I call this planet Etcetera RS 8409-2267-3-223-418 4
Some interesting facts: This planet is 0.34° above the temperature limit given. The gravity, atmospheric pressure, and mass are all slightly above the minimum allowed. Water Vapor and CO2 atmosphere
There are so many close calls here, that i am speechless.
" What compromises in precision should scientists make in the name of tradition, sentiment, and good public relations?" None
Edited by Dodecahedron - Saturday, 28.02.2015, 22:10
I call it Teletubbia, because of it's trippy colors . It has a pleasant half-g and zips around the brown dwarf it hugs in around two weeks. Tidally locked. It's in a binary system with a white main sequence.
In the two week period of a year the temperature swings from -14C to just under freezing.
Here's one I've been wanting to show for a while: Grentorj (shown in the first three images), along with Hidisha (shown in the other three images), and the system's star I'll let the screenshots do the explaining.
Do moons count? For example, if we find a tidally heated moon with similar Earth-y characteristics, (like Laythe in KSP) will that count?
Added (23.07.2015, 21:18) --------------------------------------------- Here's one that *barely* makes it. Only a few degrees short. It's an oceanea, with a rather thick atmosphere and chilly air
Mass: .78 Earth Masses Radius: 1 Earth Radius, approximately. ESI: .9 Rotational Period: 17h 49m Gravity: .75g Atmospheric Pressure: 1.0907 atm Temperature: 7.5 Degrees Fahrenheit. -13.8 Degrees Celsius. Orbiting a red bright giant (M5 II) Name: Potato, because I couldn't think of anything more creative. Maybe spudtopia.
KSP Progress Proud user of WINE and Linux, SE working perfectly
Edited by waterlubber - Thursday, 23.07.2015, 21:18