Neutron Star (story)

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"Neutron Star," is a science fiction short story written by Larry Niven. It was originally published in the October 1966 issue of Worlds of If. It was later reprinted in Neutron Star, (New York: Ballantine, 1968, pp. 9-28, ISBN 0-345-29665-6), and Crashlander (New York: Ballantine, 1994, pp. 8-28, ISBN 0-345-38168-8). The story is set in Niven's fictional "Known Space" universe

"Neutron Star" is the first to feature Beowulf Shaeffer, the ne'er-do-well ex-pilot and reluctant hero of many of Niven's Known Space stories. It also marked the first appearance of the nearly indestructible General Products starship hull, as well as its creators the Pierson's Puppeteers. The star itself, BVS-1, is featured in the novel Protector (1973), where it is named "Phssthpok's Star".

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Beowulf Shaeffer, a native of the planet We Made It and unemployed for the last eight months due to a stock market crash, is contracted by a Pierson's Puppeteer, the Regional President of We Made It, to pilot a General Products-hulled starship, the Skydiver, in a close approach about neutron star BVS-1. The Puppeteers want to determine why two previous researchers, Peter and Sonya Laskin, were killed during their attempt to study it. Shaeffer, who has no intention of completing the dangerous mission and plans to fly off in the ship, is forced into compliance by an operative of the Bureau of Alien Affairs, Sigmund Ausfaller, who has installed a bomb somewhere inside the Skydiver. Ausfeller informs Schaeffer that if he does not attempt the mission he will be sent to prison for uncollected debts, and that if he attempts to escape with the ship the bomb will be detonated within a week. Shaeffer, realizing he is trapped, agrees to fly the mission.

The Skydiver reaches the neutron star, and the ship’s autopilot puts the Skydiver into a hyperbolic orbit that will take 24 hours to reach perigee with BVS-1, a mile above its surface. During the descent Schaeffer notices many unusual things: the stars ahead of him began to turn blue from Doppler shift as his speed increases enormously; the stars behind him, rather than being red-shifted, were blue too as their light accelerated with him into the gravity well of the neutron star. The nose of the ship is pulled towards the neutron star rather than along the course the autopilot had set for it.

As the mysterious pull exceeds one Earth gravity, Shaeffer accelerates the Skydiver to compensate for the unknown X-force until he is in free fall (though the accelerometer only registers 1.2 gees). Shaeffer eventually realizes what the X-force is: the tidal force. The strong tidal pull of the neutron star is trying to force the ends of the ship (and Schaeffer himself) into two separate orbits. Shutting off the drive, he moves to the midpoint of the ship, its center of mass, around which the ship would rotate as it reached the closest point to the neutron star. The ship reaches perigee where tidal forces threaten to pull Shaeffer apart, but he survives.

After returning to We Made It, Shaeffer is hospitalized for observation at the puppeteer’s insistence. While explaining tidal forces to the puppeteer, Schaeffer realizes the alien had no knowledge of tidal forces, something that would be elementary for a sentient species living on a world with a moon. When Schaeffer threatens to reveal this fact to the public, the puppeteer agrees to give Shaeffer a million stars in return for his silence (the puppeteers keep all details of their homeworld secret).

[edit] Notes

  • In the story "Ghost", including as framing story for the Crashlander collection, Schaeffer discovers that the puppeteers were well aware of the tidal effect. The actual motives for them paying for Shaeffer's silence remain unclear.
  • In the "Afterthoughts" section of the Tales of Known Space collection, Niven writes: "I keep meeting people who have done mathematical treatments of the problem raised in the short story 'Neutron Star,' .... Alas and dammit, Shaeffer can't survive. It turns out that his ship leaves the star spinning, and keeps the spin." If this is true, it does more than kill Shaeffer: it kills the entire story premise, for the Laskins' ship also would have acquired and kept a similar spin, which the puppeteers could hardly have failed to notice. It is also unclear how the Laskins' ship returned to its starting point; presumably it would have had to do so through normal space, a journey of years.

[edit] Awards

  • 1967 Hugo Award, Best Short Story
  • 1999 LOCUS Magazine Readers Poll, All-time Best Novellette (#30)

[edit] See also

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