John Sandford - Saturn Run

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Saturn Run: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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“Fans of Lucas Davenport and Virgil Flowers will eat this up.”
—Stephen King For fans of THE MARTIAN, an extraordinary new thriller of the future from #1
–bestselling and Pulitzer Prize–winning author John Sandford and internationally known photo-artist and science fiction aficionado Ctein. Over the course of thirty-seven books, John Sandford has proven time and again his unmatchable talents for electrifying plots, rich characters, sly wit, and razor-sharp dialogue. Now, in collaboration with Ctein, he proves it all once more, in a stunning new thriller, a story as audacious as it is deeply satisfying. The year is 2066. A Caltech intern inadvertently notices an anomaly from a space telescope—something is approaching Saturn, and decelerating. Space objects don't decelerate. Spaceships do.
A flurry of top-level government meetings produces the inescapable conclusion: Whatever built that ship is at least one hundred years ahead in hard and soft technology, and whoever can get their hands on it exclusively and bring it back will have an advantage so large, no other nation can compete. A conclusion the Chinese definitely agree with when they find out.
The race is on, and an remarkable adventure begins—an epic tale of courage, treachery, resourcefulness, secrets, surprises, and astonishing human and technological discovery, as the members of a hastily thrown-together crew find their strength and wits tested against adversaries both of this earth and beyond. What happens is nothing like you expect—and everything you could want from one of the world’s greatest masters of suspense. REAL SPACE REAL SCIENCE REAL ADVENTURE

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Crow nodded approvingly. “Considerably simpler than what my colleagues had in mind, but it’s a starting point. Have you ever thought of coming to work for me? I could find a place for you.”

“I like my world fine, thank you very much,” Becca retorted. “But I’ll take the compliment.”

Crow said, “If it is sabotage, we don’t know this is what the saboteur did or exactly how they did it, what they’re using as a trigger. Could be a specific data value, could be an untrapped out-of-bounds fault, there’s a dozen ways to do this. And because it only takes a few lines of code to set it off, looking through the code factory’s maintenance and revision records wouldn’t tell you anything. If the Easter egg were resident in the operating system, there’d be thousands of lines of code, and you’d find the discrepancy in the records. But all that’s in the operating system is the tripwire. A couple of lines of odd code? That gets written every day. It can be as simple as a few typographical errors getting corrected. Nobody reviews the quality control records for a couple of lines of code unless it misbehaves, and this is designed to never misbehave without the trigger.”

Fang-Castro: “So why has this affected only one reactor and not the other?”

Becca responded, “I can think of several reasons. Maybe someone didn’t have time to insert it into the logs on both systems. Or maybe it got inserted in and then flushed and scrubbed in one of the log modifications. The logs are just big repositories for the data that’s collected from the two power plants. Essentially they’re nothing more than storage bins, and beyond making sure that they’re operating the way they’re supposed to, we don’t worry about them much. We don’t treat them exactly the same way.”

Fang-Castro ran her hand through her hair. “So you’re saying we got lucky. Or half lucky, half unlucky.”

Crow said, “I doubt that luck has anything to do with it.”

“And we can’t bring both reactors back online?”

“If I do, I’m pretty sure the second one is just going to shut down again,” Becca said. “I don’t see what we’d gain by it. Plus, these emergency shutdowns are hard on the system. That’s not the way it’s designed to be run. We keep this up and we’re going to break something before the mission is done.”

“How about wiping the data logs and starting from scratch?” Fang-Castro asked.

Becca started to say, “We could try that… ,” but Crow cut her off in mid-sentence.

“That’s such an obvious thing to do that if I were in charge of this little hack, it’s the first thing I’d make sure wouldn’t work,” Crow said. “It’d be very easy to circumvent.”

Fang-Castro sighed. “So we’re stuck with half power indefinitely. Assuming that, and that things don’t get worse, I had Navigation work up a revised trajectory for us.” She pulled up an orbit plot on the wallscreen. “The dashed line is our old trajectory. The solid one our new course. You can see there isn’t much difference.” She zoomed in on the part of the trajectory near the sun. “The main difference is we don’t need to come in quite as tight by the sun, because we won’t be traveling as fast. A perihelion of thirty-five million kilometers will be close enough for the sun’s gravity to swing us onto the right vector for Saturn. That should make you a little happier, Becca.”

