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'''Asteroids''' are a common theme '''in fiction''', especially in ]. | |||
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] | |||
]s have appeared in fiction since at least the late 1800s,{{Efn|The earliest example listed in the catalogue of ] works compiled by ] and ] in the 1990 ] '']'' is the anonymously published 1886 story '']''<!-- entry 1434 -->.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |title=] |date=1990 |publisher=Kent State University Press |others=With the assistance of ] |isbn=978-0-87338-416-2 |pages=864 |language=en |chapter=Motif and Theme Index |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KEZxhkG5eikC&pg=PA864}}</ref>}} the first one—]—having been discovered in 1801. They were initially only used infrequently as writers preferred the planets as ]. The once-popular ], which states that the ] consists of the remnants of the former fifth planet that existed in an orbit between ] and ] before somehow being destroyed, has been a recurring theme with various explanations for the planet's destruction proposed. This hypothetical former planet is in ] often called "Bodia" in reference to ], for whom the since-discredited ] that predicts the planet's existence is named. | |||
By the early 1900s, the asteroids started making more regular appearances. The asteroid field has often been depicted as having asteroids so close together as to impede travel, though this became less common later in the century as writers started portraying a more realistic density. Because the asteroids are so small, they are usually not depicted as inhabited—though in some works they are nevertheless ]. In other works they are made so by human activity, be it ] or hollowing out to create ] on the inside. The latter concept has also been used for turning asteroids into ]. Human activity in the asteroid belt has featured frequently since the ] of science fiction, particularly in the form of ]. ] also debuted as a theme around the same time. In works where the asteroid belt is settled by humans, it is often conceptually similar to the ]. | |||
The earliest mentions of asteroids dates back to the begnning of the ]. | |||
The threat of ]s by asteroids has been a recurring theme. It received successive boosts in popularity following the end of ] (possibly as a result of ]), the 1980 publication of the ] about the ], and the 1994 impact of ] on Jupiter. Many stories involve attempts to alter asteroid trajectories to avert such collisions, while in some stories they are instead caused intentionally. | |||
*], ]' arch-enemy, "is the celebrated author of'' "The Dynamics of an Asteroid"'', a book which ascends to such rarefied heights of pure mathematics that it is said that there was no man in the scientific press capable of criticizing it" (], ], set in 1888). Though publication of the Holmes books was simultaneous with those of ], Holms regards astronomical studies as an issue of pure abstract science, which would never have practical applications or provide the scene of future adventures. | |||
*In '']'', a 1943 novel by ], the ] lives on an asteroid named "B-6-12". He then travels among various asteroids, each inhabited by a single person: a lamp-lighter, a king, a businessman, a geographer... Saint-Exupéry made no effort at scientific accuracy, since he was mainly writing social and political commentary and satire. (For example, his reference to "Baobab trees which, if not uprooted in time, might take root and break an asteroid to pieces" is commonly understood as an allegory of ]). The ] ] was named after the character, and ], after his asteroid. | |||
== Remnants of a planet == | |||
A common depiction of asteroids (and less often, of ]) in fiction is as a threat, whose impact on Earth could result with incalculable damage and loss of life. This has a basis in scientific theories regarding such impacts in the distant past as responsible for the extinction of the ] and other past catastrophes - though, as they seem to occur within tens of millions of years of each other, there is no special reason (other than creating a dramatic story line) to expect a new such impact at any close millennium. | |||
{{See also|Fictional planets of the Solar System#Phaëton}} | |||
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| quote = How might it be if Ceres and Pallas were just a pair of fragments, or portions of a once greater planet which at one time occupied its proper place between Mars and Jupiter, and was in size more analogous to the other planets, and perhaps millions of years ago, had, either through the impact of a comet, or from an internal explosion, burst into pieces? | |||
| source = Letter from ] to ], May 17, 1802<ref name="Murdin2016" /> | |||
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}} | |||
The first ]—]—was discovered by ] in 1801.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /> For the rest of that century, however, asteroids rarely appeared in fiction—writers preferring the planets as ].<ref name="StablefordAsteroid">{{Cite book |last=Stableford |first=Brian |title=] |date=2006 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-0-415-97460-8 |pages=40–41 |language=en |chapter=Asteroid |author-link=Brian Stableford |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uefwmdROKTAC&pg=PA40}}</ref><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /> When German astronomer ] discovered a second asteroid—]—in the same orbit in 1802, he theorized that these objects were remnants of a planet predicted by the ] to exist between ] and ] that had somehow been destroyed.<ref name="Murdin2016">{{Cite book |last=Murdin |first=Paul |author-link=Paul Murdin |title=Rock Legends: The Asteroids and Their Discoverers |date=2016 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-3-319-31836-3 |pages=42 |language=en |chapter=Pallas: A Second New Planet |quote=Within weeks of his discovery, Olbers had an explanation for why there were two planets in the same orbit. Olbers fleshed out the idea in a letter to William Herschel on May 17, 1802 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QDusDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA42}}</ref><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="WandererAmHimmelSteineVomHimmel" /> This became a popular explanation for the existence of the ], though it has since been superseded by the notion that the material never coalesced into a planet in the first place.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="StanwayTheVerminOfTheSkies">{{Cite web |last=Stanway |first=Elizabeth |author-link=<!-- No article at present (July 2024); Stanway is an astrophysicist at the University of Warwick who has been published in ], among others (see https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/physics/research/astro/people/stanway/sciencefiction); Wikidata Q127710708 --> |date=2022-10-02 |title=The Vermin of the Skies |url=https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/physics/research/astro/people/stanway/sciencefiction/cosmicstories/the_vermin_of |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230320185313/https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/physics/research/astro/people/stanway/sciencefiction/cosmicstories/the_vermin_of/ |archive-date=2023-03-20 |access-date=2024-04-12 |website=] |series=Cosmic Stories Blog}}</ref> In astronomy, this hypothetical former fifth planet is known as ];<ref name="WandererAmHimmelSteineVomHimmel">{{Cite book |last1=Caryad |first1=<!-- None; mononymous --> |url= |title=Wanderer am Himmel: Die Welt der Planeten in Astronomie und Mythologie |last2=Römer |first2=Thomas |last3=Zingsem |first3=Vera |date=2014 |publisher=Springer-Verlag |isbn=978-3-642-55343-1 |pages=162–164 |language=de |trans-title=Wanderers in the Sky: The World of the Planets in Astronomy and Mythology |chapter=Steine vom Himmel – und eine Lücke im Sonnensystem |trans-chapter=Rocks from the Sky – and a Gap in the Solar System |author-link2=<!-- No article at present (January 2023); editor for Phantastische Medien, Wikidata Q126753 --> |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y_WJBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA162}}</ref> in ], it is often called "Bodia" after ].<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="GernsbackYearsScienceFictionSolarSystem">{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |title=] |last2=Bleiler |first2=Richard |date=1998 |publisher=Kent State University Press |isbn=978-0-87338-604-3 |pages=539 |language=en |chapter=The Science-Fiction Solar System |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |author-link2=Richard Bleiler |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PbMdeizaCNcC&pg=PA539}}</ref> An ] work that mentions this explanation for the origin of the asteroids is ]'s 1895 novel '']'', which describes the release of energy stored in ] a few thousand years ago as the culprit.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="SFERobertCromie">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2022 |title=Cromie, Robert |encyclopedia=] |url=https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/cromie_robert |access-date=2024-02-18 |edition=4th |author1-last=Clute |author1-first=John |author1-link=John Clute |editor1-last=Clute |editor1-first=John |editor1-link=John Clute |editor2-last=Langford |editor2-first=David |editor2-link=David Langford |editor3-last=Sleight |editor3-first=Graham |editor3-link=Graham Sleight}}</ref> | |||
By the ] of science fiction, Bodia was a recurring theme. In these stories it is typically ] and inhabited by humans, often advanced humans and occasionally the ancestors of humans on Earth.<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="GernsbackYearsScienceFictionSolarSystem" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |title=] |last2=Bleiler |first2=Richard |date=1998 |publisher=Kent State University Press |isbn=978-0-87338-604-3 |pages=xvii |language=en |chapter=Introduction |quote=The "science" in science-fiction of the Gernsback period was not wholly borrowed from the outside world. Some concepts were created on a mythical level. Particularly interesting is the establishment of "Bodia" (according to one cosmology of the day, a former fifth planet whose destruction formed the asteroids) as the ultimate origin of mankind and possessor of a supercivilization. |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |author-link2=Richard Bleiler |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PbMdeizaCNcC&pg=PR17}}</ref><ref name="GernsbackYearsMotifAndThemeIndex">{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |title=] |last2=Bleiler |first2=Richard |date=1998 |publisher=Kent State University Press |isbn=978-0-87338-604-3 |pages=627–628 |language=en |chapter=Motif and Theme Index |quote=Bode's Fifth Planet, "Bodia." (A hypothetical planet between Mars and Jupiter that broke up to form the asteroid belt. It is usually fictionally considered as Earth-like, with a human population.) |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |author-link2=Richard Bleiler |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PbMdeizaCNcC&pg=PA627}}</ref> Interplanetary warfare with Mars causes the destruction of Bodia—and indirectly, ]—in ]'s 1930 short story "]".<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |title=] |last2=Bleiler |first2=Richard |date=1998 |publisher=Kent State University Press |isbn=978-0-87338-604-3 |pages=455–456 |language=en |chapter=Vincent, Harl |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |author-link2=Richard Bleiler |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PbMdeizaCNcC&pg=PA455}}</ref> An internal disaster resulting in the explosion of the ] is responsible in ]'s 1932 short story "]".<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |title=] |last2=Bleiler |first2=Richard |date=1998 |publisher=Kent State University Press |isbn=978-0-87338-604-3 |pages=204 |language=en |chapter=Kalland, John Francis |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |author-link2=Richard Bleiler |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PbMdeizaCNcC&pg=PA204}}</ref> In ]'s 1934 short story "]", war with Mars over the colonization of then-uninhabited ] results both in the partial destruction of Bodia, thus creating the asteroids, and the displacement of the largest fragment to a much wider orbit to create ], while the settlers on Earth eventually become humanity.<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |title=] |last2=Bleiler |first2=Richard |date=1998 |publisher=Kent State University Press |isbn=978-0-87338-604-3 |pages=417 |language=en |chapter=Stone, Leslie F. |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |author-link2=Richard Bleiler |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PbMdeizaCNcC&pg=PA417}}</ref> | |||
