I have to say that i personally use less lights in my car when it snows more here in Finland. Due to our short days, the darkness combined with the snowstorm has made the visibility be so bad that i've sometimes had to shut down both the full and half-beams and drive (slowly) only on the fog-lights. The more lights one has on, the more they reflect from the falling snow and make it harder to see...
+markotark So that you are saying... When you driving in a snowstorm with your headlights on, then it is like going into hyperspace? You know, like we see in Star Wars?
@@NeilRoy the music in itself... not copyrighted. You are free to reproduce and/or play it. Performances/recordings of the Blue Danube however can be copyrighted as in that you are not allowed using specific version in videos and such.(e.g "by the London Philharmonic"). The version used for Elite Dangerous however is in the public domain afaik.
I suggest you raise a ticket on Frontier's support site. They will probably have to move your ship as it is probably in an untenable (for the game) location.
Even the Bugs in Elite Dangerous are awesome. I love this game. I have talked to several Eve Online players that wish they had come over sooner to Elite. It makes me happy.
This moon isn't impossible. The roche limit isn't some crazy force that instantly annihilates any large object. It mainly prevents tiny bits of rubble coalescing into a moon, or makes the moon "evaporate" over time. How fast the moon is destroyed is determined by now big and how dense it is. Maybe this moon somehow drifted to inside of the rings, and will be destroyed over time. There is also the fact that moons can form in special conditions in a planet's rings. Saturn has two moons in its rings, but they are nowhere near as big as the one here.
They should implement this bug in a more realistic way: Planet colisions and planets with irregular shapes from the massive tidal forces, random asteroids, commets roaming in the sistem that can be found with the fss, etc
+OnePercent That would work if you drop out at a position in the ring in front of the planet, so the planet can come to you... Somebody should try that in a very cheap ship ;)
OnePercent Would you be so kind to share with us here what happened? I am interested to know, albeit I am not anywhere near my gaming rig these days to see it myself...
i remember finding this exact place before horizons, i flew into the rings and i brought me through the planets and it looked as if my game crashed until i came back out through the other side
+Ueberdoziz Go smuggle from Fehu or Maia, im currently smuggling from 17 draconis because i need fereration rep for the corvette . Not many smuggle missions here though but truckloads of donation missions for those interested in getting fed rep while smuggling.
yea i noticed that aswell... i gave up trading, did some smuggling in my python... but now i ended up doing haz-res runs in my new FDL. at least thats the most fun.. especially with the upcoming AI update and new guns! :D cant wait to throw a huge multi cannon in there :DDD
An object can be inside the Roche limit without being torn apart, if it is structurally sound to begin with. All the Roche limit means is that a moon or planet cannot form in that area. In fact, it involves both the planet's size and density, AND the second object's size and density. Thus it actually varies.
I just got this game and it is fantastic but the real physics says - IF there were a ring on an airless planetoid the particles would be going many kilometers/sec as they tangentially orbit and come right down to airless surface as lose energy. The reason the Earth moon covered in several meters of dust is due to high speed impacts of orbiting debris pulverizing (i.e. miles/sec) so sitting or standing on foreign world equally destructive to you and your craft. The neutron stars and galaxy core are very well done, the ultimate space destroyers.
This moon might be protected due to fan love. I remember in ED, someone found a moon that orbits its planet in 5 seconds. The fucker is just swinging around it and ED was going to patch it but the community loved it so much they left it in. I think it's a destination a lot of people go to.
Where is this planet? Did Fdev "fix" it like how they fixed the places Ghost Giraffe found flying thru rings? There used to be a starport that would fly through rings, and they found another world that did this, and it got patched too.
there is actually a very slim chance of survival. Rings are composed of particles ranging from grains of sand to mountain-size chunks. So you may have been extremely lucky and just gotten your spaceship sandblasted for free.
I don't know if it's a bug or what but I was trying to fuel scoop this blue star and got an interdiction warning that wouldn't go off screen and then I couldn't retract the scoop and couldn't power engines and had to just sit and slowly burn up :-/
Not been able to log back into the game , sounds like something I should avoid, very beautiful video, the effects look like snowflakes too bad elite dangerous does not have weather patterns.
