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Space Astro
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Info for exoplanet "Myogyu-ya"
Scientific (actual) data |
Planet | Kepler-952 b |
Planet status | Confirmed |
Radius | 0.682 |
Orbital period | 130.355 |
Discovered | 2016 |
Updated | 2021-02-05 |
Tconj | 2454980 |
Publication | Announced on a website |
Detection type | Primary Transit |
Alternate names | 2MASS J19012926+4159380 b, K01790.01, KIC 6504954 b, KOI-1790 b, KOI-1790.01, WISE J190129.25+415937.9 b |
Star name | Kepler-952 |
Right ascension | 285.37° |
Declination | 41.99° |
Mag j | 14.063 |
Mag h | 13.741 |
Mag k | 13.662 |
Star distance | 1167 |
Star metallicity | 0.06 |
Star mass | 1 |
Star radius | 0.99 |
Star age | 4.27 |
Star temperature | 5730 |
Star alternate names | 2MASS J19012926+4159380, KIC 6504954, KOI-1790, WISE J190129.25+415937.9 |
Wikipedia article | Kepler-952 b |
Back
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Fictional info (?) |
Suggested name | Myogyu-ya |
Planet type | Cold planet |
It is the second-brightest natural object in the night sky after Kakachu, reaching an apparent magnitude of -5 - bright enough to cast shadows at night and, often, visible to the naked eye in broad daylight.
The planet is named after the deity Myogyu-ya, the messenger of hate.
Its orbital eccentricity is the largest of all known planets in its solar system; at perihelion, Myogyu-ya's distance from Kepler-952 is only about two-thirds (or 116 pct) of its distance at aphelion.
It was the one of the first exoplanets visited by a spacecraft, and one of the first to be successfully landed on.
Myogyu-ya is the site of Celestium Montanus, the tallest 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.
Its north and south poles, therefore, lie where most other planets have their equators. |
Atmosphere | Hydrogen | 99% |
Neon | 0.012% |
Atmospheric pressure | 17 bar |
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Moon | Hebidofu-gabyo | Medium-sized round rocky comet |
Wajabi Ba | Huge round gaseous asteroid |
Zesamya Pyaso Tsu | Large almost round rocky comet |
Tone'byote Yu | Medium-sized irregular ice moon |
Shasu Ba | Medium-sized almost round ice comet |
Hashi-myoko | Small slightly egg-shaped rocky asteroid |
Jiterehe Nehya | Huge potato shaped rocky asteroid |
Wokyuno Myapyanya | Medium-sized almost round rocky asteroid |
Google search for Myogyu-ya |
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Website by Joachim Michaelis
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