Isonzo IV
Isonzo IV, Isonzo IVc | |
INFORMATION | |
Quadrant: |
Alpha |
Star System: |
BD+18 1563 Isonzo |
Affiliations: |
Independent; Uninhabited |
Natives: |
Yxtoxi (Extinct) |
ASTROMETRIC DATA | |
Star Type(s): |
A:V |
Estimated Age: |
3.6 Billion Standard Years |
Number of Planets: |
4 |
Classification: |
Class J (Class P moon) |
Number of Satellites: |
7 |
PLANETOLOGICAL DATA | |
Atmosphere Type: |
Toxic; Carbon Dioxide, Ammonia, Water Vapor |
Atmosphere Pressure: |
Ultradense |
Mean Temperature: |
Average |
Hydrosphere: |
Saturated as Vapor |
Dominant Terrain: |
Gas Giant |
Gravity: |
5.5g (Earth=1) |
Day/Night Cycle (Hours): |
76 standard hours |
LIFE DATA | |
Stage of Life Evolution: |
None. Simple, homogeneous multicellular life is located on Isonzo IVc, the third moon |
END OF BRIEFING | |
Template:Planet |
At a Glance
The Isonzo Star System, known in the Federation database as BD+18 1563 Isonzo, was named by Dr. Giulietti Isonzo, a 22nd Century astronomer aboard the Starship Daedalus who first scanned the system. She named it after her home region and her grandfather, who was a miner that died in the Isonzo mountains. BD+18 1563 Isonzo is over thirty light-years from the coreward-trailing frontier of the Federation. The nearest Federation worlds are Izar (31 light-years) and Denobula Triax (33 light-years).
Astrometrics
BD+18 1563 Isonzo is located 122 light-years from Sol in the direction of the galactic core, and trailing. It is plus nineteen light-years "above" Earth on the galactic z-axis. The nearest Federation colony is Izar and the nearest sapient species are the B'Saari.
Initial Survey
A Class X Probe launched from the starship Daedalus passed through the BD+18 1563 Isonzo stars system on December 28th, 2272. Until that time the only survey done by any known group was a small Denobulan medical survey vessel who scanned the system at long-range, looking for habitable worlds. Neither they nor the Daedalus primitive sensors at the time noted anything of particular, immediate interest. The third moon around the gas giant Isonzo IV had nebulous Class P readings. Initial curiosity from the Daedalus was not around the habitability of the system, but some unusual subspace readings and heavy ion storms emitting from the Isonzo star. The Captain of the Daedalus deemed the risk too high to enter the system at the time.