*An episode of the political television drama, '']'' entitled "Impact Winter" included a subplot in which the ] staff prepared for a possible asteroid strike on the Earth. (First broadcast on ], ]). | |||
*The ] '']'' (1979) depicts an asteroid named Orpheus hurtling toward Earth after its orbit is deflected by a ]. | |||
*]'s novel '']'' (1993) depicts mankind's efforts to stop an asteroid named Kali from hitting the Earth. The film '']'' (1998) was based on Clarke's novel, although in the movie, the asteroid becomes a ]. In another Clarke book, ], an asteroid impacts in the Adriatic and causes the destruction of ].In the aftermath of that disaster, a regular space service guarding against rogue asteroids is formed, whose members are the protagonists in the main stroy line - a meeting with a mysterious alien space artifact. | |||
*In the ] game '']'' (originally released in 1995) and its novelization, the impact-threatening asteroid Attila turns out to be an alien probe. | |||
*In the 1998 movie '']'', based on ]'s controversial 1959 book of the same name, aliens launch an asteroid at Earth, completely wiping out ]. This is the opening move in the war. | |||
* Similarly, in ]'s book ] (1985), elephant-like aliens launch an asteroid which lands in the ], causing huge tidal waves which almost completely wipe out life in ] and cause enormous damage to all countries which have shores on that ocean. | |||
* In another Pournelle book, ], the world's population falls into panic at hearing of an impending collision with a space object, is falsely reassured when hearing that the object is not an asteroid but a comet "with the density of sundae", then finds out in the hard way that at the speed of collision this still causes enormous damage and throws the world into total chaos. | |||
*The film '']'' (1998) is also about efforts to stop an asteroid hitting Earth. Its representation of an asteroid (and of space travel in general) is deeply unrealistic. | |||
* In ]'s book ], Jack Brennan - a human turned into a ] - commits genocide by causing an ice asteroid to collide with ], thereby causing a rise in the water content of its atmosphere and exterminating the native ] to whom water is a deadly poison. | |||
* ] by ] begins with the protagonist Galvanix, a citizen of the Lunar Republic, preparing to plant a small fusion bomb on an asteroid which threatens to smash into the terraformed moon, causing untold devastation. He succeeds, but there are complications which take a whole book to resolve. (See http://sf.www.lysator.liu.se/sf_archive/sf-texts/Otherrealms/OR.28.) | |||
*In '']'' (1968), a masterpiece of ]s, a rogue asteroid hurtles toward Earth. The astronauts leave ] Gamma 3 and place bombs on the asteroid, finding it inhabited by strange blobs of glowing slime that are drawn to the equipment. Unfortunately for everyone some of the slime was carried back on a ] and soon evolves into tentacled creatures! See the review: . The movie inspired the classic ] '']''. | |||
Following the invention of the ] in 1945, stories of this planetary destruction became increasingly common, encouraged by the advent of a plausible-seeming means of disintegration.<ref name="StablefordPlanet">{{Cite book |last=Stableford |first=Brian |author-link=Brian Stableford |title=] |date=2006 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-0-415-97460-8 |pages=375 |language=en |chapter=Planet |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uefwmdROKTAC&pg=PA375}}</ref> ]'s 1948 novel '']'' thus states that the fifth planet was destroyed as a result of ], and in ]'s 1948 short story "]" ({{Aka}} "Perchance to Dream"), the ghosts of the former warring factions infect the mind of an astronaut stranded on an asteroid.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids">{{Cite book |last=Gillett |first=Stephen L. |title=] |date=2005 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-313-32951-7 |editor-last=Westfahl |editor-first=Gary |editor-link=Gary Westfahl |pages=146–148 |language=en |chapter=Comets and Asteroids |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/greenwoodencyclo0000unse_k2b9/page/146/mode/2up}}</ref> Several works of the 1950s reused the idea to warn of the dangers of nuclear weapons, including ]'s 1954 ] short story "]" and ]'s 1957 novel '']'' ({{Aka}} ''Fallen Star'').<ref name="SFEAsteroids">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2023<!-- 2 January --> |title=Asteroids |encyclopedia=] |url=https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/asteroids |access-date=2023-10-06 |edition=4th |author1-last=Stableford |author1-first=Brian |author1-link=Brian Stableford |author2-last=Langford |author2-first=David |author2-link=David Langford |editor1-last=Clute |editor1-first=John |editor1-link=John Clute |editor2-last=Langford |editor2-first=David |editor2-link=David Langford |editor3-last=Sleight |editor3-first=Graham |editor3-link=Graham Sleight}}</ref><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids">{{Cite book |last=Westfahl |first=Gary |title=] |date=2021 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-1-4408-6617-3 |pages=139–141 |language=en |chapter=Asteroids |author-link=Gary Westfahl |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WETPEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA139}}</ref><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation">{{Cite magazine |last=Hampton |first=Steven |date=Summer 2000 |editor-last=Lee |editor-first=Tony |editor-link=<!-- No article at present (June 2023); not the same as ] --> |title=Momentos of Creation: Asteroids & Comets in SF |department=The Planets Project: A Science Fictional Tour of the Solar System<!-- https://web.archive.org/web/20160818162252/http://www.zone-sf.com/planetsproject.html --> |magazine=]<!-- Not the same as ] --> |pages=6–7 |issue=9 |issn=1351-5217}}</ref> In ]'s 1942–1951 ] an ] explosion is to blame,<ref name="VisualEncyclopediaTechnologiesAndArtefacts" /><ref>{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2024<!-- 19 February --> |title=Williamson, Jack |encyclopedia=] |url=https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/williamson_jack |access-date=2024-02-26 |edition=4th |author1-last=Clute |author1-first=John |author1-link=John Clute |editor1-last=Clute |editor1-first=John |editor1-link=John Clute |editor2-last=Langford |editor2-first=David |editor2-link=David Langford |editor3-last=Sleight |editor3-first=Graham |editor3-link=Graham Sleight}}</ref> and in ]'s 1955 short story "]", the destruction results from a ] conducted by the inhabitants of Mars, while in Heinlein's 1951 novel '']'' the technology that caused the destruction has been lost to time.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /> The planet's destruction by Martians is also mentioned in Heinlein's 1961 novel '']'', and implied to have been caused using ] powers.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> The 1977 novel '']'', the first in ]'s ], revisits the theme of the fifth planet—here called "Minerva"—being destroyed by nuclear war.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> | |||
Another way in which asteroids could be considered a source of danger is by depicting them as a hazard to navigation, especially threatening to ships travelling from Earth to the outer parts of the Solar System and thus needing to pass the Asteroid Belt (or make a time- and fuel-consuming detour around it). Asteroids in this context provide to space travel stories a space equivalent of reefs and underwater rocks in the older genre of sea-faring adventures stories. And like reefs and rocks in the ocean, asteroids as navigation hazards can also be used by bold outlaws to avoid pursuit. | |||
Representations of the Asteroid Belt in film tend to make it unrealistically cluttered with dangerous rocks. In reality asteroids, even in the main belt, are spaced extremely far apart (even so, they can still be a risk to ships travelling at high speeds). | |||
. | |||
*] released the arcade game '']'' in 1979. | |||
*In the classic science-fiction movie '']'' (1968), the ''Discovery'' has a scientifically accurate "close approach" by a binary asteroid whilst en route to ]. The scene simply cuts briefly to two lone rocks passing by the ship, with tens of thousands of kilometres to spare. | |||
*]'s novel '']'' (1986) depicts a journey through the asteroid belt and its ominous parallels with the journey of the '']''. | |||
*In the ] ] '']'' (2004), the ''Pegasus'' encounters a ] from much closer than expected, and dubs the rocks "Hubris" and "Catastrophe" as a result. | |||
*In ]'s ], as its name suggests, the Asteroid Belt is the haunt of dangerous pirates. The hero, an agent of the The Terran Empire, has not only his job but also a private score to settle with pirates who had killed had his parents. In the end, however, the enlightened Empire gives former Pirate strongholds in terraformed asteroids a chance to stay on as law-abiding communities. (See http://homepage.mac.com/jhjenkins/Asimov/Books/Book010.html.) | |||
*A somewhat similar theme, but with reversed sympathies, figures in the film '']'' (1980). ] enters an asteroid field to flee from the fleet of the evil ], and ] thinks it is a bad idea. Han then hides his ship, the '']'' inside a giant asteroid; The ship is then attacked by a vast monster that lives within the asteroid in the vacuum of space. | |||
