canonsystem brief

Inamun Orbital Dossier

Inamun circles the blue-white sun Zumur while distant Anara hangs as a second star on the edge of every argument. Three visible moons shape tides, labor, and ritual; a fourth remains disputed.

Entry body

Inamun Orbital Dossier

The modern Inamun model begins with a compromise between indigenous sky-memory and Umari astronomy. Inamun orbits Zumur directly, while Anara remains a distant companion star whose white light still marks the origin point of the Umari refugee fleets.

The three accepted moons orbit Inamun itself, not one another. Nannamen is the nearest and most feared during eclipse season; Kurumen glints with cratered mineral plains; Zishara is the outer working moon that drew both scientific fascination and colonial extraction. Umari observatories renamed them Umbra, Lumina, and Celestra, but those names never replaced the older ones everywhere.

Ninara survives as both a myth and an orbital hypothesis. Some treat it as an ancestral moon in a dark outer track. Others think it is a captured object, invisible for long intervals because it is small, dim, and politically inconvenient to admit into the official charts.