Difference between revisions of "Centaurus Relic"

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The [[Centaurus Relic]] is an ancient, [[alien]] contact probe found in the [[Alpha Centauri]] system.  Judging from the choice of target system, its distance from its home, trajectory, and age, it is believed to be from the same [[tlorai]] civilization that gave the [[dyrajt]] their technology.
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The [[Centaurus Relic]] is an ancient, [[alien]] contact probe found in the [[Alpha Centauri]] system.  The originating species has been named the [[tlorai]], mainly because that's what the insignia over a plaque believed to represent their species seems to read like.
  
Dating isotopes and [[exotic]]s breakdowns leads to an estimated age of thirteen hunded [[solar cycle]]s, or roughly 150,000 years of age, much of it spent en route to its target system.  It is estimated, though much less certain, that the artifact arrived at [[Alpha Centauri]] approximately fifteen thousand years ago.
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Dating isotopes and other breakdowns leads to an estimated age of twenty-five thousand [[solar cycle]]s, or roughly three million years of age, much of it spent en route to its target system.  It is estimated, though much less certain, that the artifact arrived at [[Alpha Centauri]] a bit over a million years ago.
  
Despite the advanced data-storage methods that the species possessed, they relic contains frustratingly little information.  It is clear that they possess some understanding of the local stellar neighborhood, and were aware of how nearby the [[Solar System]] was, but chose [[Alpha Centauri]] due to a higher probability of finding [[sapient]] life around multiple suitable stars, or so the [[tlorai]] thought.
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Despite the advanced data storage methods they possess, too many micrometeorite impacts, too much radiation, and too much decay has rendered the [[relic]] almost worthless for recovering much valuable information - it was only intended to last a few millennia after its journey finished, and even that was a stretch.
  
Little about the [[tlorai]] can be devised from the data they sent.  There are some audio samples of their voices, and some simple drawings of their masculine and feminine forms.  They appear to have been an aquatic, sexually non-dimorphic species, with several mamillian characteristics including live birth.  They had an extensive, nearly complete (99.5%) map of stars within a thousand light-years of [[Alpha Centauri]], several of which were also marked for explorationCoincidentally (or not really), a few of the nearest ones already have [[human]] probes underway as well.
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Preempting this, a set of oxygenated titanium plaques try to convey visual information, including star charts, a brief overview of the physical structure of their species, a map of their [[star system]] and homeworld, and a triad of stellar maps that pinpoint the location of [[pulsar]]s.
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Perhaps most disconcerting, in all of the starmaps, is the presence of a small hole in the sheetsIts position is always quite precise, and, looking in their direction, it is possible to resolve the gravitational lensing around a rogue [[black hole]].
  
 
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Latest revision as of 14:25, 18 April 2007

The Centaurus Relic is an ancient, alien contact probe found in the Alpha Centauri system. The originating species has been named the tlorai, mainly because that's what the insignia over a plaque believed to represent their species seems to read like.

Dating isotopes and other breakdowns leads to an estimated age of twenty-five thousand solar cycles, or roughly three million years of age, much of it spent en route to its target system. It is estimated, though much less certain, that the artifact arrived at Alpha Centauri a bit over a million years ago.

Despite the advanced data storage methods they possess, too many micrometeorite impacts, too much radiation, and too much decay has rendered the relic almost worthless for recovering much valuable information - it was only intended to last a few millennia after its journey finished, and even that was a stretch.

Preempting this, a set of oxygenated titanium plaques try to convey visual information, including star charts, a brief overview of the physical structure of their species, a map of their star system and homeworld, and a triad of stellar maps that pinpoint the location of pulsars.

Perhaps most disconcerting, in all of the starmaps, is the presence of a small hole in the sheets. Its position is always quite precise, and, looking in their direction, it is possible to resolve the gravitational lensing around a rogue black hole.


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