In ]'s 1950 short story "]"<!-- The source gives the title as "A Step Further Out". This is an error, see https://archive.org/details/Super_Science_Stories_v06n03_1950-03_Tawrast-EXciter_FIXED/page/n47/mode/2up. -->, valuables from the destroyed civilization are recovered,<ref name="VisualEncyclopediaTechnologiesAndArtefacts">{{Cite book |title=] |date=1977 |publisher=Harmony Books |isbn=0-517-53174-7 |editor-last=Ash |editor-first=Brian |editor-link=Brian Ash (bibliographer) |pages=163–164 |chapter=Technologies and Artefacts |oclc=2984418 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/visualencycloped00ashb/page/163/mode/2up}}</ref> and in ]'s 1969 novel '']'', an ancient virus is found in the asteroid remnants.<ref name="VisualEncyclopediaExplorationAndColonies">{{Cite book |title=] |date=1977 |publisher=Harmony Books |isbn=0-517-53174-7 |editor-last=Ash |editor-first=Brian |editor-link=Brian Ash (bibliographer) |pages=82 |chapter=Exploration and Colonies |oclc=2984418 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/visualencycloped00ashb/page/82/mode/2up}}</ref> ]'s 1985 short story "]", where ]s are found on an asteroid, is a late example of the destroyed planet theme;<ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /><ref name="FraknoiAsteroids">{{Cite web |last=Fraknoi |first=Andrew |author-link=Andrew Fraknoi |date=January 2024 |title=Science Fiction Stories with Good Astronomy & Physics: A Topical Index |url=https://astrosociety.org/file_download/inline/7b5edc23-7a89-46c1-a6b3-33a30ed4c876 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240210011957/https://astrosociety.org/file_download/inline/7b5edc23-7a89-46c1-a6b3-33a30ed4c876 |archive-date=2024-02-10 |archive-format=PDF |access-date=2024-02-18 |website=] |pages=2, 7–8 |format=PDF |edition=7.3}}</ref> it has otherwise largely been relegated to deliberately retro works such as the 1989 ] '']''.<ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids">{{Cite book |last1=Caryad |first1=<!-- None; mononymous --> |url= |title=Wanderer am Himmel: Die Welt der Planeten in Astronomie und Mythologie |last2=Römer |first2=Thomas |last3=Zingsem |first3=Vera |date=2014 |publisher=Springer-Verlag |isbn=978-3-642-55343-1 |pages=170–172 |language=de |trans-title=Wanderers in the Sky: The World of the Planets in Astronomy and Mythology |chapter=Science vs. Fiction: der ganz andere Asteroidengürtel aus Roman und Film |trans-chapter=Science vs. Fiction: The Entirely Different Asteroid Belt from Novel and Film |author-link2=<!-- No article at present (January 2023); editor for Phantastische Medien, Wikidata Q126753 --> |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y_WJBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA170}}</ref> A variation on the theme appears in ]'s 1973 short story "]", where the asteroids are leftover material originally intended for the construction of a fifth planet.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /> | |||
Before colonization of the asteroids became an attractive possibility, a main interest in them was theories as to their origin. | |||
== Navigational hazard == | |||
*In ]'s ], the hero's first assignment after graduation from the ]'s academy is to a ship charting the intractable Asteroid Belt. He has the luck to be involved in a startling discovery: not only is the Belt proven to be what is left of of an exploded planet, but also remains are found of that planet's inhabitants. | |||
Asteroids started making more frequent appearances in fiction in the early 1900s, and these works tended to depict the asteroid belt as a region that must be navigated carefully lest one's spaceship should collide with one of the asteroids.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /> The ] subgenre in particular often features this motif.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /> In ]'s 1939 short story "]", a group of astronauts run into this danger,<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /> and in Williamson's 1949 novel '']'', a region of space is virtually impassable for this reason.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /> The problem is circumvented in ]'s 1960 novel '']'' by exploiting the third dimension of space, since the asteroids are mostly located in the plane of the ].<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /> | |||
*Similarly, the Japanese science fiction film '']'' aka '']'' (1957) reveals the solar system's asteroid belt as the remnants of the Mysterian's home planet, Mysteroid, after a nuclear war broke out. | |||
* In ] ''Inherit the Stars'' (1977), first book of the ''Gentle Giants'' series, Minerva was a planet that exploded to form the ] 50,000 years ago. | |||
*In ]'s ], two groups - "The Wardens" and "The Rangers" - wage a relentless struggle for control of Earth and the Solar System. As a result, ] is blown up, its remnants becoming a new Asteroid Belt. Thereupon, the two fighting sides tacitly agree to use more subtle forms of fighting, involving mainly time-travel. | |||
*In ]'s ], the hero, travelling in a vehicle capable of traversing ] passes many where Earth had been shattered in a cataclysmic war and was rendered into a scattered collection of asteroids. He gets a brief and horrifying glimpse of an asteroid on which a section of road is still visible. Later, he learns that our own Earth narrowly avoided a similar fate. | |||
*]'s book ] ends with the "useless" planet Venus being deliberately blown up so as to create a new Asteroid Belt. (This in fact belongs to a later kind of asteroid SF, where asteroids are rated as more valuable than planets). | |||
*In ]'s ], a living (and intelligent, and very powerful) asteroid arrives in the Solar System's Asteroid Belt, after countless aeons of wandering interstellar space. Passing near a lonely asteroid, "he" encounters the first living beings other than "himself" which "he" ever met: a likeable criminal involved in a life-and-death struggle with a corrupt and power-mad judge. The bad judge is eventually killed, but so is the judge's beautiful wife who is is the good criminal's ally and beloved. The god-like Living Rock takes pity on the couple, resurrects the woman, collects all the asteroids in the Belt and forms them back into a planet with "himself" at its centre, and makes of the new planet a private Paradise for "his" favourite human couple. | |||
When the theme of interplanetary colonization first entered SF, the Asteroid Belt was quite low on the list of desirable real estate, far behind such planets as ] and ] (often conceived as a a kind of paradise planet, until probes in the 1960's revealed the appalling temperatures and conditions under its clouds). Thus, in many stories and books the Asteroid Belt, if not a positive hazard, is still a rarely-visited backwater in a colonized Solar System. | |||
*''],'' ]'s first published story, concerns the plight of a group of astronauts stranded in orbit around the asteroid ]. A later short story, ']', has a lonely asteroid as the location for an intractable robot mystery and tangle. (In 1950 collected in repeatedly republished '']''). | |||
*In ]'s short story ] (1952), a ruthless Earthman buys a young Martian woman (Martians, in this story, being a humanoid race subject to Earth-human colonialism and exploitation). She is to serve as a companion in his five-year of lonely tour of duty on an asteroid orbiting ]. The power struggle between the two of them, isolated on the asteroid, forms the main plot, and the arrogant and chauvinistic Earthman finds the hard way that his "Dumb Martian" is not as dumb as he thought her. | |||
*In ]'s '']'' (1985), and his later companion piece '']'', the Asteroid Belt is mainly a military zone, housing the bases and institutions dedicated to the war against Earth's insectoid invaders (which in the end turn out not quite as horrible as official propaganda made them look). A major part of both books takes place at ] on ] where gifted children are kept in complete isolation and ruthlessly turned into tough fleet commanders, losing their childhood in the process. | |||
Later works mostly recognize that the individual asteroids are very far apart: the average distance between them is comparable to the ].<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="BloomAsteroidsCometsAndImpacts" /> Accordingly, they pose little danger to spacecraft,<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /> though this need not necessarily be the case in asteroid fields outside of our ].<ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> Nevertheless, the idea of a thick asteroid field that poses constant danger to any spaceship within it recurs in the 1979 video game '']'',<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /> and close-quarter ]s between spacecraft among asteroids appear in the 1980 '']'' film '']'' and the 1995–1996 television series '']''.<ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> A densely packed extrasolar asteroid field in the ] system also appears in the 1981 episode "The Golden Man" of the television series '']''.<ref name="BloomAsteroidsCometsAndImpacts">{{Cite book |last=Bloom |first=Steven D. |title=The Physics and Astronomy of Science Fiction: Understanding Interstellar Travel, Teleportation, Time Travel, Alien Life and Other Genre Fixtures |date=2016 |publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0-7864-7053-2 |pages=57–60 |language=en |chapter=Asteroids, Comets, and Impacts |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8NbIDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA57}}</ref> ]'s 1984 novel '']'' goes so far in its adaptation of the ] to the asteroid belt that it treats space as two-dimensional and constrains movement accordingly.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Langford |first=David |author-link=David Langford |date=May 2005 |title=Retro Wars |url=https://ansible.uk/sfx/sfx130.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211021180550/https://ansible.uk/sfx/sfx130.html |archive-date=2021-10-21 |access-date=2024-02-25 |magazine=] |issue=130}}</ref> | |||
The prospects of colonizing the Solar System planets became more dim with increasing discoveries about conditions on them. Conversely, the potential value of the asteroids increased, as a vast accumulation of mineral wealth, accessible in conditions of minimal gravity, and supplementing Earth's dwindling resources. Stories of asteroid mining became more and more numerous since the late 1940s, with the next logical step being depictions of a society on terraformed asteroids - in some cases dug under the surface, in others having dome colonies and in still others provided with an atmosphere which is kept in place by an artificial gravity. | |||
An image developed and was carried from writer to writer, of "Belters" or "Rock Rats" as rugged and independent-minded individuals, resentful of all Authority (in some books and stories of the military and political power of Earth-bound nation states, in others of the corporate power of huge companies). As such, this sub-genre proved naturally attractive to writers with ] tendencies. Moreover, depictions of the Asteroid Belt as The New Frontier clearly draw (sometimes explicitly) on the considerable literature of the Nineteenth-Century ] and the ]. And since (in nearly all stories) the asteroids are completely lifeless until the arrival of the humans, it is a New Frontier completely free of the moral taint of the brutal dispossession of the ] in the original. | |||
== Native life == | |||
