best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 18

Project Hail Mary

โ€ŒThe crew of theย Hail Maryย sat on the couch in the break room, each with their drink of choice.โ€Œ

Commander Yรกo had a German beer, Engineer Ilyukhina had a distressingly large tumbler of vodka, and Science Specialist DuBois had a glass of 2003 Cabernet Sauvignon that he had poured ten minutes in advance to ensure it had time to breathe.

The break room itself had been a struggle to arrange. Stratt didnโ€™t like anything that wasnโ€™t directly related to the mission, and an aircraft carrier wasnโ€™t exactly over๏ฌ‚owing with extra space. Still, with more than a hundred scientists from all over the world demanding a place to relax, she had relented. A small room in the corner of the hangar deck was built to house theย โ€œextravagance.โ€

Dozens of people crowded into the room and watched the TV feed on the wall-mounted monitor. By silent agreement, the crew got to sit on the couch. The crew got all possible perks and privileges. They were sacri๏ฌcing their lives for humanity. The least we could do was give them the best seats.

โ€œAnd weโ€™re just minutes away from lift-o๏ฌ€,โ€ย said the BBC reporter. We could have watched American news, Chinese news, Russian news, it would have all been the same. The long shot of Baikonur Cosmodrome interspersed with shots of the huge launch vehicle on the pad.

The reporter stood in the observation room overlooking Moscowโ€™s Mission Control Center.ย โ€œTodayโ€™s launch is the ninth in a total of sixteen total launches for Project Hail Mary, but it is arguably the most important one. This payload contains the cockpit, lab, and dormitory modules. Astronauts on ISS are ready to receive the modules and will spend the next two weeks

positioning them on theย Hail Maryโ€™s frame, which was built over the last several expeditionsโ€ฆโ€

Ilyukhina raised her vodka.ย โ€œDo not fuck up my house, Roscosmos bastards!โ€

โ€œArenโ€™t they your friends?โ€ย I asked.

โ€œThey can be both!โ€ย She bellowed with laughter.

The countdown came on-screen. Less than a minute to go.

Yรกo leaned forward and peered intently. It must have been hardโ€”a military man of action forced to passively watch something so important play out.

DuBois saw Yรกoโ€™s expression.ย โ€œIโ€™m certain the launch will go well, Commander Yรกo.โ€

โ€œMm,โ€ย said Yรกo.

โ€œThirty seconds to launch,โ€ย said Ilyukhina.ย โ€œI cannot wait that long.โ€ย She downed her vodka and immediately poured herself another glass.

The assembled scientists pressed forward a bit as the countdown continued. I found myself pinned against the back of the couch. But I was too focused on the screen to care.

DuBois craned his neck to look back at me.ย โ€œWill Ms. Stratt not be joining us?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t think so,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œShe doesnโ€™t care about fun stu๏ฌ€ย like launches.

Sheโ€™s probably going over spreadsheets in her o๏ฌƒce or something.โ€

He nodded.ย โ€œThen itโ€™s fortunate that we have you here. To represent her, in a way.โ€

โ€œMe? Represent her? How did you get that idea?โ€

Ilyukhina spun her head to face me.ย โ€œYou are number two, no? You areย ๏ฌrst o๏ฌƒcer of Project Hail Mary?โ€

โ€œWhat? No! Iโ€™m just one of the scientists. Like all these guys.โ€ย I gestured to the men and women behind me.

Ilyukhina and DuBois looked at each other and then back to me.ย โ€œYou honestly think this?โ€ย she said.

Bob Redell spoke up behind me.ย โ€œYouโ€™re not like the rest of us, Grace.โ€ย I shrugged at him.ย โ€œOf course I am. Why wouldnโ€™t I be?โ€

โ€œThe point is,โ€ย DuBois said,ย โ€œyou are, somehow, special to Ms. Stratt. I had assumed you two were engaged in sexual congress.โ€

My mouth fell agape.ย โ€œWhaโ€”what?! Are you out of your mind?! No! No way!โ€

โ€œHuh,โ€ย said Ilyukhina.ย โ€œPerhaps you should be? She is uptight. She could use good roll in hay.โ€

โ€œOh my God. Is that what people think?โ€ย I turned to face the scientists. Most of them averted their eyes.ย โ€œNothing like that is going on! And Iโ€™m not her number two! Iโ€™m just a scientistโ€”drafted into this project like the rest of you!โ€

Yรกo turned around and stared at me for a moment. The room fell silent.

