Sa'kira listened to her crew as they gave their feedback, she nodded every often at what was said, staring at the holographic image of the asteroid as it began to slowly turn.
"All we know is it's general direction," she stated in regards to Shar's geologist comment, another display appeared beside the asteroid, showing it coming from the systems galactic west. "What's worrisome is this..."
"Also, while our ship doesn't have much data on 'where' it came from, the outpost that was monitoring it DID and Intel was able to recover the sensor logs from the black-box." She looked over at Def'leor, then knelt down beside the panel and tapped it a few times, a dialogue box on the holographic tank appeared saying: 'authorized personnel only, please enter command code'
Sa'kira did just that, entering her command code, along with the code for unlocking the data so that the rest of her crew could get access to it later.
The image suddenly faded outward, then was replaced by recorded sensor logs from a sensor outpost that 'had' been out on the rim of the system. The key word being had, because right beside the logs was the words 'station destroyed by asteroid'
This new image showed the asteroid as a circular white object as being beyond the sensor field which was being displayed as hundreds of small diamonds that ringed the entire star system - just a short distance from the net was a circular looking sensor outpost that monitored the net, the asteroid the asteroid was at a direction which would've taken it well clear of the star system. The sensor data then time-lasped by one hour every minute, showing this asteroid moving ever so slowly, then it suddenly disappeared from the display.
The time lapse continued until the asteroid reappeared, except this time it was well beyond the sensor field very close to the outside. The asteroid began to move, only this time at a much faster rate.
Red lines appeared showing the asteroids trajectory toward the sensor outpost, after a minute of the data being played the asteroid struck the outpost and that was it for the data. The data, however, replayed itself as the larger image of the asteroid reappeared into focus.