For full documentation see the Official Soyuz Documentation
The Yasny (Russian, archaic: Ясный - Eng: Bright) system was fully catalogued by Russian observatories in 2064. With the analysis of the final exoplanet complete, Yasny would become the top candidate for potential future colonization attempts. The system dossier would be picked up again following the election of General Sec. Gregoriy Mikhailovich Chekhov in 2100 CE, leading the USSR to return to the space race through its new project ‘Izkhod (Exodus)’. The first objectives of the project were to test FTL capability by sending an autonomous ship to the highest habitation candidate, Kitezh. Following its arrival into the system a month later, the vessel would deploy numerous satellites into the polar orbit, designed to map the surface with altimetry radar and multispectral scans. With potential landing sites established, a separate ship manned by humanoid drones was sent to the surface with supplies. The mission commanded the machines to construct a base and reside on Kitezh for one full solar cycle while taking measurements, which lasted for 10 years. In its success, the first batch of Kitezh colonists had arrived in 2117 CE, officially settling the Yasny system.
The Yasny (Russian, archaic: Ясный - Eng: Bright) system was fully catalogued by Russian observatories in 2064. With the analysis of the final exoplanet complete, Yasny would become the top candidate for potential future colonization attempts. The system dossier would be picked up again following the election of General Sec. Gregoriy Mikhailovich Chekhov in 2100 CE, leading the USSR to return to the space race through its new project ‘Izkhod (Exodus)’. The first objectives of the project were to test FTL capability by sending an autonomous ship to the highest habitation candidate, Kitezh. Following its arrival into the system a month later, the vessel would deploy numerous satellites into the polar orbit, designed to map the surface with altimetry radar and multispectral scans. With potential landing sites established, a separate ship manned by humanoid drones was sent to the surface with supplies. The mission commanded the machines to construct a base and reside on Kitezh for one full solar cycle while taking measurements, which lasted for 10 years. In its success, the first batch of Kitezh colonists had arrived in 2117 CE, officially settling the Yasny system.