It's just a guess but I'm betting your system was eating up resources trying to calculate the trajectory and individual gravity of every one of billions of ring particles. At a distance, the rings will behave like a very diffuse vapour and have a similar gravitational profile. Up close, each particle will resolve and I'm betting the game was trying to treat each one as an individual mass. Not good for efficient use of system resources.
No, those particles don't actually exist, that's why they disappear. They're just placeholders to make the rings appear like they're made of millions of asteroids. The reality is that he probably just confused the game because as he pulled out, he going into an instance inside the ring which would remove the planet instance immediately and it's such a jarring transition that the game couldn't handle it.
Actually.. This is not uncommon to see in space. In fact, many moons are created this way! It starts with some rocks in a belt, and they stick together and the snowball effect happens thus creating the moon/moons :)
Jst look at Uranus: Perhaps the most unstable moon of all is tiny Cupid, whose orbit brings it within 500 miles of the moon Belinda. Showalter and Lissauer propose that their discovery of a second ring, which orbits closer to the planet than the new outermost ring, provides further evidence for collisional evolution of the system. www.space.com/1891-moons-rings-uranus.html
Well. I think this is bug but in the reality it is not impossible. Theoreticaly on the planet with the fine round shape and with no atmosphere can orbit asteroids 1cm above the ground. They just need only enough velocity and strenght.
+Jaromír Anděl the moon would attract the asteroids, increasing the planet size, gravity and clean all the asteroids. Or the moon would be destroyed by the impact of the asteroids. NOTE: I edited the word "planet" and changed for "moon". I know it's not our moon, and you should know too. Jarmir Andel gived me a response because of this wrong name "planet".
+Luis FF The centrifugal force Will hold asteroids on its orbit so they will not fall down. They just need 1st cosmic velocity and no atmosphere which could slow down asteroids by its drag.
+Jaromír Anděl By saying "planet" I mean the biggest natural satellite orbiting the big planet. I know "planet" it is not the correct name for that satellite. But I say that before because the ring is a satellite too and the big natural satellite is not our Moon.
+Luis FF Actually, a planet/moon in a ring system would become the rings. The rings themselves were moons at some point which dropped in their orbit to a point where tidal forces started pulling them apart and grinding them down to the dust and asteroid particles which make up the ring system. The same thing would happen to any planet to suddenly appear in that ring system, it'd be torn to shreds and ground down to add even more mass to the ring system.
Lol a planet like this would be awesome... permanently bombarded with asteroid impacts. Big fireworks! Of course he would create a gap in the ring pretty quickly. Would still be an awesome event if this was rendered properly. Maybe you have to help evacuate the planet when this starts to happen.
+Dejay Rezme Actually, a planet/moon in a ring system wouldn't make a gap in the rings, it would become the rings. The rings themselves were moons at some point which dropped in their orbit to a point where tidal forces started pulling them apart and grinding them down to the dust and asteroid particles which make up the ring system. The same thing would happen to any planet to suddenly appear in that ring system, it'd be torn to shreds and ground down to add even more mass to the ring system.
HOLyPumpgun | Gaming True. Hmm maybe. I think it would depend on the size of the planet vs how near it is. I never quite understood how the whole "tidal forces rips moon apart" thing works but I guess it's because the far away side would try to move slower than the near side of the moon. Then it would start to spin and fly apart. But a smaller moon might be fine? I wonder if they model this correctly in ED.
I get way to immersed in this game. am i the only one who is terrified by half the things they encounter in elite let alone this? first time i saw a purple star scared the shit outta me. first time i fuel scooped the noises made me think i was about to over heat and explode. every time i find something new i can feel the fear of the unknown :3
I'm new to the game and i can't figure out how to do stuff... All i did was warp to Starcitysomething and now i don't know how to progress in the game. Wish I could explore that damn milky way like you do..
Is this a serious question ? How can you land on pretty much « nothing » ? There is no ground, only an extremly strong gravitational force that will kill you imediatly even if you are thousands of kilometers away