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Blish,James – Nor Iron Bars

mersmith said. “Do you want me to bail you out, or not? If

not, I’d rather be with Helen than standing around listening

to you.”

“What do you propose to do,” Arpe said, finding it impos-

sible not to be frosty, “that we aren’t doing already?”

“Teach you your business,” Hammersmith said. “I presume

you’ve established our distance from S Doradus for a starter.

Once I have that, I can use the star as a beacon, to collimate

my next measurements. Then I want the use of an image

amplifier, with a direct-reading microvoltmeter tied into the

circuit; you ought to have such a thing, as a routine instru-

ment.”

Stauffer pointed it out silently.

“Good.” Hammersmith sat down and began to scan the

stars with the amplifier. The meter silently reported the light

output of each, as minute pulses of electricity. Hammersmith

watched it with a furious intensity. At last he took off his

wrist chronometer and begun to time the movements of the

needle with the stop watch.

“Bull’s-eye,” he said suddenly.

“The Sun?” Arpe asked, unable to keep his tone from

dripping with disbelief.

“No. That one is DQ Herculisan old nova. It’s a micro-

variable. It varies by four hundredths of a magnitude every

sixty-four seconds. Now we have two stars to fill our para-

meters; maybe the computer could give us the Sun from

those? Let’s try it, anyhow.”

Stauffer tried it. The computer had decided to be obtuse

today. It did, however, narrow the region of search to a small

sector of sky, containing approximately sixty stars.

“Does the Sun do something like that?” Oestreicher said.

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Categories: Blish, James
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