A glaring omission from me! I also didn't include a few other fringe candidates such as Polis Massa but ignoring a planet proper is a dreadful mistake from me
There are others: Fondor, Dantooine, Ryloth (although the first two only appear in the KOTOR games, they're referenced here and there. Ryloth, the Twi'Lek homeworld, appeared in Rebels IIRC).
@@maerythegreek9008 There's really no way to imagine the scientific advances of a type 2 civilization that has existed as a Galactic government for ATLEAST 40,000 years. You just can't, the way their tech works or their capabilities are just space magic to us
8:36 coruscant is most definitely doing some major geo engineering. there is basically no plant life left on that planet, it's entire surface is covered layers upon layers upon layers of cities. honestly, the pollution / heating problem is secondary to the ability of the city to support itself on top the older cities imo.
Extremely easy ! Convert all heat into eletric energy or other forms of energy ! Convert all pollution into breathable air. Why would think thats so hard ?
@@GeraltofRivia22 my head cannon for why the population is so low is that they don't count certian species the same as others(like some species are just seen as lesser, so one of them only counts as a fraction of a person or some species have a hive mind and thus are considered one person). That and/or other portions of the planet not having as many people as we see in the area around the Jedi temple. But even with that, the population still seems a bit low.
That's not wrong though. Too bad instead of jumping off into something new or re treading the hero's journey they let someone take a massive shit on stage and call it a movie. Even the Gary Stue female lead could have become something interesting to more than just the politically correct police.
It's sad cause they could've slapped Star Wars on practically any movie and it would have succeeded. I don't know why they didn't take some chances on a real story.
I always interpreted the "core" to mean further underground passageways that nobody else had ever gone deeper than, and it would be called a core colloquially.
@SciFyerGaming well actually, there is a known planet in our galaxy that is shown to be almost 100% water to the core, then again there is a planet with such a gravitational pull that it has Ice even when it's as close to the sun as venus or mercury
@FizZeld Because it's the place where he suffered the most. On the other hand that's the actual reason Vader built his castle on Mustafar: it strengthens his dark side.
@@rayanderson5797 it would basically be spring or summer year round in the equator, while the north and south pole would most likely be in a permanent Autumn or mild Winter
@@JacketCKI can't even begin to imagine cold equatorial climates as a reality. Although real climates without change exist on earth, they are all equatorial forests.
If we had the technology to build Coruscant, we should also be able to move heat into space, using something similar to geothermal heating for houses, but on a much larger scale. Collect the heat in the lower city and pump it into high orbit to be released.
OriginalTharios I don't believe it's the writers fault, it more of the artists who design and build the visual representation of the world. If I wanted to nick pick, there should of been more super structures like space rings, orbital elevators, a swarm of habitual space stations.
@@areallybadname9701 Venus' atmosphere is so dense that it could facilitate floating cities. In fact, the atmospheric layers that would be at optimal pressures for humans are also lacking in the planet's more corrosive properties.
After TROS: The Original Trilogy, the ones the memes come from (prequels), the ones which everybody hates (sequels), Les Mis in Space (Rogue One), Pearl Harbor in Space (Solo), and Rotta's Day Out (The Clone Wars Movie).
Kashyyyk was actually terraformed by the Rakatan infinite empire, same with Tattooine. Also, Courosunt is using weather and geological control. It barley ever rains on Courosunt.
NWTactical the tattooine transformation is still cannon, actually I'm not 100% sure if it is cannon as I didn't exactly see "legends" slapped on it, but it was said that Tattooine wasn't a always a "desert wasteland"
You know, I'm actually pretty sure your correct killerninja. I was about to post a comment saying the exact same thing, then I saw your post. So pretty sure your correct. I was also thinking, the gas on cloud city isn't your standard gas.. it's created by those giant floating creatures, I forget there names. They release the gas as a by product from there feeding, then its harvested.. so that could change things in regards to the placement of oxygen, as I'm sure it's stated that the gas is very dense?
