In the depths of space, far beyond the boundaries of the familiar, the greatest meaning often lies not in what we see…but what we don’t. Orbiting stars long past our solar system, are worlds beyond our science fiction imaginations: EXOPLANETS. Gas giants larger than Jupiter, lava worlds covered in molten seas, planets dominated by ice, and even the potentially habitable. Floating out in ever expanding blackness, these exoplanets are detectable when they pass in front of their star, temporarily eclipsing its light. Trillions of worlds, all yet to be found. But only the bold touch greatness. Because the power of discovery only exists for those who dare press forward…into the darkness…EVER UPWARD. Depicted on the mission patch is the Spitzer Telescope, used to discover both exoplanets UCF 1.01 and UCF 1.02 in 2012. The patch has an exoplanet depicted near the Leo constellation where the two UCF planets are located. The transit method line beneath the planet references graphs produced in the technique to discover exoplanets.
Mission VI - Mission Log
Into the Darkness | Oct. 13, 202270
13
373 PASS YARDS, 37 RUSH YARDS, 7 TD
John Rhys Plumlee's offensive performance
70 POINTS
Third most in a game in program history
111 REC. YARDS, 2 TD
Ryan O'Keefe's second consecutive game with 100+ receiving yards
121 REC. YARDS, 2 TD
Career-high receiving yards for Kobe Hudson
