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A habitable planet around Fliese 13B mostly covered in water. It is smaller than Taleria and it has a huge moon close and another one further away. The close moon prevents the planet getting tidally locked.

GENERAL INFO

  • Created On: Android
  • Game Version: 0.9.802.0

CHARACTERISTICS

  • Radius: 1,017 km
  • Sea Level: 0 m
  • Surface Gravity: 8.7 m/s
  • Rotational Period: 14h
  • Escape Velocity: 4.21 km/s
  • Mass: 1.35E+23kg

Atmosphere

  • Height: 43 km
  • Scale Height: 6,192 m
  • Surface Air Density: 1.154 kg/m3
  • Surface Temperature: 293 K

EQUIRECTANGULAR MAP


13 Comments

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    518 Aludra877

    hi do u know how to do clouds on non terrestial planets? Ur planet is awesome, can u pls sent me the system link when u reply?

    +1 2.2 years ago
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    nice
    i like subnautica

    +2 2.2 years ago
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    17.6k Danny4205

    @FriendlyFin @rockethelper you are both right. I made this planet to be an analog to planet 4546b from subnautica

    2.2 years ago
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    Gorgeous

    +1 2.2 years ago
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    so yeah,

    don’t put moons too close

    +2 2.2 years ago
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    the rings would cast a shadow on some of the planet and it would freeze there and life might not survive because the seasons would be extreme winter on some places

    +1 2.2 years ago
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    4,162 Soilaf

    @FriendlyFin Which, as the only bonus would end up with the planet gaining a Saturnian-esque ring system

    +1 2.2 years ago
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    i also forgot, the tidal forces would be so strong that it’d tear the moon apart (roche limit) and also heat up both objects so much because of friction

    +1 2.2 years ago
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    4,162 Soilaf

    @FriendlyFin If the moon is at least 1/4 of the planet's mass then yes, it could theoretically keep it from getting tidal locked. But that would mean both the moon and the planet orbit around a common barycenter essentially making them a binary planet system with both being mutually tidally-locked to each other, which would create massive tides on this planet, probably resulting in it becoming uninhabitable.

    +1 2.2 years ago
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    closely orbiting natural satellite to prevent tidal locking?
    i don’t think even an average moon could orbit due to the external gravity of fliese 13b.
    haven’t you seen mercury? it has no moons because of the sun’s gravity, and even if it did have a moon, it would travel away or impact mercury for the same reason

    you need a gas giant or brown dwarf or higher to keep this from happening, however you must regard the roche limit, or what i call “a planet’s personal space”

    +1 2.3 years ago
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    2,564 OIac2

    Absolutely dashing

    +1 2.3 years ago
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    4,015 PZLAgencies

    nice

    +1 2.3 years ago
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    480 Paris77

    Danm 👀

    +1 2.3 years ago

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