* An early example are ] and ] by ]. Earth, Mars, Venus and the Jovian Moons are all dominated by competing tyrannical political systems (a Communist one, a Fascist one, and a Capitalist "democracy" totally dominated by a single vast, all-owning and all-controlling corporation. The scattered, despised and numerically-inferior asteroid miners are left as the sole remaining champions of Individual Liberty. The "Rock Rats" neatly turn the tables by finding out how to produce energy from the collision of matter and ] asteroids (anti-matter or "Contraterrene" is the "Seetee" of the title). Virtually unlimited energy is broadcast from the Asteroid Belt all over the Solar System, for everybody to tap and use completely free of charge - and all the oppressive systems go crashing down. | |||
]'s "]" illustrated by ] on the cover of '']'', October 1932]] | |||
*An unfavorable review of one of his books, which compared the writing to that of a comic strip, brought Williamson to the attention of The New York Sunday News, which needed a science fiction writer for a new comic strip. Williamson wrote the strip "Beyond Mars", loosely based on his novel Seetee Ship for several years until the paper dropped all comics. | |||
] on asteroids appears only rarely in fiction, owing to their small size.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /> An early example is found in ]'s 1896 short work "]", where ] and technologically advanced.<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |title=] |date=1990 |publisher=Kent State University Press |others=With the assistance of ] |isbn=978-0-87338-416-2 |pages=748 |language=en |chapter=Tsiolkovsky, Konstantin Eduardovich (1857–1935) |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KEZxhkG5eikC&pg=PA748}}</ref> Humans stranded on an asteroid encounter hostile aliens in ]'s 1932 short story "]"<!-- Stableford gives the title as "The Master of the Asteroid", with a definite article. This is an error, see https://archive.org/details/Wonder_Stories_v04n05_1932-10_-bc/page/n51/mode/2up --> and ]'s 1933 short story "]".<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |title=] |last2=Bleiler |first2=Richard |date=1998 |publisher=Kent State University Press |isbn=978-0-87338-604-3 |pages=392 |language=en |chapter=Smith, Clark Ashton |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |author-link2=Richard Bleiler |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PbMdeizaCNcC&pg=PA392}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Stableford |first=Brian |title=]: A Critical Guide to Science Fiction |date=2004 |publisher=Libraries unlimited |isbn=978-1-59158-171-0 |editor-last=Barron |editor-first=Neil |editor-link=Neil Barron |edition=5th |location=Westport, Connecticut |pages=222 |language=en |chapter=The Horror on the Asteroid and Other Tales of Planetary Horror |author-link=Brian Stableford |orig-date=1976}}</ref> The titular reptilian of ]'s 1938 novel '']'' comes to Earth from an asteroid as an egg before hatching,<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref>{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2023 |title=Phillpotts, Eden |encyclopedia=] |url=https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/phillpotts_eden |access-date=2024-03-03 |edition=4th |author1-last=Stableford |author1-first=Brian |author1-link=Brian Stableford |author2-last=Clute |author2-first=John |author2-link=John Clute |editor1-last=Clute |editor1-first=John |editor1-link=John Clute |editor2-last=Langford |editor2-first=David |editor2-link=David Langford |editor3-last=Sleight |editor3-first=Graham |editor3-link=Graham Sleight}}</ref> and an asteroid is likewise the homeworld of the title character in ]'s 1943 novel '']''.<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> Alien plant life on an asteroid turns it not only ] but paradisiacal in ]'s 1952 short story "]",<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /> and the inhabitants of an asteroid in ]'s 1953 ] "]" persuade human visitors that being a plant is preferable to being human,<ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /> while a ] from an asteroid appears in Asimov's 1955 short story "]".<ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /> In ]'s 1957 ] novel '']'', an asteroid is itself alive.<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /> The notion that asteroids might harbour ], possibly even deadly ]s that could be transferred to Earth either directly by impacting the planet or indirectly via astronauts visiting the asteroid, also surfaces occasionally.<ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> | |||
*At the center of ]'s story ] is a tense love affair between an asterite entrepreneur, who represents a kind of reversion to 19th Century Capitalism, and a woman officer in a space warship sent by the Social Justice Party (in power at Washinton D.C) to clip that entrepreneur's wings. The encounter is the first skirmish in what eventually develops into a full-scale Asterite ] (consciously modelled on the American one), told of in further stories. Anderson's asteroid stories were enentually collected in ], where the flourishing Asteroid Republic makes of a terraformed asteroid the first intersettellar ship, which in the course of generations would reach other stellar systems. The veterans who go along tell, for the edification of the young generation, their memoirs of the pioneering days. | |||
* In ]'s ], the Asteroid Belt is originally colonized by ] who hog its mineral wealth and lord it over later-arrived immigrants from Third World countries - in effect recreating ] all over again. A revolution culminates with the creation of the Belt Free State, a republic far less stable than Anderson's which is headed by the likeable though thoroughly corrupt Bart Faden. The intervention of the Big Powers from Earth, seeking to control the same mineral wealth, leads to Fraden's overthrow and his escape out of the Solar System - setting the stage to further (quite grisly) adventures which are the book's main plotline. | |||
* In ]'s ], the Solar System is divided between the UN-dominated Earth and the Asteroid Belt, two competing political and cultural entities whose rivalry might at any moment descend into a destructive war - forming the background to several books and the main theme of ]. In this universe, it planets such as ] which are the neglected backwaters, Belters spurning them and their gravity wells as fit only for "Flatlnaders". | |||
*], a committed ] who makes no secret of using his books as a platform to promote his ideology, returns again and again to the Asteroids. His novel ''Pallas'' (], 1993) depicts a modernized hunting-based life on the terraformed asteroid ] and introduces Emerson Ngu. The book was partly inspired by the 1987 article "The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race" written by ]. The book also includes a brief description of a way to encapsulate the entire surface of a small body such as an asteroid to enable creating an Earthlike environment. The asteroids and the unique culture developing on and in them also figure prominently in Smith's North American Confederation alternate history series, with its social system of total Free Enterprise - among them the aforementioned ]. (See http://www.reference.com/browse/L._Neil_Smith.) | |||
*In '']'', part of ]'s dystopian ] alternate history series, the Asteroid Belt becomes a major arena of the decades-long struggle between "The Domination of the Draka", a political and military entity bent on conquering everybody else and reducing them to literal slavery, and its arch-enemy "The Alliance for Democracy". (SPOILER FOLLOWS!) Following "The Final War" of that history's 1998, the tough Asteroid miners are the last holdout against the victorious Draka. Though they, too, are eventually overwhelmed, they are able to launch "New America", a huge sraship carrying some 40,000 colonists to the stars, to keep the cause alive and fight again another day. | |||
* in ]'s story ], part of the collection ] which is the first volume of Pournelle's ], the Asteroid Belt is dominated by a consortium of ] (upgraded to multiplanetary corporations by this time). Pournelle deliberately turns upside down the well-established rules of this sub-genre by making the corporations and their field agent into the Good Guys of the story. The Bad Guys are the rugged miners of Jefferson Asteroid, who use assorted dirty tricks in their effort to get free of the corporations' rule - an aspiration which a character describes as "an atavistic nationalism for which there is no room in the Belt". | |||
*The latest addition to the genre seems to be ]'s ambitious novel series '']'' (2001-2004) which focuses on a trade war over the mining of the Belt which develops into a shooting war. | |||
== Human presence == | |||
] | |||
A new concept was introduced in the pulp era of science fiction: ].<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /> This quickly became the most popular fiction use for the asteroids, and the asteroid belt was often portrayed as the setting of a space version of the ] or ] in works like Simak's 1932 short story "]", ]'s 1935 short story "]", and ]'s 1940 short story "]".<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /> Along with this outer-space analogy of the ] genre came the introduction of ] to the asteroids in works like ]'s 1934 short story "]" and Royal W. Heckman's<!-- Probably not notable; ISFDB lists only two stories (https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?12169) and SFE has no further information (https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/heckman_royal_w) --> 1938 short story "]", as well as stories of stranded astronauts as in ]'s 1933 short story "]" and the above-mentioned "Master of the Asteroid" and "Marooned off Vesta".<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /> These themes continued to appear in the decades that followed: Heinlein's 1952 novel '']'' portrays a community of asteroid miners, Asimov's 1953 novel '']'' features space pirates, and ]'s 1960 short story "]" depicts an astronaut stranded on the asteroid ] as it makes a close approach to the ].<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="FraknoiAsteroids" /> | |||
The prospect of ] the asteroids was limited by their small size,<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /> though this did not stop some works such as the 1959–1964 science fiction ] '']'' from portraying asteroids with breathable atmospheres and ].<ref name="BloomAsteroidsCometsAndImpacts" /> Somewhat more realistic portrayals of human-habitable asteroids involve ], as in ]'s 1931 short story "]" and ]'s 1947 short story "]"<!-- Westfahl gives the title as "I'll Build Your Dream Planet", an error. -->, or hollowing them out to create ]<!-- SFE refers to the asteroid in "Misfit" as a space station, while Westfahl and Gillett call it a space habitat. -->, as in Heinlein's 1939 short story "]".<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /> In "I'll Build Your Dream Castle", the terraformed asteroids are sold as luxury real estate,<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /> while in ]'s 1967 novel '']'', a terraforming effort gone wrong results in an asteroid being used as a dumping place for the Solar System's garbage.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Stableford |first=Brian |author-link=Brian Stableford |title=The Dictionary of Science Fiction Places |date=1999 |publisher=Wonderland Press |isbn=978-0-684-84958-4 |pages=174 |chapter=Kopra |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/dictionaryofscie0000unse/page/174/mode/2up}}</ref> | |||
