During my tour, a civilian freighter strayed too close to the exclusion zone. Within four minutes, two Vanguard interceptors launched from the Nova-3 's belly, escorting the vessel back to the shipping lane.
If you look up at the twilight sky tonight, just after the last glint of sunlight fades, you might see it: a steady, silver pinprick moving faster than any star. That is not a satellite. That is the Nova-3 . nova 3 near orbit vanguard alliance
Inside the Vanguard Alliance: Life Aboard the Nova-3 Near-Orbit Platform During my tour, a civilian freighter strayed too
Stellar Date 04.17.26 By: J. Chen, Orbital Affairs Correspondent That is not a satellite
"The near-orbit position is strategic," explained Commander Rios, the ship's Executive Officer. "We are high enough to see a missile launch from any continent, but low enough to deploy drop pods and interceptors within ninety seconds. We are the shield." Life aboard the Nova-3 is not for the faint of heart. Because the vessel operates in near orbit, it still experiences trace atmospheric drag. Twice a day, the ship fires its maneuvering thrusters to maintain altitude. For the crew of 150, this means random "bump" moments where the artificial gravity flickers and the floor seems to drop out from under you.
"They don't pay us enough to watch the sun rise sixteen times a day," joked Tech Sergeant Mira, "but the view of the auroras from up here? That’s why we stay." Why does the Vanguard Alliance maintain the Nova-3 in such a precarious position?