Zeki
It might be hard to understand, but not all moons are all that important
Zeki is the moon of the planet the Levis region is part of. Small, dense and far away, it is within a highly stable orbit of the planet. This does not make it special. Indeed, compared to the reader's own moon, Zeki has made barely the proverbial pebble splash.
Perhaps the most interesting thing about Zeki is its mineral surface, made of a highly diffuse substance, it practically blends into the night sky for most of the Levis year.
Geography
Geographically only about 2000km in diameter, Zeki contains several geographic abnormalities for if any celestial mathematician or amateur cosmologist decide to take a look.
The first is an east west scar that seems a solid glance with an iron core meteorite. Observational data shows different mineral deposits along the surface of the scar.
The first is an east west scar that seems a solid glance with an iron core meteorite. Observational data shows different mineral deposits along the surface of the scar.
Ecosystem
The surace of this moon hides ridges and crevices of microbes that thrive on reflected beta radiation. Microscopic but highly active, the unfortunate state of it is their extremely short lives filled with very little change means that they have not gotten past the survive part of existence.
Climate
What little atmosphere Zeki can manage is saturated in Hydrogen sulphide, solid hydrogen sulphide forming in the recesses and dark spaces of the rocky mass.
'Rotten egg' winds swirl the surface, with surface rains incredibly rare, conditions more likely to to foster sublimation and depositing than any form of liquid phase.
'Rotten egg' winds swirl the surface, with surface rains incredibly rare, conditions more likely to to foster sublimation and depositing than any form of liquid phase.
Type
Planetoid / Moon
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