Citizendia
Your Ad Here

Spin

Cover of first edition (hardcover)
Author Robert Charles Wilson
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Science fiction novel
Publisher Tor Books
Publication date 2005
Media type Print (Hardcover & Paperback)
ISBN ISBN 0-765-30938-6

Spin is a science fiction novel by author Robert Charles Wilson. Robert Charles Wilson (born 1953 is a contemporary Science fiction author. The United States of America —commonly referred to as the English is a West Germanic language originating in England and is the First language for most people in the United Kingdom, the United States A novel (from Italian novella, Spanish novela, French nouvelle for "new" "news" or "short story Publishing is the process of production and dissemination of Literature or Information &ndash the activity of making information available for public view Tor Books is one of two Imprints of Tom Doherty Associates LLC based in New York City A hardcover (or hardback or hardbound) is a Book bound with rigid protective covers (typically of cardboard covered with Cloth Paperback, softback, or softcover describe and refer to a Book by the nature of its binding. A novel (from Italian novella, Spanish novela, French nouvelle for "new" "news" or "short story Robert Charles Wilson (born 1953 is a contemporary Science fiction author. It was published in 2005 and won the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 2006. Year 2005 ( MMV) was a Common year starting on Saturday (link displays full calendar of the Gregorian calendar. The Hugo Awards are given every year for the best Science fiction or Fantasy works and achievements of the previous year Winners of the Hugo Award for best science fiction or fantasy Novel, along with all the nominees are presented here

Wilson also wrote Axis, which is set in the same universe as Spin[1]. Axis is a Science fiction Novel by author Robert Charles Wilson, published in 2007.

Plot

Spin details Earth's response to an artificial membrane placed around the planet which selectively blocks and filters incoming electromagnetic radiation, blocking out the view of anything beyond minimal low Earth orbit. A Low Earth Orbit (LEO is generally defined as an Orbit within the locus extending from the Earth’s surface up to an altitude of 2000 km The novel is told in first person, from the viewpoint of Tyler Dupree. Tyler is a close childhood friend of Jason and Diane Lawton, twins of E. D. Lawton (a wealthy industrialist who makes his money from the developing aerostat business). As children, Jason, Diane, and Tyler witness the dramatic arrival of the "Spin", as the phenomenon comes to be known, when the stars suddenly disappear one night as they are looking at the sky. Initial experiments show that the membrane is permeable, allowing space probes to pass through, but that time outside passes at a highly accelerated rate, 3. 17 years per Earth second, or roughly 100 million years per Earth year. Thus within a generation, the surrounding solar system will age 4 billion years, and Earth will be destroyed by the expanding Sun.

The novel follows four primary protagonists, each of whom respond to the Spin, and to the certain knowledge that humanity is doomed, in distinct ways. E. D. founds a low Earth orbit satellite company (using high-altitude balloon technology) and profits spectacularly. Jason becomes a scientist and devotes himself to trying to understand the "Spin" and what or who is behind it. Diane joins a religious cult who views the Spin as part of God's plan for the end times. Tyler becomes a medical doctor who immerses himself in his work, but suffers through a series of existential crises related to the Spin and its obviously alien purposes.

When two huge technological constructs are detected floating above the poles right outside the Spin membrane, a physically impossible feat since, as far as we know, anything above Earth's orbit simply drops once it stops (geostationary devices only stay so by moving fast enough and near the equator), it becomes clear that the Spin has a "who" behind it, not a "what". A geostationary orbit (GEO is a Geosynchronous orbit directly above the Earth 's Equator (0° Latitude) with a period equal to the Earth's The equator (sometimes referred to colloquially as "the Line") is the intersection of the Earth 's surface with the plane perpendicular to the Humanity starts calling its hypothetical authors, kind of appropriately, "the Hypotheticals", and attempts start at discovering who they are, why they're doing this to Earth, and how could humans stop them before it's too late.

The first attempt is to destroy one of the pole-floating devices with a thermonuclear explosion. The attempt shatters the membrane, causing it to becomes temporarily partially transparent, and then humans in general are able to see the astounding speed at which stars are "spinning" in the sky. But other than this, nothing really happens: the floating device attacked keeps intact, the membrane recovers in a matter of a few hours (Earth time), and things just go back to the way they were right before the explosion.

