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Space Astro
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Info for exoplanet "Aimwugen Wyang"
Scientific (actual) data |
Planet | HR 2562 b |
Planet status | Confirmed |
Planet mass | 10.28 |
Orbital period | 30498 |
Semi major axis | 21.2 |
Inclination | 84.1 |
Discovered | 2016 |
Updated | 2023-02-13 |
Publication | Published in a refereed paper |
Detection type | Imaging |
Mass detection type | Theoretical |
Star name | HR 2562 |
Right ascension | 102.5° |
Declination | -60.25° |
Mag v | 6.114 |
Star distance | 33.63 |
Star metallicity | 0.015 |
Star mass | 1.3 |
Star sp type | F5V |
Star age | 0.6 |
Star detected disc | IR Excess |
Wikipedia article | HR 2562 b |
Back
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Fictional info (?) |
Suggested name | Aimwugen Wyang |
Planet type | Huge cold gas giant |
Aimwugen Wyang and Wengdwen Zyin are huge cold gas giants rich in gas. When viewed from Wengdwen Zyin, Aimwugen Wyang can reach an apparent magnitude of -3, bright enough for its reflected light to cast shadows, and making it on average the third-brightest object in the night sky. Aimwugen Wyang is similar in composition to Wengdwen Zyin, and both have different bulk chemical composition from that of the larger huge cold gas giants. It is the coldest planetary atmosphere in its solar system, with a minimum temperature of 73°K (-200°C), and has a complex, layered cloud structure with oxygen thought to make up the lowest clouds, and 2H2O the uppermost layer of clouds. It is named after the deity Aimwugen Wyang, the creator of the sky.
It is radically different from Earth in other respects.
Aimwugen Wyang is the site of Titanic Mons, the largest volcano and second-highest known mountain in its solar system, and of Valles Marineris, one of the largest canyons in its solar system.
The outer atmosphere is visibly segregated into several bands at different latitudes, resulting in turbulence and storms along their interacting boundaries. |
Atmosphere | 2H2O | 31% |
Oxygen | 24% |
Carbon monoxide | 21% |
Ozone | 14% |
Carbonyl sulfide | 5% |
Helium | 4% |
Krypton | 0.8% |
Methane | 0.22% |
Formaldehyde | 0.0086% |
Atmospheric pressure | 7 bar |
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No known satellites |
Google search for Aimwugen wyang |
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Website by Joachim Michaelis
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