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"We were essentially being shell-shocked by rapid change. That was one of the things you needed science-fiction writers for back in the Sixties, because we could cope with the future."
- Peter Watts
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Electron Gun |
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How to add a lot of electrons to a lot of positrons? |
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A businessman decides to corner the market on potable water by changing natural water to heavy water. How can you even find him?
How Munn has been curving his
streams of positrons so that we can’t
check back by directional angles to their
source. He’s superimposed an additional positive charge. The earth is an
enormous magnet. The south pole is
its negative pole. As a result of the
extra charge the streams of positrons,
no matter which way they start out
originally, feel the pull of the south
pole and swerve slightly, but continuously, in that direction. Given the
amount of surplus charge, the pull of
the earth, the voltage and speed of the
electrons, I believe I’ll be able to plot
their paths back to the point of origin.
Having found his hidden base, an electron gun is needed to make some permanent changes, and return the natural order.
Sandy Dale went
into action. The snout of his queer-looking machine pointed straight for
the cavern opening. It was simple in
construction. Two upright tubes of
heavy quartz filled with helium, a highly
compact electrostatic machine for generating continuous streams of electrons
from the helium gas; and an impulse-breaker for emitting them in surges.
The helium glowed into incandescence; the hum of the machine grew to
a piercing shriek. The air along the
path of the streaming particles glittered
with fine pin points of flame. The hurtling electrons crashed with inconceivable velocity into the circling positrons.
Positive and negative coalesced and
vanished into the substratum of the
cosmos. A blinding flare of radiation
marked the disappearance.

(Electron gun from 'The Great Thirst' by Nat Schachner)
The great concave arch of the protective curtain took form and visibility
as a huge bending sheet of flame, A
gasp of astonishment went up from the
bewildered troops. The colonel’s mouth
was agape. Sandy grinned and set the
machine up a notch. The whine became
almost unbearable. The curtain of fire
pushed in as though it were an elastic
ball, but still it did not break. |
Technovelgy from The Great Thirst,
by Nat Schachner.
Published by Astounding Science Fiction in 1934
Additional resources -
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As usual, though, more power carries the day!
See also contraterrene matter from Collision Orbit (1942) by Jack Williamson.
Thanks to @MrBeamJockey for tweeting about this classic story.
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