Seefra is a fictional planetary system in the Andromeda universe. At the end of Season 4, Trance Gemini transports all the main characters to the Seefra system. The system has two dim suns, Methus-1 and Methus-2, along with nine identical barren worlds, Seefra-1 through Seefra-9. The population of the system is highly superstitious and technology, especially spaceflight, is shunned. The planets are in constant drought, so water is treasured. Flavin, a Paradine, meets Dylan here, giving him cryptic hints about Dylan's destiny and what Seefra is before disappearing. Seefra-1 is revealed to be the planetTarn-Vedra, center of the Vedran Empire and subsequent Systems Commonwealth for thousands of years, as discovered by Dylan Hunt during Season 5. Eight of the nine planets in the Seefra system, from Seefra-9 through Seefra-2, are destroyed during Season 5, as Trance Gemini's sun enters the system to become the new Seefran/Vedran sun. Not only are the eight planets destroyed, but the manufactured Methus suns are consumed as well. The new Vedran sun comes to a stop before reaching Seefra-1, revealing that the consumption of the other eight planets and the Methus suns was part of an elaborate braking system - by design. Much of Season 5 centers on: the discovery and decoding of the Methus Diagram which is a blueprint of the Methus suns; the repair of the sun Methus-2, and; the evacuation of Seefra-9 through Seefra-2, as the new sun consumes the planetary system.
Planetary Differentiation
All Planets
Each planet in the Seefra system contains a Vedran portal chamber which allows instant transport to any of the nine planets in the system.
Seefra-1
Most crew members are transported to and reside on this planet.
Bar run by Seamus Harper, and used during most episodes of Season 5.
Seefra-5
Inhabited by a religious sect led by Burma and his sister Ashael.
This sect eschews all technology, and believes that the earthquakes, caused by the approaching sun, are an elaborate hoax of technology perpetuated by Dylan Hunt and the Andromeda.