The concept of hollowing out asteroids has also extended to turning them into large spacecraft, as in ]'s 1960<!-- SFE gives the year as 1961 in the "Asteroids" entry, as does the article in The Zone, but the SFE entry for Leinster gives the year as 1960 (https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/leinster_murray) as does ISFDB (https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?3551). --> novel '']''.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /><ref name="SFEWorldShips" /> In ]'s 1977 novel '']'' and ], an asteroid that orbits at an unusual ninety-degree angle to the ecliptic turns out to have been modified in this way by aliens long ago,<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /> while in ]'s 1979 novel '']'' humanity converts a large number of asteroids into spacecraft for ].<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /> Another alien-modified asteroid appears in ]'s 1985 novel '']'',<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /> and in ]'s 1983 novel '']'' an asteroidal ] is used for settling the cosmos.<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="SFEWorldShips">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2021 |title=World Ships |encyclopedia=] |url=https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/world_ships |access-date=2024-03-16 |edition=4th |author1-last=Langford |author1-first=David |author1-link=David Langford |editor1-last=Clute |editor1-first=John |editor1-link=John Clute |editor2-last=Langford |editor2-first=David |editor2-link=David Langford |editor3-last=Sleight |editor3-first=Graham |editor3-link=Graham Sleight}}</ref><ref name="SFEGenerationStarships">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2019 |title=Generation Starships |encyclopedia=] |url=https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/generation_starships |access-date=2024-03-17 |edition=4th |author1-last=Nicholls |author1-first=Peter |author1-link=Peter Nicholls (writer) |author2-last=Langford |author2-first=David |author2-link=David Langford |editor1-last=Clute |editor1-first=John |editor1-link=John Clute |editor2-last=Langford |editor2-first=David |editor2-link=David Langford |editor3-last=Sleight |editor3-first=Graham |editor3-link=Graham Sleight}}</ref> Hollowed-out asteroids used as prisons in ] appear in Zebrowski's 1998 novel '']'',<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="SFEGeorgeZebrowski">{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2023 |title=Zebrowski, George |encyclopedia=] |url=https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/zebrowski_george |access-date=2024-03-17 |edition=4th |author1-last=Clute |author1-first=John |author1-link=John Clute |editor1-last=Clute |editor1-first=John |editor1-link=John Clute |editor2-last=Langford |editor2-first=David |editor2-link=David Langford |editor3-last=Sleight |editor3-first=Graham |editor3-link=Graham Sleight}}</ref> and the asteroid ] is converted into another generation ship in the 2014–2015 ] series '']''.<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2021 |title=Knights of Sidonia |encyclopedia=] |url=https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/knights_of_sidonia |access-date=2024-03-17 |edition=4th |author1-last=Pearce |author1-first=Steven |author1-link=<!-- No article at present (March 2024) --> |editor1-last=Clute |editor1-first=John |editor1-link=John Clute |editor2-last=Langford |editor2-first=David |editor2-link=David Langford |editor3-last=Sleight |editor3-first=Graham |editor3-link=Graham Sleight}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Barder |first=Ollie |date=2015-09-27 |title=Weekend Anime: Knights Of Sidonia |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/olliebarder/2015/09/27/weekend-anime-knights-of-sidonia/ |url-status=dead<!-- not really, but the first paragraph is (at the time given by the URL access date parameter) for some inexplicable reason omitted on the live page --> |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201025021320/https://www.forbes.com/sites/olliebarder/2015/09/27/weekend-anime-knights-of-sidonia/#a82e2674d621 |archive-date=2020-10-25 |access-date=2024-03-17 |website=] |language=en}}</ref><!-- WP:FORBESCON notwithstanding, this source should be reliable enough for verification of the in-universe plot detail that the fictional ship is made out of the real-world asteroid. --> | |||
Settlement in the asteroid belt is in fiction often associated with a fiercely-independent, ]-minded, ] mentality akin to that of the ].<ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /><ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Westfahl |first=Gary |author-link=Gary Westfahl |title=] |date=2021 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-1-4408-6617-3 |pages=303 |language=en |chapter=Frontier |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WETPEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA303}}</ref> Anderson's 1970 fix-up novel '']'' recounts the history of such a society and the development of its particular culture,<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /> in ]'s 1975 short story "]" the asteroids are settled by "outcasts from earth",<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Booker |first=M. Keith |title=Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction in Literature |date=2014 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-0-8108-7884-6 |pages=165 |language=en |chapter=MacLean, Katherine (1925–) |quote=One important series of interrelated stories was the "Hills of Space" sequence, dealing with the colonization of the asteroids by outcasts from earth. This series began with "Incommunicado" (1950) and extended through several stories to "The Gambling Hell and the Sinful Girl" (1975). |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WRi7BAAAQBAJ&pg=PA165}}</ref> and ]'s stories of '']'', such as the 1975 short story collection '']'', depict a community of hardened asteroid-miners known as "Belters".<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /> ]'s 1974–1986 '']'' series transposes this motif from the asteroid belt to the remote ] at the outer edge of the Solar System.<ref name="StanwayThereForTheTaking">{{Cite web |last=Stanway |first=Elizabeth |author-link=<!-- No article at present (September 2024); Stanway is an astrophysicist at the University of Warwick who has been published in ], among others (see https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/physics/research/astro/people/stanway/sciencefiction); Wikidata Q127710708 --> |date=2024-09-08 |title=There for the Taking |url=https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/physics/research/astro/people/stanway/sciencefiction/cosmicstories/there_for_the |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240908202337/https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/physics/research/astro/people/stanway/sciencefiction/cosmicstories/there_for_the |archive-date=2024-09-08 |access-date=2024-09-08 |website=] |series=Cosmic Stories Blog}}</ref> In ]'s 1995 novel '']'', war breaks out over ],<ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /> and in the ''Asteroid Wars'' subseries of ]'s ], starting with the 2001 novel '']'', different factions compete for control of the resources in the asteroid belt,<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /> while ]'s 2002 novel '']'' revisits the older ] of asteroid miners fighting against space pirates.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /> ]'s 2012 novel '']'', by contrast, depicts asteroids adapted for human habitation as an integrated part of a thoroughly colonized Solar System.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Booker |first=M. Keith |title=Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction in Literature |date=2014 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-0-8108-7884-6 |pages=301 |language=en |chapter=Terraforming |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WRi7BAAAQBAJ&pg=PA301}}</ref> Astrophysicist {{Interlanguage link|Elizabeth Stanway|WD=Q127710708}} writes that while the portrayal of the inhabitants of the asteroid belt as independent-minded remains common in works such as ]'s (joint pseudonym of ] and ]) 2011–2021 novel series '']'' and its ], there has also emerged a portrayal of the region as dominated by corporate interests as in the 2017 '']'' episode "]".<ref name="StanwayThereForTheTaking" /> Colonized asteroids also appear in games such as the '']'' franchise and the 2009 tabletop role-playing game '']''.<ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> | |||
Resource extraction from asteroids has remained a common theme in science fiction, serving many different purposes both in space and on Earth.<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /><ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> Besides being sources of valuable materials such as ] to be sold for profit,<ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> asteroids may be repurposed as raw material for ] projects,<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /> and certain compounds such as ice may be used for terraforming.<ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /><ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> Other compounds may be used on-site for ] purposes, as ], or to set up a ].<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> In ]'s 1967 short story "]<!-- ] redirects to ] and ] is a WP:REDLINK, so this is the least bad alternative in terms of linking. -->", large quantities of asteroidal ] disrupt the ],<ref name="FraknoiAsteroids" /> a topic earlier broached by ] author ]'s posthumously-published 1908 novel '']''.<ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> In Robinson's 1992 novel '']'', material from the asteroid belt is used to construct a ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Booker |first=M. Keith |title=Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction in Literature |date=2014 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-0-8108-7884-6 |pages=277 |language=en |chapter=Space Elevator |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WRi7BAAAQBAJ&pg=PA277}}</ref> | |||
== Impact events == | |||
{{Further information|Impact events in fiction}} | |||
] | |||
