Station
Similar stations in CD-37 641
Surface Settlement (Installation) - 74 Ls
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Surface Settlement (Installation) - 74 Ls
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Surface Settlement (Installation) - 74 Ls
G.O.M. CollectiveScarlet Nebula Unlimited
Installation (Industrial) - 617 Ls
CD-37 641 Empire PactSilver Halo Tooling
Installation (Industrial) - 925 Ls
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G.O.M. CollectivePeters Silo
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CD-37 641 Empire PactScott's Progress
Surface Settlement (Installation) - 2,299 Ls
G.O.M. CollectiveSpielberg Installation
Surface Settlement (Installation) - 2,299 Ls
CD-37 641 Empire PactSilver Pulsar Construction
Installation (Industrial) - 3,106 Ls
G.O.M. Collective
Galpedia
Heinrich Kreutz
Heinrich Carl Friedrich Kreutz (September 8, 1854 – July 13, 1907) was a German astronomer, most notable for his studies of the orbits of several sungrazing comets, which revealed that they were all related objects, produced when a very large sun-grazing comet fragmented several hundred years previously. The group is now known as the Kreutz Sungrazers, and has produced some of the brightest comets ever seen.
Kreutz was born in Siegen in 1854, and obtained his PhD at the University of Bonn in 1880 on the orbit of comet C/1861 J1. In 1882 he moved to Kiel, working at the observatory and university there. In 1896 he became the editor of the Astronomische Nachrichten, the leading astronomical journal of the time, and held the position until his death in 1907.
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