The second attempt to stave off extinction happens when the world powers decide to terraform Mars, something possible thanks to the vast rate at which time progresses outside Earth. The terraforming (literally "Earth-shaping" of a Planet, moon, or other body is the hypothetical process of deliberately modifying its Human colonists are sent to Mars to start a new civilization and, over the millennia (weeks on Earth), to develop science way ahead Earth's, to seek answers as to why the Spin exists and, if possible, to find a solutions for it and save Earth. After 100,000 years, roughly at the same moment Mars is engulfed by its own Spin membrane, the Martian government sends the scholar Wun Ngo Wen to Earth. Wun provides Earth the technology to send Von Neumann machines that will self replicate throughout the galaxy in search for information about the Spins creators and broadcast it back to Earth and Mars. John von Neumann 's Universal Constructor is a Self-replicating machine in a Cellular automata environment A self-replicating machine is an artificial construct that is theoretically capable of autonomously manufacturing a copy of itself using raw materials taken from its environment However, within a few years of Earth time, the signals become weaker, contradictory or corrupted.

Wun also brings a collection of advanced medical technology, including a drug that brings about an upgrade in human beings known as the "Fourth Age." This is used to cure Jason's "atypical multiple sclerosis" (AMS) and Diane's "cardiovascular wasting syndrome" (CVWS). A Fourth is a fictional type of being in the novel Spin The Fourth State The Fourth State is an upgrade performed on human beings Multiple sclerosis (abbreviated MS also known as disseminated sclerosis or encephalomyelitis disseminata) is an autoimmune condition in which the This is an article about the rock music band "Circulatory System" Wasting could also mean unefficient and/or uneffective consumption.

The final explanation behind the Spin is that it was created by self-replicating machines similar to those humans sent out, but far more advanced, billions years old self-conscious galaxy-spanning collective entity. Sentience is the ability to feel or perceive subjectively. It is an important concept in the philosophy of Animal rights, in buddhist philosophy and in A group mind or group ego in science fiction is a single consciousness occupying many bodies The earlier corruption of the Earthly information-seeking machines, it's discovered, was caused by them being both (materially) consumed by the more ancient network of self-replicating machines, as well as (technologically) assimilated by it. Before it's fully absorbed by the Spin-creator network, the human-created network returns evidence that other planets outside the Solar system have been contained by similar Spins, but ultimately it is the technological assimilation of one network by the other that allows humans to indirectly detect the Spin-creator network and infer its objectives, at least as far as humanity is concerned.

What is inferred is that the Spin-creator network put planets with sentient species into a state of almost suspended animation as soon as it detects they've entered a phase of unsustainable growth that will destroy them and their home planet due to resource starvation. While these planets are suspended, the machines construct huge wormhole-based gates connecting planets of similar conditions to those that were suspended, in a long chain of interconnected planets of similar environment and habitability. In Physics, a wormhole is a hypothetical topological feature of Spacetime that is fundamentally a 'shortcut' through Space and Time An interstellar teleporter is a hypothetical Technology appearing in Science fiction, typically in hard sci-fi, which Teleports people and/or This is supposed to compensate for the inefficiencies of space travel as a mean of propagation, saving those sentient species from their own self-destruction by providing them greatly expanded means of development.

At (approximately) 4 Billion AD, a few years after "the Hypotheticals" have shutdown the time-warping properties of the Spin membrane (although not the membrane itself, since the Sun, having already noticeably expanded by then, would kill life on Earth were the Spin completely displaced), the Earth governments, fearing the disrupting effect of Martian biotechnology, starts to hunt down humans who have gone through the Fourth Age treatment. Jason is long dead, but Diane, being a Fourth, must hide. Tyler, who is with her, also undergoes the process of becoming a Fourth, and by the end of the book both run away from the governmental persecution by leaving Earth, going through the wormhole gate to the next Earth-like world in the sequence.

It should be noted that the first half of the story is told in the form of notes and memories written by Tyler during his Fourth treatment, which encompasses the "in the present" chapters of the first half of the book, as well as a substantial part of the second half.

Technologies

Awards

Preceded by
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
by Susanna Clarke
Hugo Award for Best Novel
2006
Succeeded by
Rainbows End
by Vernor Vinge
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is the debut novel by British writer Susanna Clarke. Susanna Clarke (born November 1, 1959) is a British author best known for her debut Novel Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell Winners of the Hugo Award for best science fiction or fantasy Novel, along with all the nominees are presented here The year 2006 in literature involved some significant events and new books Rainbows End is a 2006 Science fiction novel by Vernor Vinge. Vernor Steffen Vinge (ˈvɪndʒi (born October 2, 1944 in Waukesha Wisconsin, U
© 2009 citizendia.org; parts available under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License, from http://en.wikipedia.org
Dapyx Software network: MP3 Explorer | Ebook Manager | Zenithic