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Chajo 
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Posts: 21
(11/21/01 2:41 pm)
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Bedlam's history
I had a thought just before I went to bed this morning.

Why does Bedlama have those creators? It looks like the place was hit pretty hard sometime in it's past. But then again the Original sun went Supernova, correct?

I have a whole page of thoughts on the Limbo system and it's working. *S* I'll post that later though once Igetit worked out to my satisfaction

Chajo AKA Phantom

Mikel30
Registered User
Posts: 4
(11/23/01 9:24 am)
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Re: Bedlam's history
I guess the cataclism of the original sun going supernova could have cause pieces of another planet to impact Bedlama. Speaking of which, does anybody think that the asteroids in the Light Year Limit could have originally been another palnet?

Chajo 
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Posts: 39
(11/23/01 10:02 am)
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Re: Bedlam's history
*nods* That's part of my theory(Which I seem to be to lazy to write up). The Light year limit is what's left of all the planets that were destroyed. Bedlama was once like Brim*Star, un-inhabitable on the surface, untill it was terraformed. Hawk Haven is what's left of BedLama's moon. At least that's my guess *S*

Chajo AKA Phantom

Blackhawk
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Posts: 1
(6/1/02 2:50 pm)
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Bedlam's history
I've wondered why Bedlama would need an artificial sun, but a supernova theory doesn't hold water. Supernovas are HUGE. If Bedllama's sun went supernova, the entire star system would've been destroyed. It's more likely that Bedllama's sun simply used up it's energy and became a dwarf star, no longer producing enough heat for Bedllama. So where'd the craters come from? The remains of a past battle perhaps? An orbital bombardment?

Another thing I find confusing about the Artificial sun is that it's stationary. Even if the star it orbited is gone, with nothing to stop it, the planet would contiune to orbit, or hurtle blindly through space, wouldn't it? And if it did, it would move away from the sun, and ice over.
Even if the artifical sun was in the original star's place, and Bedllama orbited it, Bedllama would be out of it's light for half the year.

Hmm, puzzling this is.

Moonhawke 
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Posts: 57
(6/1/02 3:01 pm)
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Re: Bedlam's history
Well, as to the craters, there is the Lightyear limit, which is made up of a number of asteroids. Those MUST have some from somewhere, right? And some of them must have GONE somewhere as well.

Do I have any idea? No. Sorry. :)

MH-

Blackhawk
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Posts: 4
(6/2/02 6:15 pm)
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Bedlam's history
Well, when asteroid belts such as the lightyear limit, which appears to rest inside a nebula, are formed when gravity is not strong enough or there's not enough material to form a planet. Left overs if you will. Our solar system has an asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, and it's most likely Limbo system(it's not a galaxy) has something similar

Moonhawke 
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Posts: 58
(6/2/02 7:28 pm)
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Re: Bedlam's history
I rather thought our little asteroid belt was the result of two (or more) planets having a little fenderbender out there (It's a mightly big gap between Mars and Jupiter) and there's just not enough gravity to put them back into some sort of super-planet. I rather think the same thing might one day happen between Neptune and Pluto, seeing as they have crossing orbits, though not anytime where we're going to see it, since Pluto just moved outside of Neptuens orbit again. It's another interesting theory, though.

MH-

Blackhawk
Registered User
Posts: 5
(6/3/02 3:07 am)
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Bedlam's history
Actually the leading theory is that Pluto's ever increasing ellipitical orbit, will cause it to be flung out our solar system. But your theory may be what happened to Uranus, the sleeping giant. It's a gas giant that's axis is off by nearly 90 degrees and it rotates north to south, not east to west. It's speculated the something massive slammed into it and knocked it off it's axis. If Pluto did slam into Neptune, they wouldn't break into rocky peices, Neptune is a gas giant, many times bigger than Pluto, and would most likely swallow it whole, but the impact would cause serious problems. Or Neptune's massive gravity could capture Pluto and transform it into another moon. But this is a Silverhawks message board so I'll shut up now.

TheTraveler007
Registered User
Posts: 19
(9/19/02 1:34 pm)
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Re: Bedlam's history
O.K. Heres my thought on the subject:

What powres up mon*star but a moon star, if we hold that a star was there then brimstar would be at the center of the system and everthing rotated around it with the fake sun postioned where pluto would be in are system.Then when the planets did rotate around the fake sun it would shine towerds brimstar and bedlama would be where the Earth is now. that would make brimstar mercury and dol-lar would be jupiter.

Now the light year limit could be formed up of two or more planets and/or rouge ones that got trapped in the orbit of the star.

The craters on bedlamma could have come from anything and then the planet could have been terriformed wich is why none of the rocks burned up entering the planet if the planet had no air to begine with.

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