Mustafar, according to its information in the complete locations book, it is a moon caught in between the gravitational pull of nearby planets. Because of this, the two planet's gravitational pull is literally tearing the mustafar apart. That is why it's so volcanic.
So it is a lot more like Io then Earth in the hadean. but that still doesn't explain its breathable atmosphere. Should be choked with volcanic gasses and with no plant life on its surface to replenish the breathable oxygen then it should have all been sequestered back into the rocks by the volcanic activity if it even had oxygen in the first place. I see the point still standing.
+MegaAwesomeNick no, yeah, you're right it still stands. the only explanation made in-universe as to why anakin, Obi-Wan, and padme survived how they did was that the landing platform was shielded and Anakin and Obi-Wan created force barriers (a thing in star wars legends) to protect them from the insane heat which I think the book placed at 600 degrees Fahrenheit if i remember correctly. but yeah, that still doesn't make the atmosphere breathable or anything so vid still very much stands.
Terraforming? Interstellar travel has been around for freaking forever in Star Wars, so all these planets could have been terraformed before even the Old Republic
@@echelon3282 Correct, as well as Kashyyyk. According to KOTOR the Rakata punished the rowdy and rebellious inhabitants of a lush Tatooine by glassing the planet, but not before planting their native greenery on a then bare Kashyyyk.
I don't know about Hosnian, but Coruscant does have some *serious* geo-engineering going on. Its climate is completely controlled by stations across the planet and by orbital mirrors, which focus sunlight from the planet's sun (which is actually a bit further away than earth's is). So... yeah.
I don't know why she's acting like you even could run a planet-sized city off of fossil fuels. (And yes, if you can build such a thing, geoengineering is mandatory, but not that big a task) For more see: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XAJeYe-abUA.html
A population of 1 Trillion seems rather low for a planet-city such as Coruscant! I don't know why they gave it a 'maybe', they obviously don't rely on fossil fuel for their primary source of energy, and geo-engineering would be no big deal at all for a civilization as advanced as that depicted in Star Wars.
@@KutWrite It seems reasonable to assume that it would be paid for by taxation of the planetary population and industry, or by tax collected from across the galaxy given that it was the political centre for such a long period?
Be nice. If you are enough of a superfan to go all caps; you should know that the planet and its forest moon are both called Endor. Just for the sake of playing Micheal’s advocate though. If you check their orbital charts; you might see that they are both planets. According to the IAU’s 2006 assertion that ousted Pluto, each of them is three laws compliant* and qualifies as a planet. The Moon and Earth have a similar 2 planets 1 orbit** relationship. *Yes, that was a thoroughly uncalled for allusion, but Isaac Asimov has been in the new a lot lately. **My apologies, this was just an inexcusably bad joke that reflects my immaturity.
Isaac Delgass Unlikely means nothing, given the mere possibility means that it exists, somewhere in the billions of galaxies. Saying that anything is impossible is almost meaningless, really.
the idea that something not being impossible means it exists is moderately incorrect. Some infinities are bigger than other as the saying goes. Take it like with the number scale. There are infinite things between 1 and 2. None of them are 3 or 4. Just as with that in the near infinity that is the ever expanding universe is the same as that may be everything between earth and endor but that doesn't mean kashyyk is in it.
But this is just 2 factors. Of wich BOTH exist in our solar system so its unlikely that they are that rare. And in a galaxy with literal billions of worlds there are sure to be one or two worlds that show both characteristics.
except "bespin" actually could never exist, because you cant build a city in the upper atmosphere of a gas giant, even though you could build one in the upper atmosphere of a terrestrial planet like venus.
