This is Commander Maximilian Trasser's report on the preliminary expedition into the newly discovered, presumed extra-Sirian system, codename
EARHART.
At 1835 hours SMT, October 12, the
Unto Nightfall engaged its jump drive for a "blind jump," opening a hyperspace breach to what conventionally should have been a random location within the Sirius sector. The
Point Of No Return, under my command, escorted by field operative Armsman, was to enter the opened breach, traverse hyperspace, and investigate whatever system we entered on the other side. As predicted based on analysis from a previously attempted blind jump, the
Point Of No Return exited hyperspace in an unknown location. Due to rapid destabilization of the jump hole, Armsman was unable to follow; the
Unto Nightfall was forced to open a second breach, which the operative was able to traverse. While he, too, entered the same location as us, our arrival points were separated by several dozen clicks.
The location, confirmed by visual data comparison with the
Unto Nightfall's logs to be codename
EARHART, appears to be a starless sector of space. While similar in appearance to locations in the Edge Nebula, we were unable to pinpoint coordinates using known astrographical data, corroborating the hypothesis that
EARHART is extra-Sirian.
The EARHART sector
Fascinatingly, the entire sector was littered with debris. Scanner sweeps confirmed the majority of it to be of
human origin. Several dozen remains of spaceships were discovered, most of relatively recent date, including the two Libertonian dreadnoughts
Fairmont and
Whitefield and their escorts, presumed lost in 826 A.S., as well as ships of Rheinland, Kusari, Bretonian, Gallic, and Outcast origin.
The LNS Fairmont
The LNS Whitefield
However, we also discovered wreckage of significantly older make, dating as far back as the earliest days of Sirian exploration: the LCC
Bell, dating back to 92 A.S., and the LCEC
Ordway, dating as far back as 60 A.S.
The LCC Bell
The LCEC Ordway
At the center of
EARHART, we discovered a formation of clearly artificial origin: a series of smaller objects, enveloped by energy fields of a yet unknown kind, forming a ring around a large central structure, consisting of two horizontally segmented, roughly diamond-shaped polyhedrons forming a pylon. Their segments shift by rotating every few seconds. Between the two objects' obtuse points, sensors detected a point of high, extremely concentrated energy. Exact readings were impossible to take, resulting in readout failures across the board. The exact energy output, dimensions, mass, material composition, or temperature of the structure are therefore currently impossible to ascertain. However, it is clear that these structures are not of human origin.
The central structure with surrounding ring formation
Armsman and the
Point Of No Return attempted to approach the formation to conduct another series of scans at closer range. However, the smaller structures forming the perimeter seem to serve as a defensive system. They targeted both our vessels and launched kinetic projectiles at incredible velocities and ranges. The
Point Of No Return took a direct hit, which overloaded her shields immediately. We aborted our approach, took evasive actions, and retreated out of range of these weapons. Scanners could not determine the composition of the launched projectiles, nor the exact mechanism by which they were launched.
The sector's intense radiation, likely emanating from the central structure, was gradually wearing through both Armsman's and the
Point Of No Return's shielding. Nevertheless, I decided to perform a sweep of
EARHART's outer reaches. Around the perimeter, we discovered eight further structures of clearly artificial, non-human origin. Consisting of three pairs of connected petal-like "arms" in a ring formation, these constructs vaguely resemble human-made jump gates. While four of these objects were inert, four more were actively containing unstable jump holes. Amazingly, scans showed that two of these led to Sirian systems, Sigma-19 and Zurich. The other two destinations could not be determined. It is possible that these lead to further extra-Sirian systems. As with the sector's central structures, even close-range surface scans were unable to determine the "gates'" material composition.
An inert "gate"
With our ships' shielding rapidly wearing down and radiation damage to their hulls accumulating, I made the decision to abort any further exploration of
EARHART. Armsman and the
Point Of No Return set course for the gate containing a jump hole to the Sigma-19 system and entered. Despite its unstable nature, we successfully reentered real space intact. The egress point showed signs of extreme instability, likely rendering a return jump through the jump hole to
EARHART recklessly dangerous, if not outright impossible. Given the state of our ships, I chose not to make an attempt.
We returned to Omicron Mu at best speed and without any incident to deliver the collected data.
I advise extreme caution regarding future expeditions into EARHART. It is unknown whether further blind jumps will open breaches into the sector, nor whether there will continue to be viable egress routes back to Sirius. Further, the intense radiation and present hostile weapon systems pose a severe threat to any exploratory force.
End of report.
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