By cross-referencing Traveller's Universal World Profile definitions with Star Trek's Planetary Classifcation definitions, we arrive at this handy Venn Intersection of science-fiction geekery.
Please note that these are approximations; Star Trek's system isn't as granular as Traveller's UWP.
Class A, B, C
- Different only in how the planet is heated
- Class A is geothermal (heated internally)
- Class B is geomorteus (heated by a star)
- Class C is geoinactive (frozen)
- Size:1-6
- Atmospheres: 0-3
- Hydrographics: 0-1
Class D
- Planetoids
- Size:0-1
- Atmospheres: 0
- Hydrographics: 0
Class E, F, G
- Highly volcanic
- Class E is geoplastic: the entire surface is molten
- Class F is geometallic: the surface has cooled somewhat with significant metal deposits
- Class G is geocrystalline: volcanic eruptions have mostly stopped and the surface is beginning to metamorphose into traditional rock
- Size:6-9
- Atmospheres: 9-12
- Hydrographics: any
Class H
- Desert
- Size: 5-9
- Atmospheres: 9-13
- Hydrographics: 0-1
Class I
- Large Gas Giants
Class J
- Small Gas Giants
Class K
- Uninhabitable without technology
- Size: 3-6
- Atmospheres: 0-10, but always tainted or exotic
- Hydrographics: 0-1
Class L
- Marginally habitable
- Size: 6-9
- Atmospheres: 4-9, tainted
- Hydrographics: any
Class M
- Terrestrial
- Size: 6-9
- Atmospheres: 5-9 (taint is likely to be from industrial pollution)
- Hydrographics: any
Class N
- Terrestrial, with reducing (hostile) atmospheres
- Size: 6-9
- Atmospheres: 5-12
- Hydrographics: any
Class O, P
- Water worlds; main difference is that class O is pelagic and class P is glaciated
- Size: 6-9
- Atmospheres: 5-9
- Hydrographics: 8-10
Class Q, R
- a.k.a "questionable" or "random", i.e. "WTF? This makes no sense. I blame the Ancients."
- Size: 3-9
- Atmospheres: 1-10
- Hydrographics: any
Class S, T
- Supermassive Gas Giants
- Artificially constructed habitats
- Class U: hollowed-out asteroid
- Class V: Ringworld
- Class W: Dyson Sphere
Class X, Y, Z
- a.k.a. "hellworlds" or "demon planets"
- Size: 6-9
- Atmospheres: 10-15
- Hydrographics: any, but rarely H20
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