@@raidermaxx2324 do you know all elements of all the planets out there? Because you don't. You've got no idea and no conclusive evidence to support any argument you've got saying it couldn't dare exist. Correct, with our earthly materials
@@mcthuggin9803 um well actually yea I do.. they can only be whatever elements exist on our periodic table of elements, but each planet can have different elements depending on how it was formed, and where.. but there are no"eridian" type sci-fi elements "yet to be discovered" except for highly radioactive heavy metals above 125 on the periodic table .. but those don't exist in nature and have to be made artificially in a particle accelerator like the Hadron collider or in nature when neutron stars collide, and the element only exists for a short time before it decays into random electrons .. so yea, actually I do know what elements are on every planet, because our chemistry and physics that exist on our planet, is the same for the entire observable universe ..
I was looking for a comment about Naboo, that planet also has a core of plasma energy instead of a molten one so we really can't decide on that mind f#ck.
They probably mean "really deep", like at the crust boundary to the mantle. The bottom of an ocean. Not literally the core of the planet. As shown the planetary battlefield on the surface wasn't that far from Theed.
More likely than not it may just be deep river and lakes with many connected by under water cavities, canals and caves. And would be located at around 0 to 5,000 ft deep into nabboo's crust. Also it has the potential to be deeper in the oceans.
As soon as I saw Star Killer Base, I lost my shit. Before I even knew what it did. Our crust may be as thin as an eggshell when compared to a basketball, but it's not an Easter Egg craft where you poke a hole in the bottom and let the yolk leak out.
TBH hollowing out plants is EASY in a Sci-Fi setting. If you really want your mind blown by some Hard Sci-Fi, try this: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Tul4njD6uP4.html
Just curious on some things. How would Tatooine or other desert planets hold a breathable atmosphere with no large bodies of water or seemingly any flora? Isn't Naboo's interior a bunch of massive big tunnels filled with underground oceans, does that not cause some issue? I presume Mustafar minus a global breathable atmosphere (say as a mining base manned by droids, or with interior atmosphere within strucutres) would work? Also I felt a little cheated on Dagoba, it seems sometimes singular biomes planets can exist, but I was hoping for details how a planetwide swamp would work. Other than that, great video
And how could a world lacking any visible water or flora support populations of megafauna like Banthas, Dewbacks, Krayt Dragons, Rontos, Sarlaacs, and so on?
Tatooine used to be covered in plant life, until the Rakata firebombed it to dust and glass. What water is left is either in the atmosphere, or in aquifers deep under the sand. And turns out that Earth itself has an underground ocean.
Sarlaacs are actually foreign to the planet. 98% of it's body is underground, it has taproots to suck up underground water, and it digests it's prey over thousands of years. Banthas are found all over the galaxy. Nobody knows why or how, and it even developed a cult in-universe due to the mystery. And turns out Tattooine has some plant life, and a species of lichen that a lot of herbivores depend on. And of course, Krayt Dragons EAT the other megafauna, and basically everything else.
Mustafar is described as a planet in the materials, but the film, which we should consider the most valid source, shows it near a bigger planet in all the space views. Therefore I would say it's a moon and the volcanic activity is due to the tidal forces, just like Io. Also, how about Naboo? Apparently it's possible to travel through its core with a submarine, if we take Boss Nasses words literally. The wiki says that the interior has naturally occurring plasma.
5:48, but that not the gas it made of, It Tibanna gas (fictional) which, based on its use in plasma weapons, is much MORE dense and heavy then air. Real world Science is all well and good but just ignore fictional elements (in this case literally) from a setting.
Doesn't matter. If Cloud City is sitting in the bottom of a nitrogen/O2 layer, just above a layer of tibanna, the way gases sort out should mean that the N/O2 layer - and Cloud City within it - should be under inhospitable pressure due to the lighter gases above it. (it'd be hard to imagine there being no lighter gases - hydrogen and helium are _everywhere_ in a forming solar system no matter what weird galaxy you're in, and they seem to accumulate anywhere with a strong enough gravity well to hold them.) Of course, this doesn't mean you can't have a Cloud City. It just means that it should not have been open to the sky.
