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Space Astro
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Info for exoplanet "Sewano Siz"
| Scientific (actual) data |
| Name | TIC 77552382 b |
| Planet status | Confirmed |
| Radius | 0.50781 |
| Orbital period | 3.5103 |
| Discovered | 2026 |
| Updated | 2026-03-27 |
| Publication | Published in a refereed paper |
| Detection type | Primary Transit |
| Radius measurement type | Primary Transit |
| Star name | TIC 77552382 |
| Right ascension | 152.51° |
| Declination | -4.9° |
| Mag v | 13.9 |
| Star distance | 373.415 |
| Star mass | 0.83 |
| Star radius | 0.887 |
| Star sp type | K0V |
| Star temperature | 5002 |
| Wikipedia article | TIC 77552382 b |
Back
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| Fictional info (?) |
| Suggested name | Sewano Siz |
| Planet type | Cold planet |
| It is a cold planet planet with a mass one-thousandth that of TIC 77552382, but two-and-a-half times that of all the other planets in its solar system combined.
As seen relative to the fixed stars, it rotates on its axis exactly four times for every five revolutions it makes around TIC 77552382.
It was the one of the first exoplanets visited by a spacecraft, and one of the first to be successfully landed on.
A prominent result is the "great white spot", a giant storm that is known to have existed for centuries since it was first seen by telescope.
Its north and south poles, therefore, lie where most other planets have their equators.
The inhospitable surface is populated by barbaric medieval oceanic life that survive on the ground by killing the somewhat smaller "Weda-buty". Wisi Wer are closely related to Gomuri'we, have scales and vary in size from 70 to 120 cm. Most Wisi Wer are known to endure temperatures from 60 to 130°C and even electrical shock. |
| Estimated population | 400000000 |
| Atmosphere | Oxygen | 73% |
| Methane | 18% |
| Water | 8.3% |
| Carbon dioxide | 0.0038% |
| Atmospheric pressure | 50 bar |
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| Moon | Lebasore | Huge irregular rocky asteroid |
| Rivaj Ar | Small irregular rocky asteroid |
| Herer | Large round crater-filled planetoid |
| Xarapyk Yqi | Medium-sized irregular rocky moon |
| Edipek'a | Medium-sized round oceanic planetoid |
| Google search for Sewano siz |
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Website by Joachim Michaelis
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