They discover a Dyson Sphere under construction by microbots, but the bots are scavenging one part of the sphere to construct another. And where is the civilization that designed this massive project?
"This is cutting edge, hard science fiction at its finest. This broad-minded, far-sweeping saga is both realistic and daring. The reader feels that yes, this is what the universe is like and what man's role in it will come to be." Professor John B. Rosenman, Norfolk State University.
Braxton Thorpe and his crew of 10,000, who originate from three different star systems, are on a voyage of discovery in the gigantic starship Andromeda, headed toward the Cold Spot in the Cosmic Microwave Background, deep in the constellation of Eridanus. As they approach the Keid triple-star system, to the delight of the Humans from Earth, they stop at Keid A, around which rotates the planet Vulcan, home to Spock in the "Star Trek" television and film franchise. Keid B & C revolve around each other, and both revolve around Keid A.
While exploring lifeless Vulcan, Thorpe and his people discover that the planet is under attack by robotic scavengers. They follow the scavengers to Keid C, where they discover a Dyson Sphere under construction by microbots who seem to be scavenging one part of the sphere to construct another. The Andromeda crew set about exploring this immense sphere, half the size of an entire solar system. Suddenly, the starship is attacked by those microbots, apparently seeing the starship as raw material. After narrowly escaping the bots, pilots in smaller spacecraft travel through the unimaginably immense sphere, studying how such a structure could exist, and searching for the beings who built it. They discover several primitive races inside?humanoid, feline, and reptilian, who are each unaware that the other races even exist. While they mount a study to learn what they can about these races, they discover a hidden population of electronic uploads stemming from the original builders of the gigantic sphere.
As the explorers begin to assemble a model of the sphere, they receive data showing the Dyson Sphere's star is about to produce a superflare that could destroy all life inside the sphere?and even the Dyson Sphere itself. Can the explorers survive such an event? If so, can they save any of the sapient races, and will they succeed in removing the uploads of the sphere builders?
Autorentext
Dr. Robert G. Williscroft is a retired submarine officer, deep-sea and saturation diver, scientist, author, and a lifelong adventurer. He spent 22 months underwater, a year in the equatorial Pacific, three years in the Arctic ice pack, and a year at the Geographic South Pole. He holds degrees in Marine Physics and Meteorology and a doctorate for developing a system to protect SCUBA divers in contaminated water. A prolific author of both non-fiction, Cold War thrillers, and hard science fiction, he lives in Centennial, Colorado.
Dr. Williscroft is a member of Colorado Author's League, Independent Association of Science Fiction & Fantasy Authors, Science Fiction Writers of America, Libertarian Futurist Society, Los Angeles Adventurers' Club, Mensa, Military Officers Association, U.S. Sub Vets, American Legion, and the NRA, and now spends most of his time writing his next book, speaking to various regional groups, and hanging out with the girl of his dreams, Jill, and her two cats.