Ceres Geographic Location in Uplink | World Anvil
BUILD YOUR OWN WORLD Like what you see? Become the Master of your own Universe!

Remove these ads. Join the Worldbuilders Guild

Ceres

Fifth planet from Sol.

Ceres is the fifth planet of The Sol System and is the innermost dwarf planet. It has a tilt of 4°. It has a global population of 35 million spread across ??? nations, with its cities built in pressurised due to terraforming attempts failing. Temperatures range from -10 to 15 within the domes, averaging at 7°. 73° of Ceres' gravity is artificially generated.   Ceres is the only planet farthar than Sol than Terra that has not been terraformed   It has an atmosphere of oxygen, carbon dioxide and hydrogen. The planet experiences a lot of asteroid storms.   Water needs importing, mostly from Mars and Callisto, though hydroplants allow for the burning of oxygen and hydrogen to create water. 35% of Ceres' energy is biofuel, 10% is solar energy, 10% comes from kinetic sources and 45% is imported from Mars and Io.   Its major industries include resource mining and farming. Most transportation is achieved with planes, hovervehicles, hypertubes and landvehicles. It is a popular tourist destination due to its ???.   People from Ceres are called Ceresians and products from Ceres are described as Ceresian.   Terraformers have experienced setbacks due to the location of Ceres within the asteroid belt.

Geography

Ceres has many craters on its surface from previous asteroid collisions. It also has no seasons.

Fauna & Flora

Many plants grown for crops. Very few animals.

Natural Resources

Minerals from rocks.
Alternative Name(s)
Sol 5
Type
Planet
Location under
Related Professions

Remove these ads. Join the Worldbuilders Guild

Guild Feature

Display your locations, species, organizations and so much more in a tree structure to bring your world to life!

Comments

Please Login in order to comment!
Nov 29, 2019 12:58 by Jimmy Shrekson

Okay this stuff is really good and clearly thought out. I've looked into these locations as they are in 2019 and I must applaud the fact that you've clearly looked into things and thought your ideas through. That aside, your work is very interesting and I must disagree I tried eating a lemon and clearly the things aren't edible.

Nov 29, 2019 15:42 by Ava S. Jones

Thank you, however I have eaten many lemons before, and can assure you that they are.

Nov 29, 2019 20:39 by Jimmy Shrekson

You're welcome, but then why was the skin impossible to chew?