> > > Hi Captains. Thank you for your patience! We've got our top Engineers checking in on the errors you are reporting. More updates as they become available, so watch this announcement section. < < <
UPDATE! We will be bringing down STO in 1hr 22min for emergency maintenance. ETA is 2 hrs (2AM) PDT. Details here.
Update! The queue is clear for now :) Thanks for your patience as we worked to get all players in. (Note: There may be small, sporadic queues as more players log in.)
Update! We are aware that some players are seeing an error upon login and are working to resolve this.
Jolan tru Captain!
Welcome to Legacy of Romulus!
If you have purchased a Legacy or Starter Pack, please see this thread for instructions on how to claim your items in-game. (Please see the yellow text in the linked thread for instructions on creating a Reman.)
If you have additional questions about the Legacy or Starter pack, please read this FAQ.
Thanks SO MUCH for all your support, and we'll see you in-game!
- The Star Trek Online Team
***Resolved Issues***
"Login failed for unknown reason" error
Missing additional character slot for current/ lapsed Gold Members
Proxima Centauri, V645 Cen, is our closest stellar neighbor, at 4.2 Light years.
1 Light Year is:
exactly 9,460,730,472,580.8 km (about 9.5 Trillion Km)
about 5,878,625,373,183.608 miles (about 5.9 Trillion miles)
So a Proxima Centauri is about :
39.9 trillion km --- that's 39,900,000,000,000 km
24.78 trillion miles --- 24,780,000,000,000 miles
in 21 days (as pointed out in the link) the probe moved about 6 million miles-9.66 million km
so 285,714 miles per day --- 460,000 km/day ..
A vessel, fully stocked and capable of supporting a crew for the whole duration, bound for Proxima Centauri, moving at the speed that the Juno probe is currently, would arrive at Proxima Centauri in:
about 86,739,130 days --- or 237,641.45 YEARS
...
So in conclusion: Warp Drive, or we are not going anywhere
Also, "Modern man" has been dated to be as old as nearly 200,000 years for it's whole complete (up to today) cycle to have been completed.
A journey as long as the one to Proxima Centauri shown above could show that a another whole evolutionary cycle could occur. The travelers would be something not at all human by modern definition, and neither would the residents still on the Earth.
Proxima Centauri, V645 Cen, is our closest stellar neighbor, at 4.2 Light years.
1 Light Year is:
exactly 9,460,730,472,580.8 km (about 9.5 Trillion Km)
about 5,878,625,373,183.608 miles (about 5.9 Trillion miles)
So a Proxima Centauri is about :
39.9 trillion km --- that's 39,900,000,000,000 km
24.78 trillion miles --- 24,780,000,000,000 miles
in 21 days (as pointed out in the link) the probe moved about 6 million miles-9.66 million km
so 285,714 miles per day --- 460,000 km/day ..
A vessel, fully stocked and capable of supporting a crew for the whole duration, bound for Proxima Centauri, moving at the speed that the Juno probe is currently, would arrive at Proxima Centauri in:
about 86,739,130 days --- or 237,641.45 YEARS
...
So in conclusion: Warp Drive, or we are not going anywhere
We're "Boldly Going"... it makes me smile to see this kind of thing. It puts us just one little step closer to the dream of actually venturing to the stars. Well done Nasa and everyone involved in the project.