Difference between revisions of "Planet Classification"
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==Class H - Desert== | |||
{| | |||
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| colspan="5" |[[File:ClassA.png|alt=|left]] | |||
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'''Age:''' 4 - 10 billion years<br> | |||
'''Diameter:''' 8,000 - 15,000 km<br> | |||
'''Location:''' Hot Zone / Ecosphere / Cold Zone<br> | |||
'''Surface:''' Hot and arid, little or no surface water<br> | |||
'''Atmosphere:''' May contain heavy gases and metal vapors<br> | |||
'''Evolution:''' None<br> | |||
'''Life Forms:''' Drought- and radiation-resistant plants, animal life<br> | |||
'''Example:''' [[ma:Nimbus_III|Nimbus III]], [[ma:Ocampa|Ocampa]] | |||
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| colspan="6" |Rocky planets with primarily silicate crusts, Class H planets are true desert worlds. With less than 20% of its surface covered in surface water, and high levels of surface radiation, Class H planets are not conducive to complex ecosystems. Though many Class H worlds are covered in sand, it is not required to be considered a desert; it must, however, receive little in the way of precipitation. Drought-resistant plants and animals are common on Class H worlds, and many are inhabited by humanoid populations. Most Class H worlds are hot and arid, but conditions can vary greatly. Class M planets can be reduced to Class H through environmental damage. | |||
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==Class I - Ice Giant== | |||
{| | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="5" |[[File:ClassA.png|alt=|left]] | |||
| | |||
'''Age:''' 2 - 10 billion years<br> | |||
'''Diameter:''' 30,000 - 100,000 km<br> | |||
'''Location:''' Cold Zone<br> | |||
'''Surface:''' Rocky, with methane and ammonia ice<br> | |||
'''Atmosphere:''' Hydrogen, helium, methane, ammonia, water<br> | |||
'''Evolution:''' None<br> | |||
'''Life Forms:''' None<br> | |||
'''Example:''' [[ma:Uranus|Uranus]], [[ma:Neptune|Neptune]] | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="6" |Class I, or Uranian, planets are gaseous giants that have vastly different compositions from other giant worlds; the core is mostly rock and ice made of methane, water, and ammonia. Additionally, the magnetic field is sharply inclined to the axis of rotation. Unlike other gas giants, Class I planets almost exclusively form on the outer fringes of a young star system. | |||
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==Class J - Gas Giant == | |||
{| | |||
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| colspan="5" |[[File:ClassA.png|alt=|left]] | |||
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'''Age:''' 2 - 10 billion years<br> | |||
'''Diameter:''' 50,000 - 140,000 km<br> | |||
'''Location:''' Cold Zone<br> | |||
'''Surface:''' Tenuous, composed of gaseous hydrogen and hydrogen compounds; radiates some heat<br> | |||
'''Atmosphere:''' Zones vary in temperature, pressure and composition<br> | |||
'''Evolution:''' None<br> | |||
'''Life Forms:''' Hydrocarbon based<br> | |||
'''Example:''' [[ma:Jupiter|Jupiter]], [[ma:Saturn|Saturn]] | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="6" |Class J, or Jovian, planets are massive spheres of liquid and gaseous hydrogen, with small cores of metallic hydrogen. Their atmospheres are extremely turbulent, with wind speeds in the most severe storms reaching 600 kph. Many Class J planets also possess impressive ring systems, composed primarily of rock, dust, and ice, as well as many moons, some of which are often habitable. They form in the Cold Zone of a star system, though typically much closer than Class I planets. | |||
|} | |||
=Planetary Zone Classification Map= | =Planetary Zone Classification Map= |
Revision as of 23:13, 14 February 2021
Classifications
Class A - Geothermal
Age: 0 - 2 billion years | |||||
Class A geoactive planets are generally small, barren worlds rife with volcanic activity. This activity traps carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, causing a greenhouse effect that keeps the temperature very hot, regardless of the planet's distance from the sun. When the volcanic activity eventually ceases, the planet 'dies' and usually becomes a Class C world - a few rare cases transform into Class Q geothermal planets. Until that happens, the toxic levels of carbon dioxide make this planet unsuitable to any known life form, though silicon-based life may be able to terraform it to their needs. |
Class B - Geomorteus
Age: 0 - 10 billion years | |||||
Class B planets are small, mostly metallic rocky planetoids. This type of planet is usually very close to, and heated by, a parent star, featuring very little native geothermal energy. The atmosphere of these worlds is usually tenuous and features little or no chemically active particles. No lifeforms have ever been discovered on these planets. Due to the proximity to their star's destructive influence of most other materials, Class B worlds exhibit a highly iron-rich crust, with a magnetic core and no mantle. |
