Pimane (world)

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Pimane/Mora (Spinward Marches 2527)
Milieu 1116
E500343-7
StarportE Frontier - no facilities
Size5 Medium (8,000 km, 0.40g - 0.57g)
Atmosphere0 Vacuum
Hydrographics0 Desert World 0%
Population3 Low (9 thousand)
Government4 Representative Democracy
Law3 Low Law (no automatic weapons)
Tech Level7 Pre-Stellar (electronics)
See also UWP
System Details
Primary K0 V
Worlds 10
Gas Giants 3
Planetoid Belts 0
Cultural Details
Government Representative democracy
Law Level Low
Cultural Extension 1124
Army Size (BEs) 0
Economic Details
Technology Level 7
Economic Extension
521-5
Resources5Scarce
Labor2Low (900)
Infrastructure1 Extremely limited
Efficiency-5Extremely poor
Importance Extension -3
Resource Units 5
GWP (BCr) 0
World Trade Number 2
Trade Volume (MCr/year) 0
Starport Details
Classification Class-E
Port Size 0
Building Capacity (Tons) 0
Port employees 0
Port passengers (annual) 0

Pimane is a vacuum world, with no atmosphere or hydrosphere. The system supports a population of fewer than 10,000 sophonts. It is a member of Third Imperium in the Mora Subsector of Spinward Marches Sector and in the Domain of Deneb. Pimane, as a member world of the Third Imperium, holds the estate of an Imperial knight, a member of the Imperial Nobility charged with overseeing the world.

Astrography & Planetology

Pimane is a member of the Spinward Main.

There are rumors that deep valleys on the surface of Pimane contain both atmosphere and life, although the surface plains are star-baked vacuum. [2][3]


Monostellar System

Pimane Monostellar System
Star Name Hierarchy Category Mass (Sol) Temp (K) Luminosity (Sol)
Pimane primary

K0 V

Primary Main Sequence 0.88 5170 - 5270 0.63928
Unit Diameter Min Distance Hab Zone Jump Shadow M-Drive Limit
AU 0.0038 0.0663 0.78 - 1.4 0.38 3.8
Orbit #  *  * 3 1 5

History & Background (Dossier)

At first glance, Pimane appears to be nothing more than a struggling domed village on the surface of an inhospitable and featureless plain. Your first glance is correct. [4]

There is, however, evidence that deep valleys on the surface of Pimane contain both atmosphere and life, although the surface plains are star-baked vacuum. While there have been proposals to set up several small scientific research laboratories to investigate this, so far funding and offworld interest have been insufficient. The most accepted hypothesis holds that the world originally held an atmosphere and supported life, but a cataclysmic collision with a rogue world stripped off Pimane's atmosphere several million years ago. [4]

Reports of these airpockets are only as valid as the unproven reports of local explorers, who seem more interested in local notoriety than scientific accuracy. Anyway, exploration is very hazardous; local technology is hazardous enough, and the single city of Hope's End is far from the deep canyons that break up the surface of the planet. Add to that almost-invisible pools of fine dust, some deep enough to swallow a starship, and incentive to stay home is very high. [4]

Not that staying home is very attractive. Hope's End is a dismal community, with few facilities for the traveller. The so-called Starport is nothing more than a concrete pad raised ten meters above the surrounding plain, kept mostly free of dust. Reactionless drives are compulsory to avoid stirring up any dust around the area. [4]

It is recommended that you bring all supplies with you. Off-planet goods are prohibitively expensive, and local food is all too obviously derived exclusively from the algae which replenishes the atmosphere, along with a local fungus to provide texture. [4]

TAS Advisories

  • Do not use terrain-following on the surface.
  • Land only at the starport.
  • Only reactionless thrusters and contra-grav permitted.
  • Berthing fees are unusually high.

References & Contributors (Sources)

This list of sources was used by the Traveller Wiki Editorial Team and individual contributors to compose this article. Copyrighted material is used under license from Far Future Enterprises or by permission of the author. The page history lists all of the contributions.
  1. "Jump Map API" and map location from Travellermap.com
  2. Marc Miller. The Spinward Marches (Game Designers Workshop, 1979), 32.
  3. Martin DoughertyNeil Frier. Behind the Claw (Steve Jackson Games, 1998), 112.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Information provided to the library by User:Sstefan