He didnโ€™t speak much, so when he did, people paid attention.

โ€œYou are the number two,โ€ย he said. Then he turned back to the screen.

The BBC announcer counted the last few seconds along with the on-screen timer.ย โ€œThreeโ€ฆtwoโ€ฆoneโ€ฆand we have lift-o๏ฌ€!โ€

Flames and smoke surrounded the rocket on-screen, and it rose skyward.

Slow atย ๏ฌrst, then picking up more and more speed.

Ilyukhina held her glass up for a few seconds andย ๏ฌnally burst into cheers.ย โ€œTower is clear! Launch is good!โ€ย She gulped her vodka.

โ€œItโ€™s only a hundred feet o๏ฌ€ย the ground,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œMaybe wait till it reaches orbit?โ€

DuBois sipped his wine.ย โ€œAstronauts celebrate when the tower is clear.โ€ย Without a word, Yรกo took a sip of his beer.

โ€”

โ€œWhy. Doesnโ€™t. This. Work?!โ€ย I hit my forehead with both palms at each word.

Iย ๏ฌ‚op into the lab chair, de๏ฌ‚ated.

Rocky watches from his tunnel above.ย โ€œNo predator, question?โ€ย โ€œNo predator.โ€ย I sigh.

The experiment is simple enough. Itโ€™s a glass bulb full of Adrianโ€™s air. The air didnโ€™t actually come from Adrian, but the proportions of gases are based

on the spectrograph of its atmosphere. The pressure is very lowโ€”one-tenth atmosphere, like the upper atmosphere of Adrian must be.

Also inside the bulb is our collected Adrian life-forms and some fresh Astrophage. I hoped that providing a bunch of nice, juicy Astrophage would make the predator population spike and I could isolate it from the sample once it was the dominant cell type present.

Didnโ€™t work.

โ€œYou are certain, question?โ€

I check my makeshift heat-energy indicator. Itโ€™s just a thermocouple with part of it sticking in ice water and part of it attached to the bulb. Heat energy is provided by Astrophage and consumed by the ice. The resulting temperature of the thermocouple tells me how much total heat energy the Astrophage is giving o๏ฌ€. If the temperature goes down, it means the Astrophage population went down. But thatโ€™s not happening.

โ€œYeah, Iโ€™m sure,โ€ย I say.ย โ€œNo change in Astrophage population.โ€

โ€œMaybe temperature of bulb no good. Too hot. Adrian upper atmosphere is probably much colder than you room temperature.โ€

I shake my head.ย โ€œAdrian air temperature shouldnโ€™t matter. The predator has to be able to handle Astrophage temperature.โ€

โ€œAh. Yes. You are right.โ€

โ€œMaybe the predator theory is wrong,โ€ย I say.

He clicks across the tunnel to the far side of the lab. He paces when he thinks. Interesting that humans and Eridians would both have that behavior.ย โ€œPredators is only explanation. Maybe predators no live in Petrova line. Maybe predators live further down in atmosphere.โ€

I perk up.ย โ€œMaybe.โ€

I look over to the lab monitor. I have it showing the external camera view of Adrian. Not for any scienti๏ฌc reasonโ€”just because it looks cool. Right this moment weโ€™re about to cross the terminator into the day side of the planet. The light of orbital dawn glows along an arc.

โ€œOkay, letโ€™s say the predator lives in the atmosphere. What altitude?โ€ย โ€œWhat altitude is best, question? If you predator, where you go, question?

