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Planet

From the Star Citizen Wiki, the fidelity™ encyclopedia
Revision as of 17:19, 10 December 2019 by Alistair3149 (talk | contribs) (Terrestrial Planets: fixed link)
The planet of Terra

Planets ( Xi'an: tèÞ(teth) (Proper); ) are astronomical bodies which are gravitationally bound to the barycenter of a (star) system. They are usually surrounded by natural objects of smaller size (called moons), natural (asteroids, comets) and artificial space debris which can form visible planetary rings. If two planets surrounding each other [1] and sharing the same barycenter, they are commonly called a binary planet.

They are the birthplaces of all known civilizations, provide most materials needed for survival, and are centers of research, culture, and development. Each planet is unique, from the massively terraformed ArcCorp to the aquatic haven of Cassel.

Origin

Planets, moons, and stars are formed in accreditation discs. Space debris, which is leftover of this process can be ejected extremely far away from the system's barycenter (i.e. Oort Cloud). Also, planets could be ejected from a star system are then called "Rogue planets".

Classification

The ARK Starmap shows currently (as of February 2019) 21 different planet 'types', including 324 planets. Over the development, the types of some planets have changed.[2] There is currently no indicator known on which basis these types for certain planets were chosen. The terms used by the Starmap for planets are not mutually exclusive, but for some reason, every planet has only one type. An example is Kampos: A super-earth and ocean planet, but it is only listed as a Super-Earth on the Starmap.[3]

The ARK Starmap classification also includes Dwarf and protoplanets, even if they can have the size of an asteroid.

The listed types can refer to the mass, composition and unique characteristics of the planet. Some types are 'counterparts'. While sharing a common feature, they differ in other aspects. Gas Dwarfs and Gas Giants are gas planets while they are differentiated by mass. However, there is no type called Gas planet.

There are anomalies in the amount and cumulation of planets per system, i.e. Gurzil and Cathcart having no planets, while Kilian has 14 planets.

List of Planet Types According to the Starmap

In alphabetical order:

Type Amount (Starmap, 2019) [4]
Artifical planet 1
Carbon planet 2
Chthonian planet 7
Coreless planet 7
Desert planet 8
Dwarf planet 20
Evaporating planet 1
Gas Dwarf 9
Gas Giant 39
Ice planet 11
Ice Giant 17
Iron planet 10
Lava planet 8
Mesoplanet 14
Ocean planet 10
Protoplanet 23
Puffy planet 5
Rogue planet 1
Smog planet 22
Super-Earth 16
Super Jupiter 3
Terrestrial Rocky 90
Sum 324
Other (Unclassified) 14
incl. Fictional planets (4)
incl. Krell System (9)
incl. RyiXy’an (1)
338

Types

The Starmap doesn't define what the planet 'types' exactly are. The following definitions are based on the assumption that the terms are self-descriptive and referring to their 'real-life' equivalents.

The presence of certain elements (gases constitute the atmosphere), the planet's density, an existing core (magnetosphere), the surface temperature on a planet are significant factors for the development of specific features. A carbon planet, for example, would never have large amounts of water on its surface, because supplied oxygen would instantly react with the carbon.

Gas Planets

The abundance of volatile elements (gases, and 'ices'), elements with low boiling points (i.e. helium, hydrogen). Gas planets, even if they a larger core then terrestrials showing a low density. It is the result of the high gravity of such objects. In the early phase of planet-forming, more massive planetary bodies pulling large amounts of gases into their atmosphere.

  • Gas Dwarf, a gas planet with a total radius between 1.7 and 3.9 Earth radii
  • Gas Giant, a gas planet with a radius higher than 3.9 Earth radii
  • Super Jupiter, its mass is larger than Jupiter and causes compacting and densification of the atmospheric gases. They constitute the borderline from gas planets to Brown Dwarfs.
  • Puffy planet (or Hot Jupiter), the counterpart of the Super Jupiter. They are lighter than Jupiter and have a larger radius.

Ice Planets

The abundance of heavier volatiles (with freezing points above about 100 K) such as methane, carbon dioxide, water, are predominant. These elements are frozen on the surface, while under the surface they could be liquid due to various reasons, i.e. tidal heating.

  • Ice giant: a gas planet with a mass higher than 10 Earth masses and a radius of 1,5 Earth radii and larger
  • Ice planet: see definition above, it could refer to ice planets with up to 10 Earth masses.

Terrestrial Planets

Terrestrials are 'Earth-like' planets with an abundance of silicates, rocks, and metals.

  • Terrestrial Rocky planets have a rocky mantle and an iron core
    • Desert planets are planets with a planet-wide desert "biome"
  • Carbon planets are primarily made of carbon and carbon minerals
  • Iron planet, most of his mass due to a large percentage of iron, i.e. Mercury's core contains up to 70% of its entire mass.
  • Coreless planet, a planet with a rocky mantle, but without a differentiated metal-based core
  • Planets with a fluid surface:
    • Ocean planets are referring to planets which are covered by an ocean of water
    • Lava planets are referring to planets which are covered by an ocean of molten rock
  • Smog planets seem to be terrestrial planets with a thick atmosphere consisting of smog (acidic, corrosive or poisonous air pollutants such as ammonia, hydrocarbon and sulfur dioxide)
  • Super-Earths have a mass higher than earth, but lower than 17 earth masses.
  • A Mesoplanet has a diameter between 473 Km (Ceres) and 4880 Km (Mercury). Science fiction writer Asimov coined the term.