The focus of the video was "could these planets/moons/whathaveyou really exist?", not "could these things exist if we make allowances for the writers' imaginations?". I could tell you there is a planet somewhere off in the distance that has a perfect 372 day year, numerous moons, and is otherwise exactly like Earth. If the two people in this video tell me such a thing is impossible, I tend to believe them regardless of what Plot Crowbar I use to get around their objections.
aspie182 that’s where you’re wrong. Is the video limited by what planets could form naturally or are stable according the laws of physics? Many planets in Star Wars were altered, either their landscape or their position in the local solar system. And that is entirely possible according to physics.
My calculations show that coruscants population would be at least in the quadrillions. (With the population density of New York City being used for every layer [3000+] and their respective surface areas)
@@BioniclesaurKing4t2 but not nearly to that degree. coruscant has literally thousands of layers with each layer including several stories. I personally like to think it has the heat equivalent of a black hole somewhere down in the core because otherwise, massive heat death Edit: Also, apart from the factories they also have to be growing their own food, so it can be assumed that they have massive hydroponic systems down there recycling their biowaste in the process
I imagine Coruscant has vast spaces where people don't live. Power grids, huge biowaste recycling systems, massive atmospheric cleaners, automated production facilities, shipyards, factories, with huge structural supports throughout.
@@alveolate They did this with a tool called 'Plotdevice'. It allows you to build shit from even less stuff than McGaiver uses and make it work a thousand times more efficent than it could possibly work. Whoever invented this tool was a true genius.
The water planets are interesting to me. I read a novel by Arthur C. Clarke called "The Songs of Distant Earth" which featured a water planet, covered by ocean save for a single archipelago. Seeing them show up in things like Star Wars, Interstellar and even Waterworld, or "Mad Max on Water" always makes me smile.
This was extremely cool and very helpful! I'm trying to create a universe similar to Star Wars with planets and star systems that could theoretically exist in our own world and this really helped me with that! Plus, I'm a Star Wars fan and a science nerd, so this was just awesome all around
Fantastically done, really interesting video! Keep up the good work! P.S. The number of meme-references in this video was off the charts! Even Master Yoda doesn't have a meme count that high!
It’s theoretically possible in the future that we could build giant bases containing stars so with the super advanced society of Star Wars I would have given the Starkiller Base a Maybe.
Hold on so mercury has nearly no axial tilt and venus has a nearly perfect orbit. Judging on our solar system alone there would be (1/8)*(1/8) chance of a planet having both traits, or rather 1/64 chance. If the space lady says it's extremely unlikely then I trust her, but I would like some reasoning behind it.
@@volundrfrey896 Well the problem with that is that our solar system is just one example, which could be the exception. Though what you are saying is mathematically correct, we simply don't have enough measurements to concider this 1/64 chance to be correct. She also said 'nearly', so having an actually perfect orbit and no tilt hasn't been recorded yet. And in this case you might also have to consider every object in our solar system, not just the eight biggest ones. This would quickly turn 1/64 into an improbably small chance.
@@hard_drive.system Ruling out a planet for orbital mechanics that are not only plausible but completely possible is a tad, well, rash. Especially as we can observe both, while on operate planets, in one solar system. That is our own.
Only by Disney standards, but since Disney is not the Star Wars we accept as canon, its not important. Ney, on the contraire. Its an abomination that ruins the true Star Wars lore, both past and future.
@@masonpreston5156 An very powerful iceplanet, with the force that strong to build cyber cristals, I'm sorry the reference to a planer like hoth was bad
you forgot Salucamai (that could exist) for the new movies: Kessel: could exist but unlikely with a breathable atmosphere Canto Bight: Yes Crait: Yes Mimban: yes Savareen: yes (similar climate to Tatooine) Corellia: yes Vandor: yes (Hoth with jagged mountains) That other planet from Solo that I cant remember: probably
Love the thinking that went into this video. Very impressive. However, I take issue with wookieworld. You specifically say that in our solar system we have evidence of no tilt and perfect circular orbit. Then go on to say that the chances of it happening are slim. There are a lot of planets in the universe and that is the only thing that makes it a "maybe"?