You go to Astrophage.โ€

โ€œOkay, so what altitude are the Astrophage at?โ€ย The question answers itself.ย โ€œAh! Thereโ€™s a breeding altitude. Where air has enough carbon dioxide for Astrophage to breed.โ€

โ€œYes!โ€ย He clatters back up his tunnel and stands above me.ย โ€œWe canย ๏ฌnd.

Easy. Use Petrovascope.โ€

I slam myย ๏ฌst into my palm.ย โ€œYes! Of course!โ€

Astrophage have to breed somewhere. Some partial pressure of carbon dioxide will be key. But we donโ€™t have to work that out or take any guesses. When an Astrophage divides, it and its o๏ฌ€spring head back to Tau Ceti. And they use IR-light emission to make it happen. That means there will be a glow of Petrova-frequency light coming from all over the planet at that speci๏ฌc altitude.

โ€œTo the control room!โ€ย I say.

โ€œControl room!โ€ย He scampers across the lab ceiling tunnel and disappears through his personal control-room entrance. I follow along beside but Iโ€™m not quite as fast.

I climb up the ladder, take the pilotโ€™s seat, andย ๏ฌ‚ip on the Petrovascope. Rocky has already taken up position in his bulb and points his camera at my main screen.

The entire screen glows red.ย โ€œWhat is this, question? No data.โ€

โ€œWait,โ€ย I say. I bring up the controls and options and start moving sliders.

โ€œWeโ€™re inside the Petrova line. Thereโ€™s Astrophage all around us. Let me just change the setting to only show the brightest sourcesโ€ฆ.โ€

It takes a lot of manipulation, but Iย ๏ฌnally manage to get the brightness range set. What Iโ€™m left with are irregular blotchy areas of IR light coming from Adrian.

โ€œI think this is our answer,โ€ย I say.

Rocky gets closer to his textured screen toย โ€œseeโ€ย what Iโ€™m looking at.ย โ€œNot what I expected,โ€ย I say.

I thought it would just be a general layer of IR glow at a given altitude. But itโ€™s nothing like that. The clumps are basically clouds. And they donโ€™t match

up with the wispy white clouds I can see with visible light. These are, for lack of a better term, IR clouds.

Or, more accurately, clouds of Astrophage that are emitting IR. For whatever reason, Astrophage breed much more in some areas than others.

โ€œUnusual distribution,โ€ย says Rocky, echoing my own thoughts.ย โ€œYes. Maybe the weather a๏ฌ€ects breeding?โ€

โ€œMaybe. Can you calculate altitude, question?โ€ย โ€œYes. Wait.โ€

I zoom and pan the Petrovascope until Iโ€™m looking at an Astrophage cloud right on the horizon of Adrian. The readouts show the cameraโ€™s current angle with respect to the axes of the ship. I jot those angles down and switch to the navigation console. It tells me the angle of the ship relative to the center of our orbit. With that information, and a whole bunch of trigonometry, I can work out the altitude of the Astrophage clouds.

โ€œThe breeding altitude is 91.2 kilometers from the surface. The width is less than 200 meters.โ€

Rocky folds one of his claws over the other. I know that body language.

Heโ€™s thinking.ย โ€œIf predators exist, predators are there.โ€ย โ€œAgreed,โ€ย I say.ย โ€œBut how do we get a sample?โ€ย โ€œHow close can orbit get, question?โ€

โ€œOne hundred kilometers from the planet. Any closer and the ship will burn up in the atmosphere.โ€

โ€œThis is unfortunate,โ€ย Rocky says.ย โ€œEight point eight kilometers away from breeding zone. No can get closer, question?โ€

โ€œIf we hit the atmosphere at orbital speed, we die. But what if we slow down?โ€

โ€œSlow down means orbit no good. Fall into air. Die.โ€

I lean over the armrest to look at him.ย โ€œWe can use the engines to keep from falling into the atmosphere. Just thrust constantly away from the planet. Lower ourselves into the atmosphere, get a sample, and then leave.โ€

โ€œNo work. We die.โ€ย โ€œWhy no work?โ€

โ€œEngines give o๏ฌ€ย enormous IR light. If you use in air, air become ions.