The threat of asteroidal ]s is a recurring theme.<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="GreenwoodCometsAndAsteroids" /><ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> The earliest fictional example, according to ] ], is arguably ]'s 1912–1913 ] '']'', a ] story where the exact cause of destruction is never specified but there is a crater hundreds of miles wide and deep in the former ].<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |title=] |date=1990 |publisher=Kent State University Press |others=With the assistance of ] |isbn=978-0-87338-416-2 |pages=224–225 |language=en |chapter=England, George Allan (1877–1936) |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KEZxhkG5eikC&pg=PA224}}</ref> In the 1916–1917 serial "]" by ] and ], an errant asteroid is diverted to enter ] as an additional ] instead of striking the Earth,<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |title=] |date=1990 |publisher=Kent State University Press |others=With the assistance of ] |isbn=978-0-87338-416-2 |pages=746 |language=en |chapter=Train, Arthur and Wood, Robert Williams |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KEZxhkG5eikC&pg=PA746}}</ref> a plot point that recurs in Isaac R. Nathanson's<!-- Probably not notable; Bleiler writes "No information, except that portrait accompanying 'The Falling Planetoid' shows a man in late middle age." --> 1930 short story "]".<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |title=] |last2=Bleiler |first2=Richard |author-link2=Richard Bleiler |date=1998 |publisher=Kent State University Press |isbn=978-0-87338-604-3 |pages=305 |language=en |chapter=Nathanson, Isaac R. |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PbMdeizaCNcC&pg=PA305}}</ref> In ]'s 1930 short story "]", a record of an inhabited asteroid's history leading up to its collision with Earth is found underneath ] in ].<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Bleiler |first=Everett Franklin |author-link=E. F. Bleiler |title=] |last2=Bleiler |first2=Richard |author-link2=Richard Bleiler |date=1998 |publisher=Kent State University Press |isbn=978-0-87338-604-3 |pages=204–205 |language=en |chapter=Kateley, Walter |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PbMdeizaCNcC&pg=PA204}}</ref> | |||
The asteroid impact motif increased in popularity from the 1950s onward, possibly as a result of ] following ].<ref name="Gohd2021" /> Examples include the 1958 Italian film '']'', the 1967 novel '']'' by James Blish and ], and the 1968 Japanese film '']''.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="Gohd2021">{{Cite web |last=Gohd |first=Chelsea |date=2021-11-17 |title=Why is sci-fi so obsessed with asteroid impact disasters (and how to stop them)? |url=https://www.space.com/asteroid-impact-disasters-science-fiction-obsession |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230921180303/https://www.space.com/asteroid-impact-disasters-science-fiction-obsession |archive-date=2023-09-21 |access-date=2024-03-02 |website=] |language=en}}</ref> In Clarke's 1973 novel '']'', a disastrous asteroid impact motivates humanity to keep close track of Solar System objects thereafter.<ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /> ] wrote three stories in short succession that revolve around the topic: "]" in 1973, "]" in 1976, and '']'' in 1980—the last one in collaboration with ].<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Stableford |first=Brian |author-link=Brian Stableford |title=Science Fiction Writers: Critical Studies of the Major Authors from the Early Nineteenth Century to the Present Day |date=1999 |publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons |isbn=0-684-80593-6 |editor-last=Bleiler |editor-first=Richard |editor-link=Richard Bleiler |edition=2nd |location=New York |pages=61 |chapter=Gregory Benford |oclc=40460120 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/sciencefictionwr0000unse/page/61/mode/2up}}</ref> Clarke revisited the theme in 1993 with the novel '']'', which revolves around efforts to avert the disaster.<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /> | |||
Additional boosts to the theme's popularity came in 1980 with the publication of the ], which states that the ] 65 million years ago was caused by an asteroid impact that created the ] off the coast of Mexico,<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /><ref>{{Cite book |title=The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Science Fiction: The Definitive Illustrated Guide |date=1996 |publisher=Carlton |isbn=1-85868-188-X |editor-last=Pringle |editor-first=David |editor-link=David Pringle |pages=39–40 |language=en |chapter=Cosmic collisions |oclc=38373691 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/ultimateencyclop0000unse_a8c7/page/40/mode/2up}}</ref> and in 1994 with the collision of ] with Jupiter.<ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /><ref name="HartwellTheSkyOnTheGround">{{Cite book |last=Hartwell |first=William T. |title=Comet/Asteroid Impacts and Human Society: An Interdisciplinary Approach |date=2007 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-3-540-32709-7 |editor-last=Bobrowsky |editor-first=Peter T. |place=Berlin, Heidelberg |pages=79–82 |language=en |chapter=The Sky on the Ground: Celestial Objects and Events in Archaeology and Popular Culture |doi=10.1007/978-3-540-32711-0_3 |editor2-last=Rickman |editor2-first=Hans |editor-link2=<!--Hans Rickman--><!-- Currently (February 2024) a redirect --> |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Gpwgm022ltMC&pg=PA79}}</ref> The latter in particular is credited with inspiring a large number of ]s and other on-screen portrayals of impact events or threats thereof—be they by asteroids or other objects such as ]s—in the years that followed.<ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /><ref name="HartwellTheSkyOnTheGround" /> Among these are the 1997 TV miniseries '']'' and the 1998 film '']''; the concept had earlier appeared in the 1979 film '']''.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /> ] writes in '']'' that by the beginning of the new millennium, asteroidal impact events and ] were the two most popular scenarios in ].<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /> | |||
Altering asteroid trajectories, besides being a means to avert impact events as in ]'s 1988 novel '']'', also appears in fiction as a way to cause them.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /> In ]'s 1981 novel '']'', Ceres is deliberately crashed into the Moon.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /> Impact events are occasionally weaponized; Earth is targeted with asteroids in this manner by aliens as a form of interplanetary warfare in Heinlein's 1959 novel '']'', Niven and ]'s 1985 novel '']'', and ]'s 1996 novel '']''.<ref name="SFEAsteroids" /><ref name="WestfahlAsteroids" /><ref name="TheZoneMomentosOfCreation" /><ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> A human redirects asteroids from the distant Oort cloud towards Earth in an act of attempted ] in ]'s 2002 short story "]", and an asteroid is set on a collision course with one of the ] to create an additional ] in ]'s 2012 short story "]",<ref name="FraknoiAsteroids" /> while another human-caused—but this time unintentional—impact event appears in ]'s 1997 novel '']''.<ref name="WandererAmHimmelAsteroids" /> Asteroid diversion also appears in ]'s 2000 ] story "]" in an attempt to save the ]s from extinction.<ref name="StablefordAsteroid" /> | |||
== See also == | |||
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== Notes == | |||
{{Notelist}} | |||
{{clear}} | |||
== References == | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Bly |first=Robert W. |author-link=Robert W. Bly |title=The Science in Science Fiction: 83 SF Predictions That Became Scientific Reality |date=2005 |publisher=] |others=Consulting Editor: ] |isbn=978-1-932100-48-8 |pages=43–46 |language=en |chapter=Asteroids Colliding with the Earth |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/scienceinscience0000blyr/page/42/mode/2up}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Nicholls |first=Peter |author-link=Peter Nicholls (writer) |title=] |date=1983 |publisher=Knopf |isbn=0-394-53010-1 |editor-last=Nicholls |editor-first=Peter |editor-link=Peter Nicholls (writer) |location=New York |pages=23–25 |chapter=Mining the Moon and the asteroids |oclc=8689657 |ref=none |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/scienceinscience00nich/page/23/mode/2up}} | |||
{{Astronomical locations in fiction}} | |||
{{Asteroids}} | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 21:11, 14 October 2024
Asteroids have appeared in fiction since at least the late 1800s, the first one—Ceres—having been discovered in 1801. They were initially only used infrequently as writers preferred the planets as settings. The once-popular Phaëton hypothesis, which states that the asteroid belt consists of the remnants of the former fifth planet that existed in an orbit between Mars and Jupiter before somehow being destroyed, has been a recurring theme with various explanations for the planet's destruction proposed. This hypothetical former planet is in science fiction often called "Bodia" in reference to Johann Elert Bode, for whom the since-discredited Titius–Bode law that predicts the planet's existence is named.
By the early 1900s, the asteroids started making more regular appearances. The asteroid field has often been depicted as having asteroids so close together as to impede travel, though this became less common later in the century as writers started portraying a more realistic density. Because the asteroids are so small, they are usually not depicted as inhabited—though in some works they are nevertheless habitable. In other works they are made so by human activity, be it terraforming or hollowing out to create habitats on the inside. The latter concept has also been used for turning asteroids into spacecraft. Human activity in the asteroid belt has featured frequently since the pulp era of science fiction, particularly in the form of asteroid mining. Space piracy also debuted as a theme around the same time. In works where the asteroid belt is settled by humans, it is often conceptually similar to the Wild West.
The threat of impact events by asteroids has been a recurring theme. It received successive boosts in popularity following the end of World War II (possibly as a result of nuclear anxiety), the 1980 publication of the Alvarez hypothesis about the extinction of the dinosaurs, and the 1994 impact of Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 on Jupiter. Many stories involve attempts to alter asteroid trajectories to avert such collisions, while in some stories they are instead caused intentionally.
Remnants of a planet
See also: Fictional planets of the Solar System § PhaëtonLetter from Heinrich Olbers to William Herschel, May 17, 1802How might it be if Ceres and Pallas were just a pair of fragments, or portions of a once greater planet which at one time occupied its proper place between Mars and Jupiter, and was in size more analogous to the other planets, and perhaps millions of years ago, had, either through the impact of a comet, or from an internal explosion, burst into pieces?
The first asteroid—Ceres—was discovered by Giuseppe Piazzi in 1801. For the rest of that century, however, asteroids rarely appeared in fiction—writers preferring the planets as settings. When German astronomer Heinrich Olbers discovered a second asteroid—Pallas—in the same orbit in 1802, he theorized that these objects were remnants of a planet predicted by the Titius–Bode law to exist between Mars and Jupiter that had somehow been destroyed. This became a popular explanation for the existence of the asteroid belt, though it has since been superseded by the notion that the material never coalesced into a planet in the first place. In astronomy, this hypothetical former fifth planet is known as Phaëton; in science fiction, it is often called "Bodia" after Johann Elert Bode. An early science fiction work that mentions this explanation for the origin of the asteroids is Robert Cromie's 1895 novel The Crack of Doom, which describes the release of energy stored in atomic nuclei a few thousand years ago as the culprit.