Class C - Geoinactive
Age: 2 - 10 billion years | |||||
Class C worlds are a type of planet usually in the very late stages of development that has likely evolved from another class. Essentially dead, these small, rocky worlds are generally geothermally inactive and have a cold, barren surface. As their core cooled down, their rotation slowed and eventually their atmosphere dissipated. No life form as any use for these planets, although they do often possess rich mineral deposits from their volcanically-active past. |
Class D - Dwarf Planetoids
Age: 2 - 10 billion years | |||||
Class D planetoids are generally smaller asteroids or moons that are locked into the gravitational pull of a larger planetary body. Class D worlds are barren and rocky, often possessing no atmosphere usually composed of metals, predominantly nickel, iron, and silicate. Animal life is unable to form on D class planetoids. Depending on their proximity to a star, a D class may be hot and arid or cold and frozen. These planets can be made habitable by terraforming as was the case with Weytahn by the Andorians during the 2050s. |
Class E - Geoplastic
Age: 0 - 2 billion years | |||||
Class E, or Primordial, planets represent the earliest stage in the evolution of a habitable planet. The core and crust is completely molten, making the planets susceptible to solar winds and radiation and subject to extremely high surface temperatures. The atmosphere is very thin, composed of hydrogen and helium. |
Class F - Geometallic
Age: 1 - 2 billion years | |||||
Class F, or Developing, planets derive from the cooling and hardening of the crust in a Class E planet. Possesses a primarily silicate-based crust, although vulcanism is still rife. Water has begun to condense to form oceans, amid centuries of constant rainfall. The atmosphere and the life that may develop on the surface are intertwined; as the rich carbon dioxide atmosphere allows early photosynthetic life to flourish, these organisms flood the atmosphere with oxygen, pushing towards the next stage in its evolution. |
Class G - Geocrystalline
Age: 3 - 4 billion years | |||||
Class G, or Primitive, planets derive from a Class F planet as its surface cools, volcanic activity lessens, and oxygen and nitrogen are more abundant in the atmosphere. The atmosphere is still primarily carbon dioxide released as the planet cools and crystallizes. Primitive vegetation like algae and simple animal lifeforms like sponges are able to take hold in oceans to supplement the planet's bacterial life. This is the most important step in the formation of most planets as multiple complex factors determine what class of planet will evolve next. |
Class H - Desert
Age: 4 - 10 billion years | |||||
Rocky planets with primarily silicate crusts, Class H planets are true desert worlds. With less than 20% of its surface covered in surface water, and high levels of surface radiation, Class H planets are not conducive to complex ecosystems. Though many Class H worlds are covered in sand, it is not required to be considered a desert; it must, however, receive little in the way of precipitation. Drought-resistant plants and animals are common on Class H worlds, and many are inhabited by humanoid populations. Most Class H worlds are hot and arid, but conditions can vary greatly. Class M planets can be reduced to Class H through environmental damage. |
Class I - Ice Giant
Age: 2 - 10 billion years | |||||
Class I, or Uranian, planets are gaseous giants that have vastly different compositions from other giant worlds; the core is mostly rock and ice made of methane, water, and ammonia. Additionally, the magnetic field is sharply inclined to the axis of rotation. Unlike other gas giants, Class I planets almost exclusively form on the outer fringes of a young star system. |
Class J - Gas Giant
Age: 2 - 10 billion years | |||||
Class J, or Jovian, planets are massive spheres of liquid and gaseous hydrogen, with small cores of metallic hydrogen. Their atmospheres are extremely turbulent, with wind speeds in the most severe storms reaching 600 kph. Many Class J planets also possess impressive ring systems, composed primarily of rock, dust, and ice, as well as many moons, some of which are often habitable. They form in the Cold Zone of a star system, though typically much closer than Class I planets. |
Planetary Zone Classification Map
Credits
Descriptions, Icons, and Map created by and used with permission from Schmidt. Information originally created/gathered for the USS Fitzgerald, Star Trek Roleplaying Game. Information concerning granting of permission can be obtained via your CO or TFCO. Should specific topic be archived, please contact the Administrator.