Black Hole Hyper Iii
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Black Hole Hyper Iii
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How do I locate a hyper black hole, and do they look different than the normal ones?
I see in the wiki that there are such things as "hyper black holes"... https://nomanssky.gamepedia.com/Black_Hole How do I locate one (as opposed to any other black hole), do they look different, and/or how can I tell if I just used one?
I think the wiki info on that is out of date. Black Holes used to take you to somewhere random. Some time after NEXT, they changed it so a black hole always goes to the exact same location. I am pretty sure "Hyper" black holes no longer exist..actually this is the first time I have heard of them and been playing since September 2016. They would not look any different- just go farther than a normal black hole distance.
This article is about the Visions version of Black Holes. For the Atlas Rises version, see Black Hole (Atlas). . . . Black Holes take you to a fixed star system across the galaxy and randomly damage one of your starship technologies. They will always move you closer to the centre by approximately 7,000 light-years (+/- 1,000 ly) unless they are part of the hyper black holes which can be used to travel insane distances of over 300,000 light-years towards it. . . . Black Holes which are part of the four spirals of a galaxy have the unique ability to bridge huge distances unlike their normal counterparts, turning the Outer Rim into a black hole highway. Any hyper black hole will target a specific system all around the outer galactic shell and can bridge over 300.000 light-years towards the centre and over two million overall. This is due to a lack of systems around the centre at the same distance as the spirals. The nearest system possible around The Fade at the same angle is chosen. This also works to a lesser degree for all other black holes near the Fade aside of the upper and lower rim due to their limited radius of 50.000 light-years. Seems the Hyper Black holes are only along the outer edge of the Galaxy.
Last edited by Lindy Bomber ;
31 Jul, 2019 @ 6:52pm
Those articles are out of date. There is no such thing as a hyper black hole. I've crossed 17 galaxies from outer edge to core and thru the cores and never heard of or saw a "hyper" black hole. Every galaxy moves you 5 to 7 thousand light years from the core -- unless the core is less than that distance away. It's random in that the distance is random but it would be the same distance for every one for each black hole. OMG Go here Black Hole Suns https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Ce7nIALXq95t27ptVFe0Ufz3Wu0e0h9l_LauASU0UU4/edit#gid=1014951953
Last edited by DarkEternal ;
1 Aug, 2019 @ 6:52am
Last edited by BaneBlackGuard ;
1 Aug, 2019 @ 7:37am
Originally posted by BaneBlackGuard :
Last edited by DarkEternal ;
1 Aug, 2019 @ 9:54am
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Date Posted: 31 Jul, 2019 @ 2:35pm
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Black Holes take you to a fixed star system across the galaxy . If any technology modules exist in your starship general inventory, some may be be damaged at random upon arrival to the new system (modules in technology inventory are safe). Black holes will always move you closer to the centre by approximately 7,000 light-years (+/- 1,000 ly) unless they are part of the hyper black holes which can be used to travel vast distances of over 300,000 light-years towards it.
Even though your ship may be capable of traveling further by warping several times in a row, it does not fly a linear path. Instead, your warp navigation is calculated by navigating past several systems along the route. So if you travel 5,000 ly with your ship, you may only be 2,500 ly closer to the centre, or roughly 50% of the distance your ship actually travelled.
Black hole travel is one of the fastest ways to the centre of the galaxy discounting the ancient Portal network. Using black hole jumps, it is possible to reach the Galaxy Centre from the starting system (~700K ly away) in 2.5 - 3 hours. The effective warp speed achieved with black hole travel is ~5,500 ly/min. With Beyond and Synthesis changes it is possible to achieve effective warp speed of 5,900 - 6,000 ly/min using an Explorer with 3,300ly range.
Traveling through black holes will (almost) always take you closer to the Galaxy Centre by several thousand more light-years than any Hyperdrive can accomplish, but this is NOT linear. There will be a report at the end of the trip detailing how far you traveled, but this isn't how much closer you got to the Galaxy Centre. The actual direction of travel could be anywhere around the Galaxy Centre, so it's possible you may actually travel through the galactic core to your destination. Regardless, you will (almost) always end up around 7000 light-years closer to the Galaxy Centre (even though you may have traveled through the galactic core to get there). So if you transit a black hole, don't expect to be able to find your previous position in the Galaxy Map.
Black holes are a spatial anomaly that can be found by asking Specialist Polo in the Space Anomaly for "a shortcut to the centre", or by stumbling upon them in a Black Hole System. If you learn the location of a black hole by talking to Polo, it will appear as a Waypoints selection at the top of your galactic map. Later on during the journey they will also be highlighted on the Galactic Map as a black star. After birthing a new star at the end of The Atlas Path , a traveller gains the ability to see all black holes on the nearby Galactic Map.
Every region has exactly one Black Hole System with the Portal System ID of 079 ( 079 ). This allows to track them down by using a local portal to find the system inside a region without the black hole radar. Be aware that since the late NEXT era black holes do not appear in systems that were reached by a portal, even though the signal booster may show the hexadecimal address.
The last number hereby refers to the same portal system ID, just with an extra 0 to fit the signal booster format.
Black Holes which are part of the four spirals of a galaxy have the unique ability to bridge huge distances unlike their normal counterparts, turning the Outer Rim into a black hole highway. Any hyper black hole will target a specific system all around the outer galactic shell and can bridge over 300,000 light-years towards the centre and over two million overall. This is due to a lack of systems around the centre at the same distance as the spirals. The nearest system possible around The Fade at the same angle is chosen. This also works to a lesser degree for all other black holes near the Fade aside of the upper and lower rim due to their limited radius of 50.000 light-years.
The furthest recorded travel is Uining-Reyan OR-Alpha - Vaavid XI with 339,328 ly towards the centre and 1,846,461 ly away.
The longest recorded travel is Afangdi - Uxtonbro with 149,453 ly towards the centre and 2,158,894 ly away from its original location.
Black hole exit coordinates in Ijsenufryos
Spawn system galactic map in Nipikulha
Black hole exit coordinates in Nipikulha
Spawn system galactic map in Autsurabin
Black hole exit galactic map in Autsurabin
Black hole exit coordinates in Autsurabin
Spawn system galactic map in Lusontrygiamh
Black hole exit galactic map in Lusontrygiamh
Black hole exit coordinates in Lusontrygiamh
Spawn system galactic map in Rewmanawa
This article is about the current version of Black Holes. For the Endurance version, see Black Hole (Endurance) .
By
Aristos Georgiou
On 11/13/19 at 9:38 AM EST
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Astronomers have discovered a runaway star travelling through the Milky Way at roughly 3.7 million miles per hour, accelerated to such high speeds by the supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy.
A team led by Sergey Koposov from Carnegie Mellon University spotted the ultrafast star—dubbed S5-HVS1—in the constellation Grus using the 3.9-meter Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) near Coonabarabran, Australia, according to a study published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society .
Further observations with the European Space Agency's Gaia satellite revealed the star is moving around ten times faster than most stars in the galaxy and is on course to exit the Milky Way forever.
"The velocity of the discovered star is so high that it will inevitably leave the Galaxy and never return," Douglas Boubert, a co-author on the study from the University of Oxford in the U.K.,
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