By the pulp era of science fiction, Bodia was a recurring theme. In these stories it is typically similar to Earth and inhabited by humans, often advanced humans and occasionally the ancestors of humans on Earth. Interplanetary warfare with Mars causes the destruction of Bodia—and indirectly, the end of civilization on Mars—in Harl Vincent's 1930 short story "Before the Asteroids". An internal disaster resulting in the explosion of the planetary core is responsible in John Francis Kalland's 1932 short story "The Sages of Eros". In Leslie F. Stone's 1934 short story "The Rape of the Solar System", war with Mars over the colonization of then-uninhabited Earth results both in the partial destruction of Bodia, thus creating the asteroids, and the displacement of the largest fragment to a much wider orbit to create Pluto, while the settlers on Earth eventually become humanity.
Following the invention of the atomic bomb in 1945, stories of this planetary destruction became increasingly common, encouraged by the advent of a plausible-seeming means of disintegration. Robert A. Heinlein's 1948 novel Space Cadet thus states that the fifth planet was destroyed as a result of nuclear war, and in Ray Bradbury's 1948 short story "Asleep in Armageddon" (a.k.a. "Perchance to Dream"), the ghosts of the former warring factions infect the mind of an astronaut stranded on an asteroid. Several works of the 1950s reused the idea to warn of the dangers of nuclear weapons, including Lord Dunsany's 1954 Joseph Jorkens short story "The Gods of Clay" and James Blish's 1957 novel The Frozen Year (a.k.a. Fallen Star). In Jack Williamson's 1942–1951 Seetee series an antimatter explosion is to blame, and in Theodore Cogswell's 1955 short story "Test Area", the destruction results from a nuclear test conducted by the inhabitants of Mars, while in Heinlein's 1951 novel Between Planets the technology that caused the destruction has been lost to time. The planet's destruction by Martians is also mentioned in Heinlein's 1961 novel Stranger in a Strange Land, and implied to have been caused using supernatural powers. The 1977 novel Inherit the Stars, the first in James P. Hogan's Giants series, revisits the theme of the fifth planet—here called "Minerva"—being destroyed by nuclear war.
In Raymond Z. Gallun's 1950 short story "A Step Farther Out", valuables from the destroyed civilization are recovered, and in Harry Harrison's 1969 novel Plague Ship, an ancient virus is found in the asteroid remnants. Paul Preuss's 1985 short story "Small Bodies", where fossils are found on an asteroid, is a late example of the destroyed planet theme; it has otherwise largely been relegated to deliberately retro works such as the 1989 tabletop role-playing game Space: 1889. A variation on the theme appears in Clifford D. Simak's 1973 short story "Construction Shack", where the asteroids are leftover material originally intended for the construction of a fifth planet.
Navigational hazard
Asteroids started making more frequent appearances in fiction in the early 1900s, and these works tended to depict the asteroid belt as a region that must be navigated carefully lest one's spaceship should collide with one of the asteroids. The space opera subgenre in particular often features this motif. In Isaac Asimov's 1939 short story "Marooned off Vesta", a group of astronauts run into this danger, and in Williamson's 1949 novel Seetee Shock, a region of space is virtually impassable for this reason. The problem is circumvented in Mark Clifton's 1960 novel Eight Keys to Eden by exploiting the third dimension of space, since the asteroids are mostly located in the plane of the ecliptic.
Later works mostly recognize that the individual asteroids are very far apart: the average distance between them is comparable to the Earth–Moon distance. Accordingly, they pose little danger to spacecraft, though this need not necessarily be the case in asteroid fields outside of our Solar System. Nevertheless, the idea of a thick asteroid field that poses constant danger to any spaceship within it recurs in the 1979 video game Asteroids, and close-quarter dogfights between spacecraft among asteroids appear in the 1980 Star Wars film The Empire Strikes Back and the 1995–1996 television series Space: Above and Beyond. A densely packed extrasolar asteroid field in the Alpha Centauri system also appears in the 1981 episode "The Golden Man" of the television series Buck Rogers in the 25th Century. Piers Anthony's 1984 novel Mercenary goes so far in its adaptation of the 1241 Mongol invasion of Hungary to the asteroid belt that it treats space as two-dimensional and constrains movement accordingly.
Native life
Alien life on asteroids appears only rarely in fiction, owing to their small size. An early example is found in Konstantin Tsiolkovsky's 1896 short work "On Vesta", where the lifeforms are intelligent and technologically advanced. Humans stranded on an asteroid encounter hostile aliens in Clark Ashton Smith's 1932 short story "Master of the Asteroid" and Edmond Hamilton's 1933 short story "The Horror on the Asteroid". The titular reptilian of Eden Phillpotts's 1938 novel Saurus comes to Earth from an asteroid as an egg before hatching, and an asteroid is likewise the homeworld of the title character in Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's 1943 novel The Little Prince. Alien plant life on an asteroid turns it not only habitable but paradisiacal in Poul Anderson's 1952 short story "Garden in the Void", and the inhabitants of an asteroid in Philip K. Dick's 1953 satire "Piper in the Woods" persuade human visitors that being a plant is preferable to being human, while a silicon-based lifeform from an asteroid appears in Asimov's 1955 short story "The Talking Stone". In Fredric Brown's 1957 fix-up novel Rogue in Space, an asteroid is itself alive. The notion that asteroids might harbour microbial life, possibly even deadly pathogens that could be transferred to Earth either directly by impacting the planet or indirectly via astronauts visiting the asteroid, also surfaces occasionally.
Human presence
A new concept was introduced in the pulp era of science fiction: asteroid mining. This quickly became the most popular fiction use for the asteroids, and the asteroid belt was often portrayed as the setting of a space version of the Klondike or California gold rush in works like Simak's 1932 short story "The Asteroid of Gold", Stanton A. Coblentz's 1935 short story "The Golden Planetoid", and Malcolm Jameson's 1940 short story "Prospectors of Space". Along with this outer-space analogy of the Western genre came the introduction of space piracy to the asteroids in works like Moore Raymond's 1934 short story "Scouts of Space" and Royal W. Heckman's 1938 short story "Asteroid Pirates", as well as stories of stranded astronauts as in John Wyndham's 1933 short story "Exiles on Asperus" and the above-mentioned "Master of the Asteroid" and "Marooned off Vesta". These themes continued to appear in the decades that followed: Heinlein's 1952 novel The Rolling Stones portrays a community of asteroid miners, Asimov's 1953 novel Lucky Starr and the Pirates of the Asteroids features space pirates, and Arthur C. Clarke's 1960 short story "Summertime on Icarus" depicts an astronaut stranded on the asteroid Icarus as it makes a close approach to the Sun.
The prospect of colonizing the asteroids was limited by their small size, though this did not stop some works such as the 1959–1964 science fiction anthology series The Twilight Zone from portraying asteroids with breathable atmospheres and Earth-level gravity. Somewhat more realistic portrayals of human-habitable asteroids involve terraforming, as in Paul Ernst's 1931 short story "The Planetoid of Peril" and Jack Vance's 1947 short story "I'll Build Your Dream Castle", or hollowing them out to create space stations or habitats, as in Heinlein's 1939 short story "Misfit". In "I'll Build Your Dream Castle", the terraformed asteroids are sold as luxury real estate, while in Charles Platt's 1967 novel Garbage World, a terraforming effort gone wrong results in an asteroid being used as a dumping place for the Solar System's garbage.
The concept of hollowing out asteroids has also extended to turning them into large spacecraft, as in Murray Leinster's 1960 novel The Wailing Asteroid. In Frederik Pohl's 1977 novel Gateway and its sequels, an asteroid that orbits at an unusual ninety-degree angle to the ecliptic turns out to have been modified in this way by aliens long ago, while in George Zebrowski's 1979 novel Macrolife humanity converts a large number of asteroids into spacecraft for interstellar travel. Another alien-modified asteroid appears in Greg Bear's 1985 novel Eon, and in Pamela Sargent's 1983 novel Earthseed an asteroidal generation ship is used for settling the cosmos. Hollowed-out asteroids used as prisons in interstellar space appear in Zebrowski's 1998 novel Brute Orbits, and the asteroid Sidonia is converted into another generation ship in the 2014–2015 anime series Knights of Sidonia.
Settlement in the asteroid belt is in fiction often associated with a fiercely-independent, libertarian-minded, frontier mentality akin to that of the Old West. Anderson's 1970 fix-up novel Tales of the Flying Mountains recounts the history of such a society and the development of its particular culture, in Katherine MacLean's 1975 short story "The Gambling Hell and the Sinful Girl" the asteroids are settled by "outcasts from earth", and Larry Niven's stories of Known Space, such as the 1975 short story collection Tales of Known Space, depict a community of hardened asteroid-miners known as "Belters". John Varley's 1974–1986 Eight Worlds series transposes this motif from the asteroid belt to the remote Oort cloud at the outer edge of the Solar System. In Charles Sheffield's 1995 novel The Ganymede Club, war breaks out over trade disputes, and in the Asteroid Wars subseries of Ben Bova's Grand Tour series, starting with the 2001 novel The Precipice, different factions compete for control of the resources in the asteroid belt, while Chris Bunch's 2002 novel Star Risk, Ltd revisits the older trope of asteroid miners fighting against space pirates. Kim Stanley Robinson's 2012 novel 2312, by contrast, depicts asteroids adapted for human habitation as an integrated part of a thoroughly colonized Solar System. Astrophysicist Elizabeth Stanway [Wikidata] writes that while the portrayal of the inhabitants of the asteroid belt as independent-minded remains common in works such as James S. A. Corey's (joint pseudonym of Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck) 2011–2021 novel series The Expanse and its 2015–2022 television adaptation, there has also emerged a portrayal of the region as dominated by corporate interests as in the 2017 Doctor Who episode "Oxygen". Colonized asteroids also appear in games such as the Warhammer 40,000 franchise and the 2009 tabletop role-playing game Eclipse Phase.
