Originally published on Poul Anderson Appreciation, 6 March 2013.
In Poul Anderson's Tau Zero,
a spaceship crossing intergalactic space passes a red dwarf star with
planets. The astronomer on the ship does not know whether the red dwarf
had originated in the normal way within a galaxy or in some unknown way
between galaxies.
Anderson's World Without Stars (New York, 1966) answers this question:
hydrogen clouds condensed into galaxies;
smaller condensations became intergalactic star clusters which, however, did not endure because
(i) their giants went supernova,
(ii) cosmic expansion dispersed matter, thus preventing any further star formation,
(iii) galactic gravitation broke the clusters up;
thus, only the long living red dwarfs were left.
Captain
Argens, en route to a planet of such a star, explains all this to his
two new crew members and thus to us. I thought that two spacemen would
not need to be told how stars formed. Sure enough, Rorn complains:
" 'Please...Valland and I do know elementary astrophysics.' " (p. 19)
Valland
agrees that he does but is beginning to realise the implications in
intergalactic space: old stars and planets that are metal-poor because
supernova enrichment stopped early but with lighter elements and life,
including intelligent races that might have needed millions of years to
industrialise and therefore have learned different things along the way.
These
Yonderfolk can travel only to the galactic rim and then only with heavy
radiation screening because the radiation level within any galaxy would
kill them. Valland wonders whether they have natural immortality but
Argens points out that quantum processes, viruses and chemicals can also
mutate cells. Valland's speculation echoes Anderson's story "What Shall
It Profit?" in which a man is made immortal by shielding him from all
radiation in a very restricted environment deep underground. He is
physically immortal but mentally undeveloped, an experimental dead end.
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