It is canon that Courasant uses massive terraforming machines to regulate the atmosphere and keep super hot and polluted air away from residential areas. The same is probably true for Hosnian Prime, and I'd imagine that the outside areas of Cloud City are covered with some sort of energy shield (yay sci-fi magic!) that keeps in an artificial atmosphere.
The problem is the heat generated from the over 1 trillion beings and their industry would choke the planet. The heat would have to be dumped off planet for something like that to work.
Coruscant does have "strategically placed air filters in the upper atmosphere" - some now Legends book but Disney doesn't make enough good Star Wars content
Some of the planets that you said were impossible, could be possible if you look at them slightly differently. Corosaunt looks pretty dark in the shots shown, perhaps it's further away from the star, and the population producing more heat and greenhouse effects are actually preventing the planet from freezing? You let Eadu pass with that exact explanation.
With the way tatooine was depicted in the movie, I'm surprised you didn't once talk about where the Oxygen they were breathing came from, and also the fact that because it's a desert with two suns, how could Luke and his family live on that planet for years without developing a tan overtime? Especially his aunt and uncle.
while Canon does confirm that it once had Water, that doesn't help the fact that the Oxygen should be depleted by the inhabitants of Tatooine, that includes Geonosis, Jakku, and many other desert planets.
If any of the planets in the alpha centauri system are desserts, we should name it Vulcan. I struggle to think of many more star trek planets, largely due to the sheer quantity of them, and the fact that most of them are earth like.
Just for the record you missed Saleucami. But that means literally nothing, and was not worth bringing up, to be frank. Yea, this was really cool. Make more like these, please. Maybe you could update this down the line as well. I'd like to hear your thoughts on Crait.
Yavin could potentially work if the other moons are very small and its eccentricity is nearly zero, which would reduce tidal heating. Triton has an eccentricity of 0.000016, which is 250 times less than Io. As heating reduces with eccentricity squared, Yavin could definitely be possible (but would be a bit deformed).
though the shots of Yavin 4 and Yavin Prime are indeed extremely exaggerated, as of in, they are made to look close to each other while in actuality, they aren't suppose to be that close.
Hey I just wanted to add. In Star wars the clone wars in a few episodes it shows kaminoo with clear skies and only a few clouds. When obi wan landed there in episode 2 it was just in the middle of a bad storm.
Great subject! You have a great voice over voice and who doesn't love exoplanet chat and Star wars! It's quite a long video, but then again, when you have an interesting subject how do you cut it down!
Agreed, there are so many RU-vidrs with atrocious voiceover work, it's a nice change to hear someone with a calm, stable voice (and who doesn't throw 10-million-dollar words around without understanding what they mean). Kudos, Simon!
Andy B 10-million-dollar words! I want to hear these 😉 ha. I love voice over work. It's an opportunity to really explore what the words you are saying mean and how they should make you feel.
it has exactly the right length an such a positive attitude, there are 5 or 6 hour videos that just rant and nevcer get to the point and stretch a 10 minute topic into hours and hours of overanalysis and repeating, it's realy refreshing seeing something professional on youtube xD
I wonder if we could build a Death Star planet on the surface of Earth, and then just "detach", maybe with some sort of pendulum in the middle, but the idea being that we don't have to launch all that mass into space, nor build it in space.
Regarding Mustafar, all you would need is some kind of flora that is consuming the CO2 and producing oxygen, like flora on Earth does today. So even though it may be difficult to imagine trees on such a geologically active planet, it's conceivable that something is actually living there and producing oxygen. Maybe they are flora with blimp-like air pockets allowing them to float around the upper atmosphere, far from the active surface of the planet.
