T Tauri star
...
lol I see this age record was just set yesterday, sorry guy but you can keep the other 3 records. If this is the new record my CMDR's name is Killomend.
Challenge accepted, now I want it back again:
YOUNGEST T-TAURI STAR
HIP 40430 A 16
1 MILLION YEARS
WHOCARES

Edit: Already topped to 0 Million years...

And while I am at it:
LIGHTEST CLASS III GAS GIANT
HIP 63422 10
4.9693 EARTH MASSES
WHOCARES
hip63422_10__lightest_gg3.jpg
SMALLEST CLASS III GAS GIANT
HIP 45369 AB 5
18,887 KM
WHOCARES
hip45369_ab5__smallest_gg3.jpg

Edit:
Almost missed this one from Epsilon Centauri:
OLDEST T-TAURI STAR
EPSILON CENTAURI 9
83 MILLION YEARS
WHOCARES
eps_cent_9__old_TT.jpg
 
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Y-TYPE STAR:
IC 2602 SECTOR YU-Y d168 1
SMALLEST 0.0511 SOLAR RADIUS
LIGHTEST 0.0078 SOLAR MASSES
COLDEST 289 K
ic_yuy_d168_1__ystar.jpg

IC 2602 SECTOR YU-Y d68 4
OLDEST: 7,233 MILLION YEARS
ic_yuy_d68_4__ystar.jpg
WHOCARES

Edit: Not sure whether this one qualifies:
Y-TYPE STAR WITH THE MOST BODIES
HIP 54181 A 8
8 BODIES
WHOCARES
hip54181a8__8bodies.jpg


Might have a few more for tomorrow ;)
 
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Have a strange issue here:

For oldest neutron star your record book says 16,000 million yrs. That's older than the observable universe at 13.8bn. Surely that can't be right.
 
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