Becca smiled just a bit. “I’ll take what good news I can get, Captain. It’ll put a little less strain on the radiators. Plus, since we will be running at half power anyway, we won’t need to throttle back when we’re close to the sun, like we had to in our original plans. The radiators have more than enough capacity to shed the waste heat, even that close to the sun.”

Fang-Castro continued. “That’s good. Of course, the bad news is that with only half the thrust we had before, we’re not going to get there as quickly. Fortunately we were already moving at a decent clip, fifty kilometers per second relative to the sun, when we lost Reactor 2. Consequently, the impact isn’t as bad as it could’ve been. When all is said and done, we’re going to arrive at Saturn about thirty days later than we’d originally planned. Our new ETA is January 23, 2068. That’s still more than three months ahead of the Chinese.”

She continued: “Mr. Crow, please have your colleagues put in some more thought on this problem and let me know if they come up with any ideas for eliminating the Easter egg from System 2. If there is one. In the meantime, Dr. Johansson, I suggest you reassign most of the System 2 personnel to System 1. Just keep as many people on 2 as you think you need to continue looking for the source of our problems there, but I want the priority to be pampering our one remaining power system and keeping it as happy as possible. So—let’s go.

“Ahh, Dr. Johansson?” Becca looked at Fang-Castro, who was tapping her slate. “I’m reinstating your med computer regimen. No more all-nighters. In fact, as soon as you finish reassigning personnel, and I’m giving you exactly one half hour to do that, I’m ordering you to go shower and get at least two hours’ sleep.” Fang-Castro looked at Becca more closely. “No, make that three hours. We’re out of crisis mode, and I need you in the best possible physical and mental shape to see that we don’t slip back into it. That’s all.”

Becca started to protest, but the look in Fang-Castro’s eye made it very clear that this was not a negotiating point. She closed her mouth, nodded, smiled a wan smile, and left the conference room.

25.

Even with one reactor shut down, the Nixon was by far the fastest ship humanity had ever built. By late August, less than a month into its flight, it was crossing the orbit of Mercury; six more days would see it at perihelion, thirty-five million kilometers from the surface of the sun. Its velocity was already ninety kilometers per second, more than twice as fast as the Chinese Martian Odyssey . The combined pull of the sun and the thrust of the VASIMRs would add another twenty kilometers per second to that before it crossed perihelion.

The earth had dwindled to a starlike pinpoint of light on the screen in the Commons, while the sun had visually swelled to two and a half times its normal size. It would nearly double that again before it started to dwindle on the outward leg of Nixon ’s voyage.

Power management and waste heat disposal required some adjustment, but nothing Becca and her engineers couldn’t handle. The closer they got to the sun, the less effective the radiator sails were at disposing of their burden of heat. At closest approach, the amount of solar energy hitting the sail, head-on, would have been almost half the amount it needed to radiate.

However, at closest approach, the radiators would be edge-on to the incandescent disk. They’d get minimal baking. Coming and going, the sails faced more toward the sun, but then the ship was farther away and solar heating less of a burden.

In the original mission plan, cutting back the power in response to the lower radiator efficiency would’ve cost them maybe two days of travel time, a small price to pay for trimming months off their ETA. Running on half power, though, the radiator system had capacity to spare. Their close pass by the sun wouldn’t chew up any additional time.

Running at half power vexed the Nixon ’s chief engineer. As Crow’d predicted, they’d had no luck in figuring out exactly what was wrong with the Reactor 2 software, so Becca had continued to veto any restart of the second reactor. Commander Fang-Castro could override that, but she didn’t.

Becca was appreciative. Designing commercial power plant cooling systems meant dealing with company executives who felt the laws of engineering and even physics ought to be bent to improve the fiscal bottom line. Becca always won those disagreements, but she wasn’t much for hiding how much they displeased her. Minnesota-nice vied with engineer-geek, and the geek usually won out. Her personnel evaluations suggested she might show a bit more understanding of the requirements of the business world.

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