Explosion. Destroy ship.โ€

I wince.ย โ€œRight, of course.โ€

Back when Dimitriย ๏ฌrst tested a spin drive, it was only on for 100 microseconds and it melted a metric ton of metallic silicon behind it. And that test drive was one-thousandth the power of theย Hail Maryโ€™s engines. Everything worksย ๏ฌne when Iโ€™m in a vacuum. But using the engines in air would create aย ๏ฌreball that makes a nuclear bomb look like aย ๏ฌrecracker.

We sit in frustrated silence for a while. The salvation of both our worlds might be just 10 kilometers below us, and we canโ€™t get to it. There has to be a way. But how? We donโ€™t even need to be there. We just need to get a sample of the air there. Anything, no matter how small.

Wait a minute.

โ€œHow do you make xenonite again? You mix two liquids?โ€

Rocky is caught o๏ฌ€ย guard by the question, but he answers.ย โ€œYes. Have liquid and liquid. Mix. They become xenonite.โ€

โ€œHow much can you make? How much of those liquids did you bring?โ€ย โ€œI bring much. I use to make my zone.โ€

I bring up a spreadsheet and start typing in numbers.ย โ€œWe need 0.4 cubic

meters of xenonite. Can you make that much?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ย he says.ย โ€œHave enough liquids remain to make 0.61 cubic meters.โ€ย โ€œOkay. Then I haveโ€ฆan idea.โ€ย I steeple myย ๏ฌngers.

โ€”

Itโ€™s a simple idea, but also stupid. Thing is, when stupid ideas work, they become genius ideas. Weโ€™ll see which way this one falls.

The Astrophage breeding grounds are 10 kilometers into the atmosphere of Adrian. I canโ€™tย ๏ฌ‚y theย Hail Maryย that low because the air is too thick and Iโ€™d burn up. I canโ€™t use the engines in the atmosphere because then all heck breaks loose and everything blows up.

So, itโ€™s time to goย ๏ฌshing. Weโ€™re going to make a 10-kilometer-long chain, put a sampling device of some kind on the end (Rocky will make that), and

drag it through the atmosphere. Easy enough, right?

Wrong.

Theย Hail Maryย has to maintain a velocity of 12.6 kilometers per second to stay in orbit. Any slower and weโ€™ll decay and burn up. But if we drag a chain through the air at that velocityโ€”even a xenonite chainโ€”itโ€™ll get torn up and vaporized.

So we have to go slower. But going slower means falling toward the planet. Unless I use the engines to constantly maintain altitude. But if I do that, Iโ€™d be thrusting directly away from the chain and sample device. The exhaust from the engines will vaporize all of it.

So weโ€™ll thrust at an angle. Simple as that.

Itโ€™ll look absolutely ridiculous. Theย Hail Maryย will be tilted to 30 degrees from vertical, thrusting upward at that angle. Below it, the chain will dangle 10 kilometers into the air straight down. The atmosphere behind the thrusters will be in a constant state of ionizedย ๏ฌre. It should be quite a show. But itโ€™ll beย behindย us and the chain will be passing through una๏ฌ€ected air.

All told, our lateral velocity will be just over 100 meters per second. The chain can handle that speed in the thin high-altitude air, no problem. I calculated that itโ€™ll only de๏ฌ‚ect about 2 degrees from vertical.

Once we feel like we have a sample, we skedaddle. What could possibly go wrong!

I say that ironically.

Iโ€™m not the greatest 3-D modeler, but Iโ€™m able to make a chain link in CAD reasonably well. Itโ€™s not a normal oval link, though. Itโ€™s mostly oval, but with a thin opening for another link to enter. Easy to assemble the links, but extremely unlikely for them to rattle apart. Especially when theyโ€™re under tension.

I grab a block of aluminum and mount it in the mill.

โ€œThis will work, question?โ€ย Rocky asks from his ceiling tunnel.ย โ€œIt should,โ€ย I say.

Iย ๏ฌre up the mill and it gets right to work. It drills out the mold for a chain link exactly the way Iโ€™d hoped.

