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"I operate by a code that makes me responsible for what I do, makes me definitely, directly, genuinely responsible. I am precisely the kind of person I made myself out to be." 
      - Harlan Ellison 
	 
	
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          Self-Sustaining Nuclear Reaction | 
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          An 'atomic fire' is started that consumes all matter in reach! | 
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	  Like Edison, a human and an alien try endless combinations of materials to create an atomic fire:
 
The cover was removed from the 
great caldron-like furnace and an odd set of metallic 
plates was placed inside, together with a small quantity 
of mercury. Then the cover was replaced and the air 
exhausted from the interior by means of a small electric 
pump. For a whole day a current with titanic voltage 
and strength crackled between the plates. Aggar Ho 
and Sark Ahar, wearing thick goggles and hiding behind 
lead shields, which alone saved their lives from the 
dangerous emanations, watched the white-hot inferno 
through a little quartz window set in the side of the 
furnace. The whole ship fairly reeked with heat, and 
the meters registered an enormous consumption of 
power. Finally Aggar Ho threw the great switches. 
The light slowly faded from the plates. The first attempt had been a failure. Mercury had refused to give 
up its atomic energy. 
The plates were changed and another substance was 
placed in the furnace — this time silicon. Another trial 
was made — also without any hint of success. 
 
Day after day the same soul-searing work went on — 
new elements, new compounds, new plates, new voltages 
— all to no avail.
  
Finally, the two are successful.  
      
        
          | Sark Ahar awoke with a start. His dream had been 
part reality. The chamber was glowing like a white hot 
inferno, and flickering black shadows of fantastic pieces 
of apparatus were dancing on the walls. The light in 
the illuminating globes had somehow died out. The 
young Aerthian could hear a thunderous roar quite dis- 
tinct from the noise the furnace had once produced. It 
was louder and more terrible. The air all about was 
terrifically hot. It scalded Sark Ahar's lungs. There 
was a vapor in it — a strange fiery gas. He could see 
long, slender pencilings of it reaching over and under the 
thick lead shields around the furnace like the tentacles 
of a luminous octopus. Luckily for him he was behind 
one of those lead shields ; if he had not been, the deadly 
emanations would have killed him. 
 
What had happened? Atomic energy! Atomic 
energy at last! The words fairly shrieked through his 
brain. But what of it? It was too late to do anything. 
Besides, that terrific power couldn't be controlled. He'd 
almost forgotten that. It couldn't be controlled! 
 
He grabbed a long buckler-like sheet of lead which had 
a hand-grip on one side of it. It was convex and was 
as tall as a man and resembled the shields which archers 
of a forgotten antiquity had used. It would protect 
him from the dangerous rays. 
 
He held it out in front of him and peered through the 
glazed peep-hole which was on a level with his eyes. 
The bottom of the furnace must have melted away. 
There was a dazzling mass of bluish incandescence visible beneath the lead shields around the caldron-like 
piece of apparatus. It was hissing and spitting like a 
violently active chemical. The steel floor was burning! 
And the atomic fire was spreading — consuming everything in its path! In a few minutes the whole ship 
would be a fiery mass of incandescence! 
 
...A CRAZY idea, that marked him forever as a genius, 
came to Sark Ahar. How it was born no man 
may tell. Quick as a flash he gripped the steering lever 
and swung it around a full quarter turn. The space 
flier lurched, then it swung inward and headed straight 
toward the moon, falling more and more rapidly every 
instant! 
 
...The pieces of the space-ship glowed brighter and 
continued their headlong descent. Still Sark Ahar 
dove after them. In a few minutes the fragments 
crashed into the satellite, scattering themselves over 
mountain, crater and dead sea bottom. Nor did their 
fire die out! It increased in intensity fed by the fine 
sand which covered most of the moon. It was spreading rapidly, enveloping everything in its path. 
 
Sark Ahar was smiling. "Do you understand, 
Chief?" he asked. 
 
Aggar Ho had completely forgotten his habitual calm. 
"I do !" he cried. "You meant to kindle an atomic fire 
on the moon and make it take the place of our sun! 
And you have succeeded!" 
 
The two men returned to Aerth. Within three days 
the moon's surface had become entirely incandescent.
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          Technovelgy from Atomic Fire,
              by Raymond Z. Gallun.  
Published by Amazing Stories in 1931 
 Additional resources -
          
          
           
          
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      Arthur C. Clarke uses the same basic idea at the end of 2010.  
      Comment/Join this discussion  ( 0 ) | RSS/XML | Blog This | 
      Additional
          resources: 
  More Ideas
and Technology from Atomic Fire 
  More Ideas
and Technology by Raymond Z. Gallun 
  Tech news articles related to Atomic Fire 
  Tech news articles related to works by Raymond Z. Gallun 
      
	  
      
      
	  
      
      
      
      
	  
       
	  
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