My best guess would be that they had shields holding breathable atmosphere near the inhabited areas and the oxygen was imported. The problem arises when collateral damage of certain event destroys the shields. I can only assume the shields containing oxygen were managed by another system than that the duelists broke, or there was large enough reserve of oxygen for them to survive nearby for the relatively short period of time the duel took. Another question is how Palpatine survived casually walking there much later, but then again, if anyone could survive in unlivable conditions for an extended period of time, it'd be him.
Come on! Cloud city had a force field around filled with breathable air! And Mustafarian CIS bases had shield and that was also filled with breathable air! You should know that!
Well, Yavin 4 may be able to exist so long as Yavin was a "puffy planet" (a type of gas giant which is less massive than Jupiter but bigger) and it was a bit further away than predicted (maybe 400,000 km would be far enough).
For me it's mostly* not about whether they could or could not exist, but whether the planet is realistic, or instance oxygen levels. Desert planets, Tatooine, Geonisis, Jakku ...where are the plants that produce oxygen, same for Hoth and Mon Cala (although in the latter this could still be attributed to sea-plants? Mustafar...It's an one big active vulcano, think of all the toxic fumes and gases. Of course the location within the system has to be realistic too, see Yavin 4
The Celestials geoengineered many planets, and engineered Star systems in the Star Wars galaxy, in some cases for very esoteric reasons, and we do not know all of the systems they engineered, or why they engineered them, so eliminating any candidates is problematic. That they engineered star systems to begin with also means that you need to give them some systems that they engineered for practice, so looking at any systems and saying "well, they didn't do *hypothetical planet or star system engineering purpose* here, so that means that it wasn't engineered" is a meaningless statement. Plus, as stated in other comments, other species geoengineered planets, and may well have engineered star systems too. And, all of this is fiction, fiction that can change at any time to suit new changes in canon. Which means all of it is bullshit, or that none of it is bullshit. Given the last 2 movies, I'm leaning towards all bs.
I called BS on Starkiller Base ever since I watched TFA. During the final fight of the movie, as it was sucking up the star it was orbiting around, I couldn't help but think "why isn't the gravity of the planet increasing? It's gaining mass for heaven's sake!" Not to mention the amount of energy it would require to move such a massive object through space. That concept is even more ludicrous than moving the Death Star through hyperspace.
Hyperspace is its self ludicrous, but within the universe we actually know they can control gravity to a great degree and rather easily. So... they use established tech to negate the effects of the gain in mass. Also, the deathstar would have enough recoil to liquify everyone inside and the amount of energy it must have on hand would lead to a similar effect as you describe for starkiller base. Energy also distorts spacetime like mass and the deathstar has enough on hand to overcome the gravitational pull of several earth sized planets!
15:41 actually Starkiller base originally was an ice planet and could've existed, it even could've been Ilum, a sacred Jedi planet. The cannon says that Starkiller was originally and ice planet the Empire mined for kyber crystal, and what do you know, Ilum is an ice planet where young Jedi would go to get their kyber crystals for their light saber. Because of the ice planet being possible and the whole crystal thing being possible under the right circumstances Ilum could be possible, as for the Starkiller part, well the technology in the Star Wars galaxy is extremely advanced, I'm sure they could heat it up internally to more live-able conditions, or at very least I'm sure they had AC on the base we do them at.
My question is how did the Kaminoans evolve into their current state? I just did a bit of research and it says they are adapted to seabeds which is strange since they are land dwellers. Legends says that there were continents that were flooded so the Kaminoans had to build above the water which explains why they live above water when there was no natural land. You would still think though that the Kaminoans would've lost their adaptations for seabeds in their time on land.
I think they don't adapt because they don't produce offspring in traditional ways, rather cloning themselves. This basically stops any natural evolution within their species
Maybe they were amphibious? Really, All you need to know is that they were designed to be the opposite of Yoda. The whole scene of Obi wan going to Kamino is the exact opposite of Luke going to Dagobah.