Resource extraction from asteroids has remained a common theme in science fiction, serving many different purposes both in space and on Earth. Besides being sources of valuable materials such as precious metals to be sold for profit, asteroids may be repurposed as raw material for space construction projects, and certain compounds such as ice may be used for terraforming. Other compounds may be used on-site for chemical industry purposes, as rocket fuel, or to set up a controlled ecological life-support system. In Fred Hoyle's 1967 short story "Element 79", large quantities of asteroidal gold disrupt the global economy, a topic earlier broached by French science fiction author Jules Verne's posthumously-published 1908 novel The Chase of the Golden Meteor. In Robinson's 1992 novel Red Mars, material from the asteroid belt is used to construct a space elevator.
Impact events
Further information: Impact events in fictionThe threat of asteroidal impact events is a recurring theme. The earliest fictional example, according to science fiction scholar Gary Westfahl, is arguably George Allan England's 1912–1913 serial Darkness and Dawn, a post-apocalyptic story where the exact cause of destruction is never specified but there is a crater hundreds of miles wide and deep in the former Midwestern United States. In the 1916–1917 serial "The Moonmaker" by Arthur Cheney Train and Robert W. Wood, an errant asteroid is diverted to enter Earth orbit as an additional natural satellite instead of striking the Earth, a plot point that recurs in Isaac R. Nathanson's 1930 short story "The Falling Planetoid". In Walter Kateley's 1930 short story "The World of a Hundred Men", a record of an inhabited asteroid's history leading up to its collision with Earth is found underneath Meteor Crater in Arizona.
The asteroid impact motif increased in popularity from the 1950s onward, possibly as a result of nuclear anxiety following World War II. Examples include the 1958 Italian film The Day the Sky Exploded, the 1967 novel A Torrent of Faces by James Blish and Norman L. Knight, and the 1968 Japanese film The Green Slime. In Clarke's 1973 novel Rendezvous with Rama, a disastrous asteroid impact motivates humanity to keep close track of Solar System objects thereafter. Gregory Benford wrote three stories in short succession that revolve around the topic: "Icarus Descending" in 1973, "How It All Went" in 1976, and Shiva Descending in 1980—the last one in collaboration with William Rotsler. Clarke revisited the theme in 1993 with the novel The Hammer of God, which revolves around efforts to avert the disaster.
Additional boosts to the theme's popularity came in 1980 with the publication of the Alvarez hypothesis, which states that the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was caused by an asteroid impact that created the Chicxulub crater off the coast of Mexico, and in 1994 with the collision of Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 with Jupiter. The latter in particular is credited with inspiring a large number of disaster films and other on-screen portrayals of impact events or threats thereof—be they by asteroids or other objects such as comets—in the years that followed. Among these are the 1997 TV miniseries Asteroid and the 1998 film Armageddon; the concept had earlier appeared in the 1979 film Meteor. Brian Stableford writes in Science Fact and Science Fiction: An Encyclopedia that by the beginning of the new millennium, asteroidal impact events and climate change were the two most popular scenarios in apocalyptic fiction.
Altering asteroid trajectories, besides being a means to avert impact events as in Roger MacBride Allen's 1988 novel Farside Cannon, also appears in fiction as a way to cause them. In Bob Shaw's 1981 novel The Ceres Solution, Ceres is deliberately crashed into the Moon. Impact events are occasionally weaponized; Earth is targeted with asteroids in this manner by aliens as a form of interplanetary warfare in Heinlein's 1959 novel Starship Troopers, Niven and Jerry Pournelle's 1985 novel Footfall, and David Feintuch's 1996 novel Fisherman's Hope. A human redirects asteroids from the distant Oort cloud towards Earth in an act of attempted mass murder in Don Bingle's 2002 short story "Patience", and an asteroid is set on a collision course with one of the moons of Neptune to create an additional planetary ring in Alastair Reynolds's 2012 short story "Vainglory", while another human-caused—but this time unintentional—impact event appears in Stephen Baxter's 1997 novel Titan. Asteroid diversion also appears in Charles L. Harness's 2000 time travel story "A Boost in Time" in an attempt to save the dinosaurs from extinction.
See also
Notes
- The earliest example listed in the catalogue of early science fiction works compiled by E. F. Bleiler and Richard Bleiler in the 1990 reference work Science-Fiction: The Early Years is the anonymously published 1886 story Man Abroad: A Yarn of Some Other Century.
References
- Bleiler, Everett Franklin (1990). "Motif and Theme Index". Science-fiction, the Early Years: A Full Description of More Than 3,000 Science-fiction Stories from Earliest Times to the Appearance of the Genre Magazines in 1930: with Author, Title, and Motif Indexes. With the assistance of Richard J. Bleiler. Kent State University Press. p. 864. ISBN 978-0-87338-416-2.
- ^ Murdin, Paul (2016). "Pallas: A Second New Planet". Rock Legends: The Asteroids and Their Discoverers. Springer. p. 42. ISBN 978-3-319-31836-3.
Within weeks of his discovery, Olbers had an explanation for why there were two planets in the same orbit. Olbers fleshed out the idea in a letter to William Herschel on May 17, 1802
- ^ Stableford, Brian; Langford, David (2023). "Asteroids". In Clute, John; Langford, David; Sleight, Graham (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (4th ed.). Retrieved 2023-10-06.
- ^ Stableford, Brian (2006). "Asteroid". Science Fact and Science Fiction: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. pp. 40–41. ISBN 978-0-415-97460-8.
- ^ Westfahl, Gary (2021). "Asteroids". Science Fiction Literature through History: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 139–141. ISBN 978-1-4408-6617-3.
- ^ Caryad; Römer, Thomas; Zingsem, Vera (2014). "Steine vom Himmel – und eine Lücke im Sonnensystem" [Rocks from the Sky – and a Gap in the Solar System]. Wanderer am Himmel: Die Welt der Planeten in Astronomie und Mythologie [Wanderers in the Sky: The World of the Planets in Astronomy and Mythology] (in German). Springer-Verlag. pp. 162–164. ISBN 978-3-642-55343-1.
- Stanway, Elizabeth (2022-10-02). "The Vermin of the Skies". Warwick University. Cosmic Stories Blog. Archived from the original on 2023-03-20. Retrieved 2024-04-12.
- ^ Bleiler, Everett Franklin; Bleiler, Richard (1998). "The Science-Fiction Solar System". Science-fiction: The Gernsback Years : a Complete Coverage of the Genre Magazines ... from 1926 Through 1936. Kent State University Press. p. 539. ISBN 978-0-87338-604-3.
- Clute, John (2022). "Cromie, Robert". In Clute, John; Langford, David; Sleight, Graham (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (4th ed.). Retrieved 2024-02-18.
- Bleiler, Everett Franklin; Bleiler, Richard (1998). "Introduction". Science-fiction: The Gernsback Years : a Complete Coverage of the Genre Magazines ... from 1926 Through 1936. Kent State University Press. pp. xvii. ISBN 978-0-87338-604-3.
The "science" in science-fiction of the Gernsback period was not wholly borrowed from the outside world. Some concepts were created on a mythical level. Particularly interesting is the establishment of "Bodia" (according to one cosmology of the day, a former fifth planet whose destruction formed the asteroids) as the ultimate origin of mankind and possessor of a supercivilization.
- Bleiler, Everett Franklin; Bleiler, Richard (1998). "Motif and Theme Index". Science-fiction: The Gernsback Years : a Complete Coverage of the Genre Magazines ... from 1926 Through 1936. Kent State University Press. pp. 627–628. ISBN 978-0-87338-604-3.
Bode's Fifth Planet, "Bodia." (A hypothetical planet between Mars and Jupiter that broke up to form the asteroid belt. It is usually fictionally considered as Earth-like, with a human population.)
- Bleiler, Everett Franklin; Bleiler, Richard (1998). "Vincent, Harl". Science-fiction: The Gernsback Years : a Complete Coverage of the Genre Magazines ... from 1926 Through 1936. Kent State University Press. pp. 455–456. ISBN 978-0-87338-604-3.
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One important series of interrelated stories was the "Hills of Space" sequence, dealing with the colonization of the asteroids by outcasts from earth. This series began with "Incommunicado" (1950) and extended through several stories to "The Gambling Hell and the Sinful Girl" (1975).
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Further reading
- Bly, Robert W. (2005). "Asteroids Colliding with the Earth". The Science in Science Fiction: 83 SF Predictions That Became Scientific Reality. Consulting Editor: James Gunn. BenBella Books. pp. 43–46. ISBN 978-1-932100-48-8.
- Nicholls, Peter (1983). "Mining the Moon and the asteroids". In Nicholls, Peter (ed.). The Science in Science Fiction. New York: Knopf. pp. 23–25. ISBN 0-394-53010-1. OCLC 8689657.
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