On Fri, Jan 26, 2018 at 01:27:46PM -0500, Caleuche wrote: > It does make me wonder why the imperial scout service exists at all > though - given how good our TL8 RV spectrometers are, and telescope > are, among the other methods of exoplanet detection, when you have a > network of those instruments across many star systems examining > every star, it's hard to imagine there would be an unknown exoplanet > larger than an asteroid out there. Certainly the scouts shouldn't > arrive not knowing the basic configuration of the system. Yes, they certainly shouldn't. They would arrive knowing all the planets, probably most of the moons and a lot of the other significant bodies in the system. They would also know quite a bit about the composition of each, likely including whether they have any large quantity of respirating life forms. But that's not where a scout's job ends. That's where it starts. - Tim