I pull the workpiece out, dust o๏ฌ€ย the aluminum shavings, and hold it up to the tunnel.ย โ€œHowโ€™s this?โ€

โ€œVery good!โ€ย Rocky says.ย โ€œWe will need many many many chain links. More molds means I can make more at one time. You can make many molds, question?โ€

โ€œWell.โ€ย I look in the supply cabinet.ย โ€œI have limited amounts of aluminum.โ€

โ€œYou have many items in ship you no use. Two beds in dormitory, for instance. Melt them, make blocks, make more molds.โ€

โ€œWow. You donโ€™t do anything by half-measure, do you?โ€ย โ€œNo understand.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not going to melt a bunch of stu๏ฌ€. How would I even do that?โ€

โ€œAstrophage. Melt anything.โ€

โ€œYou got me there,โ€ย I say.ย โ€œBut no. The heat would be too much for my life-support system to handle. That reminds me. Why do you have so much extra Astrophage?โ€

He pauses.ย โ€œStrange story.โ€

I perk up. Always up for a strange story. He clicks along his tunnel and sits in a slightly wider section.ย โ€œScience Eridians do much math. Calculate trip. More fuel mean faster trip. So we make much much much Astrophage.โ€

โ€œHowโ€™d you make so much? Earth had a very di๏ฌƒcult time making it.โ€ย โ€œWas easy. Put in metal balls with carbon dioxide. Put in ocean. Wait.

Astrophage double, double, double. Much Astrophage.โ€

โ€œRiiight. Because your oceans are hotter than Astrophage.โ€ย โ€œYes. Earth oceans are not. Sad.โ€

When it comes to Astrophage manufacturing, Erid was born on third base.

The whole planet is a pressure cooker. Twenty-nine atmospheres at 210 degrees Celsius means water is liquid on the surface. And their oceans are far, far hotter than the Astrophage critical temperature. They just put Astrophage in the water, let it absorb heat, and breed.

Iโ€™m jealous. We had to pave the Sahara Desert to breed up our Astrophage. All they had to do was throw it in the water. The stored heat energy of Eridโ€™s oceans is ridiculous. A whole bunch of waterโ€”multiples of

Earthโ€™s total oceansโ€”holding a temperature around 200 degrees Celsius or more. Thatโ€™s a lot of energy.

And thatโ€™s why they can take a century or so to solve the problem while Earth is going to freeze in a few decades. Itโ€™s not just their air storing heat. Their oceans store even more. Born on third base. Again.

โ€œScience Eridians design ship and fuel requirements. Journey to take 6.64 years.โ€

That trips me up for a moment. 40 Eridani is ten light-years away from Tau Ceti, so you canโ€™t get from one to the other in less than ten years from Eridโ€™s point of view. He must mean 6.64 years of time experienced by his ship thanks to time dilation.

โ€œStrange things happen on trip. Crew sick. Die.โ€ย His voice lowers.ย โ€œNow I know was radiation.โ€

I look down and give him a moment.

โ€œEveryone sick. I alone to run ship. More strange things happen. Engines not work right. I am engine expert. I cannotย ๏ฌgure out problem.โ€

โ€œYour engines failed?โ€

โ€œNo. Not fail. Thrust normal. But speedโ€ฆnot increase. No can explain.โ€ย โ€œHuh.โ€

He clatters back and forth as he talks.ย โ€œThen more strange: Reach halfway point earlier than should. Much earlier. I turn ship around. Thrust to slow down. But Tau get farther away. How? Still moving toward Tau but Tau moving away. Much confusion.โ€

โ€œUh-oh,โ€ย I say. A thought creeps into my head. A very disturbing thought.ย โ€œI speed up. Slow down. Much confuse. But get here. Even with all mistakes

and confusion, I get here in three years. Half of time science Eridian say

should be. So much confuse.โ€ย โ€œOhโ€ฆoh myโ€ฆโ€ย I mumble.