I know this video is 2 years old by now, but it has recently been confirmed that Starkiller Base is actually Ilum, the planet that the Jedi gained their crystals to complete their lightsaber, which explains why the resistance mined crystals there. Ilum was a planet that was very much like Hoth, so I'd say yes for Ilum. You know, before it imploded.
wouldn't that account that Canon Made Ilum extremely small to the point that it some how gains an earth like gravity, which would be very impossible for a planet its size
@@titan-1802 I'd say more improbable to impossible. Keep in mind this is Star Wars, so anything can happen. You could essentially say that Ilum is so incredibly dense to the point it can maintain an Earth-like gravity, even at a 660km diameter.
+Mike Tallway This video was just covering the planets seen in the movies, which is why those weren't included. If they did EVERY planet, this video would be hours long.
When it comes to Mustafar I was always wondering from the beginning. I mean I know being too close to an erupting volcano can be lethal due to volcanic gasses (I saw people investigating volcanos in Iceland being carrying a kind of meter that would alarm them if it would become really dangerous), but apart from comparing Mustafar's atmosphere to volcano gasses on Earth and Earth atmosphere when it looked similar to Mustafar I'm also wondering about the temperature there. Of course we see Darth Vader burn at the end of the battle (causing him to be put in that suit that would make him more famous than franchise itself), I wonder if you can bear that heath in general and even fighting like that causing your body temperature to rise by itself. So if the atmosphere of Mustafar wouldn't be a killer, I wonder if the temperature wouldn't kill you. Or would it be less hot on such a planet that I always imagined?
The sunset over Tatooine shows a yellow and a red sun appears as the same size in the sky. Red stars are massively larger than yellow ones. Thus we could assume that Tatooine has an S-type orbit around the smaller yellow star and we might imagine that the reason that Luke is taking the time to witness the sunset that evening is because it is the time when the two suns set at the same time. Their relative distances making them appear similar sizes to the Tatooine-bound observer.
i would say no to Endor, for starters, its Parent Planet, Tana, is still too small to have a Moon that is still way too massive, even if Endor's Mass was calculated, its still too large to have formed around Tana, even if it was captured, it would have Disrupted the other Moons while the native Moons where forming. Corellia can be possible, even if its an Ocean Planet in Canon, or an Earth-like Planet in Legends. i'm assuming that the Coax part refers to Kessel, which is a hot and mining planet that hosts Coaxium and Kesselstone, though, this shouldn't be confused with The Legends counter part of Kessel, which is- actually, i'm not too sure why did Legends turned Kessel into a lumpy Potato-like Asteroid for some reason.
The last star system mentioned, with 7 Earth-like planets, reminds me of Corellia as it is portrayed in the novels of StarWars Legends (the Corellia Trilogy and beyond). Except that the Corellian star system was put together in a long forgotten past by means of alien technology, of course.
Insert argument about artificial terraforming processes to make hostile planets livable. Insert counterargument from Wookiepedia that details exactly when this did and did not happen in canon.
@@sheevone4359 Insert an army of angry fans who say that you have strayed from the Light Side and must be executed in a Geonosian gladiator arena. Also insert that one Trekkie who walked into the room by accident turning and leaving before being noticed.
A real life Mustafar equivalent already exist (apart from a few distinct features), and it is Io. Both are highly volcanic moons that orbit a gas giant.
Well, a rise you a somewhat counter intuitive bit of statistics: A planet like earth has a probability of a 100% to exist in the solar system and milky way. All past events have zero uncertainty after observed and our planet is already here =)
People who know the full extent of star wars lore : well actually , corrusant has something called air sweepers and they clean the air in the atmosphere . Also mustafar is only covered in lava not because of anything scientific but it fully relies on a death of a jedi long ago , explaining why in the rise of skywalker the planet is now covered with trees