Charles Moll, ''Beyond Apollo'' by Barry N. Malzberg, 1973 Source
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from South Africa

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Latvia
seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United States

seen from United States
Charles Moll, ''Beyond Apollo'' by Barry N. Malzberg, 1973 Source
This Is How Mastering Dark Matter Could Take Us To The Stars
“Because dark matter is everywhere, we wouldn't even need to carry it with us as we traversed the Universe. As far as we understand it — and admittedly, we need to understand it a lot farther — dark matter could truly deliver our dream of the ultimate fuel. It's abundant all throughout our galaxy and beyond; it should have a non-zero annihilation cross-section with itself; and when it does annihilate, it should produce energy with 100% efficiency.
Perhaps, then, most of us have been thinking about experiments seeking to directly detect dark matter all wrong. Yes, we want to know what makes up the Universe, and what the physical properties of its various abundant components truly are. But there's a science-fiction dream that could come true if nature is kind to us: unlimited, free energy just waiting there for us to harness, no matter where in the galaxy we go.
Mastering dark matter is the endeavor that just might make it so.”
When we talk about our dreams of traveling to the stars, it normally involves a mythical, futuristic form of travel that goes beyond the known laws of physics. Why’s that? Because even if you increase the efficiency of your rocket fuel far beyond the limitations of any chemical-based reaction we know of, you’d still be limited in how far you could go by the mass of your spacecraft and the fuel you were able to take with you on board. You’d still have to accelerate (and decelerate) all the fuel you brought with you, until you ran out. If only there were a 100%-efficient fuel source that was ubiquitous all throughout the galaxy and beyond.
There is: dark matter. Here’s why it’s so important to study, understand, and eventually, fulfill the dream of harnessing it!
Barry N. Malzberg, Beyond Apollo (New York: Pocket Books, 1974), with cover art by Charles Moll. Via RCN.
BEYOND APOLLO - Barry Malzberg (1972)
BEYOND APOLLO – Barry Malzberg (1972)
Barry N. Malzberg’s most famous work, Beyond Apollo, has an air of controversy to it. When it won the first ever John W. Campbell award in 1973, some considered it an insult to Campbell, as Beyond Apollo lacks the positivity and wonder associated with Campbell’s strain of space exploring SF. It also features a huge amount of sex, a protagonist with mental health issues and a plot that is…
View On WordPress
Marco Bailey - Beyond Apollo (Original Mix) [MB ELEKTRONICS]
The Challenge of the Planets, Part One
The Challenge of the Planets, Part One
In the 1950s and early 1960s, many who made it their business to consider the yawning gulfs between the planets foresaw that only through enormous efforts, spanning perhaps centuries, could those immensities be crossed. To be sure, rocket engines burning chemical propellants akin to those already in use in missiles could accomplish round-trip journeys to […]
The post The Challenge of the Planets,…
View On WordPress
Charles Moll - Beyond Apollo, 1974.