โ€œMuch much much fuel remain. Much more than should have. No complain. But confuse.โ€

โ€œYeahโ€ฆโ€ย I say.ย โ€œTell me this: Is time on Erid the same as time on your ship?โ€

He cocks his carapace.ย โ€œQuestion make no sense. Of course time is same.

Time is same everywhere.โ€

I put my head in my hands.ย โ€œOh boy.โ€ย Eridians donโ€™t know about relativistic physics.

They calculated their entire journey with Newtonian physics. They worked it all out by assuming they could just accelerate faster and faster and the speed of light wasnโ€™t an issue.

They donโ€™t know about time dilation. Rocky doesnโ€™t realize that Erid experienced a whole bunch more time than he did on that trip. They donโ€™t know about length dilation. The distance to Tau Ceti will actually increase as you slow down relative to itโ€”even if youโ€™re still going toward it.

An entire planet of intelligent people put together a ship based on incorrect scienti๏ฌc assumptions, and by some miracle, the sole survivor of the crew was clever enough at trial-and-error problem solving to actually get it to its destination.

And out of that major screw-up comes my salvation. They thought theyโ€™d need a whole lot more fuel. So Rocky has boatloads to spare.

โ€œOkay, Rocky,โ€ย I say.ย โ€œGet comfortable. I have aย lotย of science to explain.โ€

โ€”

He knocked twice and leaned into my o๏ฌƒce.ย โ€œDr. Grace? Are you Dr. Grace?โ€

It wasnโ€™t a large o๏ฌƒce, but youโ€™re lucky to have any personal space at all on an aircraft carrier. Before it held the high honor of being my o๏ฌƒce, the room was a storage locker for bathroom supplies. The crew had three thousand butts that needed daily wiping. I got to keep the room as my o๏ฌƒce until the next time we were in port. Then theyโ€™dย ๏ฌll it up with more supplies.

I was approximately as critical as toilet paper.

I looked up from my laptop. The short, somewhat disheveled man at the door waved awkwardly.

โ€œYeah,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œIโ€™m Grace. You areโ€ฆ?โ€

โ€œHatch. Steve Hatch. University of British Columbia. Nice to meet ya.โ€

I gestured to the folding chair in front of the folding table I used as a desk.

He shu๏ฌ„ed in, carrying a bulbous metal object. Iโ€™d never seen anything like it. He plunked it on my table.

I looked at the object. It was like someone hadย ๏ฌ‚attened a medicine ball, added a triangle to one end, and a trapezoid to the other.

He sat in the chair and stretched his arms.ย โ€œMan, that was weird. Iโ€™ve never been on a helicopter before. Have you? Well, of course you have. How else would you get here? I mean, I guess you could have used a boat, but probably not. I hear they keep the carrier far away from land in case thereโ€™s a disaster during Astrophage experiments. A boat would have been nicer, honestly, that helicopter ride almost made me puke. But Iโ€™m not complaining. Iโ€™m just happy to be involved.โ€

โ€œUmโ€โ€”I gestured to the object on my deskโ€”โ€œwhat is this thing?โ€

He somehow became even more energetic.ย โ€œAh, right! Thatโ€™s a beetle! Well, a prototype for one, anyway. My team and I think we have most of the kinks worked out. Well, you never haveย allย the kinks worked out, but weโ€™re ready for actual engine tests. And the university said we had to do those here on the carrier. Also the provincial government of British Columbia said it. Oh, and the national government of Canada said it too. Iโ€™m Canadian, by the way. But donโ€™t worry! Iโ€™m not one of those anti-American Canadians. I think you guys are all right.โ€

โ€œBeetle?โ€

โ€œYeah!โ€ย He picked it up and turned the trapezoid toward me.ย โ€œThis is how theย Hail Maryย crew will send us back the information. Itโ€™s a little self- contained spacecraft that will automatically navigate itself back to Earth from Tau Ceti. Well, from anywhere, really. Thatโ€™s what me and my team have been working on for the past year.โ€

I peek into the trapezoid and see a shiny glasslike surface.ย โ€œIs that a spin drive?โ€ย I asked.