Other Planets

  • Chthonian planets are the remnants of a gas planet losing its gaseous atmosphere. They are resembling terrestrial planets in many ways.
  • Rogue Planet is a term for a planet, that doesn't orbit a nearby star. They are "free-floating" through space. The only known Rogue planet is Min I.
  • Synthworld is the only known Artificial planet. It is a planet which is entirely constructed by the UEE.
  • Evaporating planet, evaporates due to this closeness to its star. Starmap lists only Virtus I.[5]
  • Dwarf planet: object, which is massive enough to maintain a hydrostatic equilibrium, but hasn't 'cleared his neighborhood' from other objects in the orbit. However, the criteria of 'being a planet' used by ARK Starmap could be differing from today's standards.[6]
  • Protoplanets are made of planetesimals (very tiny chunks in a protoplanetary disc) and can reach the size of Dwarf Planets. Protoplanets can also be remnants of a system which was once formed, such as the Dwarf Planet Ceres.

Conclusion

2/3 of all ARK listed planets are terrestrial, about 1/4 can be considered gas planets.

Types % (rounded) Amount
Terrestrial planets Carbon, Coreless, Desert, Iron, Lava, Ocean , Dwarf planet, Mesoplanet, Super-Earth, Terrestrial Rocky, Chthonian planet 66,36 215
Gas planets Gas Dwarf, Gas Giant, Ice planet, Ice Giant, Puffy planet, Super Jupiter 25,93 84
Other Artificial, Rogue, Protoplanet 7,72 25

Disrupted Planets

Natural Reasons

The term disrupted planet refers to planets which were destroyed or 'disrupted' by another astronomical body. The following list gives a short overview of known disrupted and former planets (and natural satellites, if affected, too). Ellis XI and Odin I are listed by the ARK Starmap as asteroid clusters. Gainey is still listed as Odin Ia, while Odin I is dispersing into an asteroid field.

Name Former Type Date Reason / Cause Result Current Status
Ellis XI Planet 2945 Crash with his satellite Ellis XIa Planet completely destroyed and dispersed into an asteroid field. Destroyed

ARK:

Asteroid Cluster

Ellis XIa Moon 2945 Crash with Ellis XI Moon completely destroyed and dispersed into an asteroid field. Destroyed
Virtus I Planet ? - Ongoing Star expands due to hydrogen exhaustion Melting and vaporization of the planet. Disruption ongoing

ARK: Planet

Odin System Star System Before 26th Century Nearby Star collapsed All Planets and moons rendered uninhabitable.
Odin I Planet Before 26th Century Collision with another object Planet is broken into large pieces while dispersing into an asteroid field, The Coil anomaly Destroyed

ARK: Asteroid Cluster

Gainey

(Odin Ia)

Moon Before 26th Century Odin I collided with another object. Since Gainey lost its former barycenter, his status as "satellite" is debatable. Intact.

ARK: Moon

Charon I Planet Ongoing Collision with another object Planet falls into its nearby star. Disruption ongoing

ARK: Planet

Weapon Usage

Hadesian Weapon

The Hadesians developed a 'planet-killer' weapon which they are used against themselves after a civil war broke out. The only known usage was against Hades IV. The weapon merely seperated the planet into two distinct halves.

Name Type Date Reason / Cause Result
Hades IV Planet 300,000 years ago Hadesian Civil War; Hadesian weapon Planet seperated in two halves.

Travel

Travel and exploration on a planet can be done by most ships which are capable of landing on the surface or of atmospheric flight. Some ships, such as those with more aerodynamic surfaces (Hornet), will be more agile and efficient in atmospheric flight than others with fewer wings and control surfaces (Herald)

On the ground, terrestrial vehicles, like the Ursa Rover, will allow players to conduct trade, engage in combat, and complete missions, similar to most space careers.

Hypothetical and Fictionary Planets

Some lore documents (especially Short Stories) referring to content which seem to be fictionary within the SC Universe.

Notable Planets

References

  1. The barycenter of both planets must lie outside of both planets.
  2. Some examples include Charon V, Pyro IV were listed as Terrestrial Rocky, then reclassified as Dwarf planets, Ealus IV was listed as Gas Giant, then reclassified as a Gas Dwarf.
  3. Other objects include: Bacchus I is listed as a Super-Earth. His description says it is also a Smog planet. Corel is called a coreless, Terrestrial Rocky. The asteroid Ceres is listed in RL as a Protoplanet and a Dwarf planet. (Starmap designation: Dwarf planet.) Ceres was the first object in space who was considered to be part of a new class of astronomical bodies, called 'asteroids'.
  4. As of February 2019
  5. However there is another planet who are disrupted by it's sun, Charon I. However, Charon I is just listed as a Terrestrial Rocky planet.
  6. International Astronomical Union Definition, Resolution B5: (1) A planet is a celestial body that, (a) is in orbit around the Sun, (b) has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes a hydrostatic equilibrium (nearly round) shape, and (c) has cleared the neighbourhood around its orbit. (2) A "dwarf planet" is a celestial body that (a) is in orbit around the Sun, (b) has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes a hydrostatic equilibrium (nearly round) shape, (c) has not cleared the neighbourhood around its orbit, and (d) is not a satellite. (3) All other objects, except satellites, orbiting the Sun shall be referred to collectively as "Small Solar System Bodies".

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