Ash: Inktober Appropriated Short Fiction
You’re not serious about monetizing physics until you can predict supernovae. Then, get to them as fast as possible, and profit.
We’re not the first to deal in superuranics and neither are we the only ones. What we do have is the best coverage. Our miners travel the whole galaxy; their ships the only ones heading TOWARDS supernovae. Play it safe and the competition will beat you to them. Arrive too soon and be destroyed by the most powerful explosions in the galaxy. It’s best to leave the piloting to the accountants.
After mining, the markets need to be predicted. Data scientists pick out which expanding empires (we think) won’t run out of steam, and if their neighbors won’t either. Once identified, we then beat the super heavies into light sails and laser them on their way. (It’s assumed our branch offices will be there by then to receive; Sales has its own data scientists.)
That’s where I come in; I’m sales. First thing I do is show the prospect that superuranics do exist; that the ‘islands of stability’ are not just physicist wet dreams. I’ll put down a dull-silvery ingot and wait for them to check its density. Once their scientists start losing their minds, I move on to price.
Super heavies are VERY high melting point, and with a bit of graphene mixed in they’re strong enough to survive closeby nuclear explosions. This makes them perfect for pulse engine pusher plates. A fleet with pusher plates can be lasered up to near light speed, sneak for centuries while cold as the interstellar medium, and then slam to a stop on a barrage of antimatter detonations. Thus instead of their enemy swatting out invading VN dusts before they grow into war factories, they must face READY-MADE navies.
I always sell to both sides.
People say that it’s our fault these sorts of wars happen, with immense fleets irradiating target worlds before dropping legions to further pacify the ashes. They claim our entire industry allows cultures to successfully invade each other. That’s true – by supplying the machinery of war we make war an option.
But if we don’t do it, someone else will. Why should we give up our business? Our customers sure don’t want us to.
The ones that live, that is.
https://arxiv.org/abs/1703.04250v1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Island_of_stability#Possible_natural_occurrence
https://www.ligo.org/science/Publication-GW170817Kilonova/index.php