Stephen Baxter - Moonseed

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Moonseed: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Stephen Baxter established himself as a major British sci-fi author with tales of exotic, far-future technology. More recently, in
,
and now
, he shows his love for the hardware of the real world’s space programme. (Comparisons with Tom Wolfe’s
have been frequent.)
is a spectacular disaster novel whose threat to Earth comes from a long-forgotten Moon rock sample carrying strange silver dust that seems to be alien nanotechnology — molecule-sized machines. Accidentally spilt in Edinburgh, this ‘Moonseed’ quietly devours stone and processes it into more Moonseed. Geology becomes high drama: when ancient mountains turn to dust, the lid is taken off seething magma below. Volcanoes return to Scotland, and Krakatoa-like eruptions spread Moonseed around the world. A desperate, improvised US/Russian space mission heads for the Moon to probe the secret of how our satellite has survived uneaten. Baxter convincingly shows how travel costs could be cut, with a hair-raising descent on a shoestring lunar lander that makes Apollo’s look like a luxury craft. The climax brings literally world-shaking revelations and upheavals.
is a ripping interplanetary yarn.

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Then she just let herself drift in, at a yard a second. If she used the thrusters any more she risked raising dust clouds that wouldn’t settle.

There were four little landing legs at the corners of her PMU frame; they popped out now, little spear-shaped penetrators designed to dig into the surface and hold her there.

The close horizon receded, and the cliff face turned into a wall that cut off half the universe.

She collided softly with Icarus.

The landing legs, throwing up dust, dug into the regolith with a grind that carried through the PMU structure. The dust hung about her.

So Nadezhda was stuck here, clinging to the wall inside her PMU frame, like a mountaineer on a rock face in the Lunar Apennines.

She turned on her helmet lamp. Impact glass glimmered before her.

Unexpectedly, wonder pricked her. Here was the primordial skin of Icarus, as old as the Solar System, just inches before her face. She reached out and pushed her gloved hand into the surface, a monkey paw probing.

The surface was thick with regolith: a fine rock flour, littered with glassy agglutinates, asteroid rock shattered by aeons of bombardment. Her fingers went in easily enough for a few inches — she could feel the stuff crunching under her pressure, as if she was digging into compacted snow — but then she came up against much more densely packed material, tamped down by the endless impacts.

She closed her fist and pulled out her hand. A cloud of dust came with it, gushing into her face like a hail of meteorites. She looked at the material she’d dug out. There were a few bigger grains here, she saw: it was breccia, bits of rock smashed up in multiple impacts, welded back together by impact glass. There was no gravity to speak of; the smallest movement sent the fragments drifting out of her palm.

She had to get on with her work, think about her checklist. But she allowed herself a moment to savour this triumph.

She was, after all, the first human to touch the surface of a whole new world since Neil Armstrong.

And the Moonseed was here: hardened and eternal, riding the winds that blow between the stars. And now a human had come to meet it, on equal terms.

She grinned at the dust. “We need to talk,” she said.

Nadezhda? We don’t copy.

“Never mind.”

She pushed her hand back into the pit she’d dug, and went to work.

AFTERWORD

Kent Joosten of the Solar System Exploration Division, NASA Johnson Space Center, was once again extremely generous in hosting my research at JSC and taking me through the modern mission studies which formed the basis of the lunar expedition featured here, and also reading drafts of the manuscript later; thanks also to Eric Brown for reading a draft. I’m indebted for assistance with the Edinburgh-based sections of this book to Dr Roger Scrutton, head of the Department of Geology and Geophysics, Edinburgh University; and to Peter Willdridge, Emergency Planning Officer, Buckinghamshire.

NASA’s Apollo Lunar Surface Journal, annotated transcripts of the Apollo missions, is available online and was an invaluable source on the astronauts” experience of the Moon. I learned about lunar geology and resources from Paul Spudis’s Once and Future Moon (1996), The Lunar Source Book ed. G.H. Heiken (1991), Lunar Bases and Space Activities in the 21st Century ed. W. Mendell (1986) and other references. The unlikely art of harenodynamics was suggested by Krafft Ehricke in a paper printed in Lunar Bases. Terraforming the Moon has been explored by Martyn Fogg in his masterly Terraforming (1995) and by earlier authors; I’m indebted to Martyn for his blunt review of an early draft of my terraforming scenario here.

Any errors are, of course, all mine.

It seems we really could get back to the Moon for under two billion dollars. The Moonseed may not be waiting for us — but a sister world is.

Stephen Baxter

Great Missenden

March 1998

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