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Science
Fiction (continued)
- A Wreath of Stars,
by B. Shaw. An antineutrino world passes near Earth.
- Placet is a crazy place,
by F. Brown. The planet Placet orbits two stars, one made of antimatter.
- Flatlander, by L.
Niven (in the short story collection " Neutron Star", 1967). Astronauts
investigate an antimatter object at the very edge of known space, with
a lot of real physics throw in
- Broken Symmetries,
by P. Preuss (1983). At fictional particle accelerator built by the
Japanese and Americans to study proton-antiproton interactions, a political
struggle ensues over the production of large quantities of antiprotons
for antimatter space propulsion.
- Fireball, by P.
C. W. Davies (1987). Davies depicts worldwide disaster from an infall
of meteorites made of antimatter.
- Turn left at the moon,
by R. L. Forward (1988). A short story about the wonders of a cheap
antimatter world economy.
- Between The Stars,
by E. Kotani and J. M.Roberts (1988). The authors foresee the use of
antimatter for the exploration of nearby planetary systems.
- Martian Rainbow,
by R. L. Forward (1991). Mars is conquered by UN forces under General
Alexander Armstrong. Armstrong returns to Earth and becomes supreme
dictator of the planet. The story features antimatter rockets and antimatter
power sources.
(Science Fiction
- page 2 of 2)
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