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Quick facts:
Clio
Clio : Stanton 4b
Type
Moon
Classification
Planetary Moon
Affiliation
Habitable
No
Satellites
1
Sensors
Danger
4/10
Economy
4/10
Population
1/10
Physical characteristics
Sidereal day
3 hours and 15 minutes

Clio is a moon orbiting microTech. It is named after the ancient Greek muse of history to supposedly remind those gazing upon the moon from microTech to remember that 'their work stands on those who came before them.'

Clio's defining feature is a series of liquid oceans covering much of its surface. Snowy mountains, reminiscent of the famous microTech slopes, cover the other half of the surface, with unique and distinctly shaped icebergs meshing the difference. Regions with mountains and valleys that slide abruptly into the ocean at the coast and wide fields of white snow make this moon a picturesque destination. The hazy pink and green sky and jade oceans give this moon an alien feel, unmatched by anything else in the Stanton system.[1]

Atmosphere

Clio is too cold to support surface activity without the use of environmental survival gear. However, pressure suits can replenish their supplies by extracting oxygen from the atmosphere.

Atmospheric Overview [2]
Surface pressure 0.62 atm
Height 33,700 m
QT altitude 2,135 m
Surface temperature Max -32 °C
Min -77 °C
Atmospheric Composition
Chemical Formula Full Name Amount
N Nitrogen 99.2%
O2 Molecular Oxygen 0.8%

Locations

Surface outposts

Artificial satellites

A Comm Array covering Arial's airspace.

Trivia

In Greek mythology, Clio is the muse of history, or in a few mythological accounts, the muse of lyre playing.  Clio

References

  1. Traveler's Guide to the Galaxy: Calliope, Clio, and Euterpe. Transmission - Comm-Link. Retrieved 2020-03-22
  2. Cornerstone: Planetary Survey. Retrieved 2023-05-03.
Locations in the