โ€œSure is! Man, those Russians know their stu๏ฌ€. We just used their designs and everything came out great. At least, I think it did. We havenโ€™t tested the spin drive yet. The tricky part is navigation and steering.โ€

He turned the device around and faced the triangular head toward me.ย โ€œThis is where the cameras and computer are. No fancy-schmancy inertial-

navigation nonsense. It uses ordinary visible light to see the stars. It identi๏ฌes constellations and works out its orientation from that.โ€ย He tapped the center of the bulbous carapace.ย โ€œThereโ€™s a little DC generator in here. As long as we have Astrophage, we have power.โ€

โ€œWhat can it carry?โ€ย I ask.

โ€œData. Itโ€™s got a redundant RAID array with more memory storage than anyone would ever need.โ€ย He knocked on the dome. It echoed slightly.ย โ€œThe bulk of this puppy is fuel storage. Itโ€™ll need about 125 kilos of Astrophage to make the trip. Seems like a lot butโ€ฆmanโ€ฆtwelve light-years!โ€

I lifted the device and hefted it in my hands a couple of times.ย โ€œHow does it turn?โ€

โ€œReaction wheels inside,โ€ย he said.ย โ€œIt spins them one way, the ship turns the other. Easy-peasy.โ€

โ€œInterstellar navigation isย โ€˜easy-peasyโ€™?โ€ย I smiled.

He snickered.ย โ€œWell, for what we have to do, yeah. It has a receiver thatโ€™s constantly listening for a signal from Earth. Once it hears that signal, itโ€™ll broadcast its location and await instructions from the Deep Space Network. We donโ€™t have to be super accurate with the navigation. We just need it to show up within radio range of Earth. Anywhere within the orbit of Saturn or so will do justย ๏ฌne.โ€

I nod.ย โ€œAnd then scientists can tell it exactly how to get back. Clever.โ€

He shrugged.ย โ€œTheyโ€™ll probably do that, yeah. But they donโ€™t need to. Theyโ€™ll have it radio over all the dataย ๏ฌrst thing. The information gets across. Then they can collect it later if they want. Oh, and weโ€™re making four of these. All we need is for one of them to survive the trip.โ€

I turned the beetle this way and that. It was surprisingly light. A few pounds at most.ย โ€œOkay, so there are four of these. How likely is each one to survive the trip? Is there at least a little system redundancy aboard?โ€

He shrugged.ย โ€œNot that much, no. But it doesnโ€™t have to travel for nearly as long as theย Hail Maryย does. So stu๏ฌ€ย doesnโ€™t have to survive as long.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s going the same route, right?โ€ย I asked.ย โ€œWhy doesnโ€™t it take the same time?โ€

โ€œBecause theย Hail Maryโ€™s acceleration is limited by the soft, squishy humans inside. The beetle doesnโ€™t have that problem. Everything aboard is

military-grade cruise-missile electronics and parts that can handle hundreds of gโ€™s of force. So it gets to relativistic speed much faster.โ€

โ€œOh, interestingโ€ฆโ€ย I wondered if this would make a good question for my students. I dismissed the idea immediately. It was absurdly complicated math no eighth grader would be able to handle.

โ€œYeah,โ€ย Hatch said.ย โ€œThey accelerate atย ๏ฌve hundred gโ€™s until they reach a cruising speed of 0.93ย c. Itโ€™ll take over twelve years to get back to Earth, but all told the little guys will only experience about twenty months. Do you believe in God? I know itโ€™s a personal question. I do. And I think He was pretty awesome to make relativity a thing, donโ€™t you? The faster you go, the less time you experience. Itโ€™s like Heโ€™s inviting us to explore the universe, you know?โ€

He fell silent and stared at me.

