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Do SF authors make up new elements? The elements don't seem to be in Seaborg's island of stability, either.
Actually, what I really mean is why would the sort of person who can't be bothered to look at a table of elements or think about the general decline in half-lives as atomic mass increases past a certain point bother with SF? What's the attraction for them?

Actually, what I really mean is why would the sort of person who can't be bothered to look at a table of elements or think about the general decline in half-lives as atomic mass increases past a certain point bother with SF? What's the attraction for them?

no subject
Date: 2009-04-27 07:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-04-27 07:48 pm (UTC)Then a hazmat accident* released Element Zero into Earth's atmosphere and children born with sufficient concentrations of E0 in their CNS got the ability to play with gravity; voila, a fig-leaf placed on psi-powers.
-- Steve enjoyed the game as a nice tribute to SFnal classics** without particularly worrying whether the physics was internally consistant. Think of it as a modern Flash Gordon, but not quite so campy and some interesting ethical questions hidden within.
* that in-game conspiracy theorists propose wasn't an accident and was instead a deliberate experiment on the population
** others thieved were artifacts of ancient cultures (Charon, for instance, was a mass effect relay station (think jumpgate) abandoned long enough to accrete an icy debris shell) and the Ancient Menace (the Reapers) come to return.
no subject
Date: 2009-04-28 03:44 pm (UTC)Baen is exactly where I'd look for good space opera with some awareness of the history of the genre. Who reissued Schmitz? Who publishes Bujold's SF?
(Element X just catalyzed the release of the atomic energy of copper, it wasn't consumed itself in the process. Skylark was published in 1928, but was written 10-15 years earlier depending on your source.)