It's a quadrinary system. One of the stars orbits at about twice the distance of pluto around the main star, and all the jump survey locations are within this orbit. One of the other stars, New York B, orbits a fair bit farther out, and New York C orbits New York B. New York C has a few gas giants; two of these, New York C-V and New York C-VII, have 25 moons each. Suspiciously, there isn't a New York C-VI. Maybe it was eaten by the star goat.
Anyway, what confounds me is the vast distance at which New York B and C orbit the main star. The system view says it's 9200, which doesn't mean much to me, but this image shows an interesting comparison:
http://i236.photobucket.com/albums/ff76 ... 8c078e.pngThat little blue ring in the middle is the orbit comparison of
ten times the distance of Pluto. It takes
30 years for one of my cruisers to get from the inner region to New York C (and about 15 years for my survey vessels), where there's at least one potentially habitable world there and lots of potential mining colonies.
Mind you, I've just started playing, so maybe several decades from now I'll have the technology to reach the place. For now, I'm renaming this system Olympus, being beyond the reach of mortals.
Also, it says there's asteroids, but I can't find them, and it gives me an error message when I click on "asteroids" in the All Bodies menu. Presumably they're all farther out than the system map can zoom out to.
EDIT: I just found another system, a binary one, whose lesser star is just as far away, so I guess it's not that uncommon. At least this one has intra-system Lagrange points.