โ€œWell,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œThis is really impressive. Good work.โ€ โ€œThanks!โ€ย he said.ย โ€œSo can I have some Astrophage to test it?โ€ โ€œSure,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œHow much you want?โ€

โ€œHow about a hundred milligrams?โ€

I drew back.ย โ€œEasy there, cowboy. Thatโ€™s a lot of energy.โ€

โ€œAll right, all right. Canโ€™t blame a guy for trying. How about one milligram?โ€

โ€œYeah, I can swing that.โ€

He clapped.ย โ€œHell yeah! Astrophage cominโ€™ย my way!โ€ย He leaned forward to me.ย โ€œIsnโ€™t it amazing? Astrophage, I mean? Itโ€™s likeโ€ฆthe coolest thing ever! Again, Godโ€™s justย handingย us the future!โ€

โ€œCool?โ€ย I said.ย โ€œItโ€™s an extinction-level event. If anything, Godโ€™s handing us the apocalypse.โ€

He shrugged.ย โ€œI mean, maybe a little. But man. Perfect energy storage! Imagine a battery-powered household. Likeโ€”you have a double-A battery, but full of Astrophage. Thatโ€™d last your house about a hundred thousand years. Imagine buying a car and never having to charge it up? The entire concept of power grids is going to end. And itโ€™ll all be clean, renewable energy once we start breeding the stu๏ฌ€ย on the moon or something. All it needs is sunlight!โ€

โ€œClean? Renewable?โ€ย I said.ย โ€œAre you suggesting Astrophage will beโ€ฆย goodย for the environment? Because it wonโ€™t be. Even ifย Hail Maryย ๏ฌnds a solution, weโ€™re looking at a mass extinction. Twenty years from now, a whole bunch of species on Earth will be extinct. And weโ€™re working hard to make sure humans arenโ€™t one of them.โ€

He waved o๏ฌ€ย my comment.ย โ€œEarthโ€™s hadย ๏ฌve mass extinction events in the past. And humans are clever. Weโ€™ll pull through.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ll starve!โ€ย I said.ย โ€œBillions of people are going to starve.โ€

โ€œNaaaah,โ€ย he said.ย โ€œWeโ€™re already stockpiling food. Weโ€™ve got a bunch of methane in the air to hold in the solar energy. Itโ€™ll be all right. As long asย Hail Maryย succeeds.โ€

I just stared at him for a moment.ย โ€œYou are, without a doubt, the most optimistic person Iโ€™ve ever met.โ€

He gave me a double thumbs-up.ย โ€œThanks!โ€

He picked up the beetle and turned to leave.ย โ€œCome on, Pete, letโ€™s get you some Astrophage!โ€

โ€œPete?โ€ย I asked.

He looked over his shoulder.ย โ€œSure. Iโ€™m naming them after the Beatles.

The British rock group.โ€ โ€œI take it youโ€™re a fan?โ€

He turned back to face me.ย โ€œFan? Oh, yes. I donโ€™t want to exaggerate, butย Sgt. Pepperโ€™s Lonely Hearts Club Bandย is the greatest musical accomplishment in the history of mankind. I know, I know. Many would disagree. But theyโ€™re wrong.โ€

โ€œFair enough,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œBut why Pete? Arenโ€™t the Beatles named John, Paul, George, and Ringo?โ€

โ€œSure. And thatโ€™s what weโ€™ll call the ones aboard theย Hail Mary. But this fella is for testing in low Earth orbit. I get a whole SpaceX launch just for me! Isnโ€™t that amazing! Anyway, I named him after Pete Bestโ€”he was the drummer for the Beatles before Ringo.โ€

โ€œOkay, I didnโ€™t know that,โ€ย I said.

โ€œNow you do. Iโ€™m gonna get that Astrophage now. Iโ€™ve got to make sure these beetles will be able toโ€ฆโ€˜Get Back.โ€™ โ€

โ€œOkay.โ€

He frowned.ย โ€œ โ€˜Get Back.โ€™ย Itโ€™s a song. Itโ€™s by the Beatles.โ€ โ€œSure. Okay.โ€

He spun on his heel and left.ย โ€œSome people got no appreciation for the classics.โ€

I was left confused in his wake. Pretty sure I wasnโ€™t theย ๏ฌrst.

You'll Also Like