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Trapped in Time

What would happen if you got stuck in Time? Zia has completed her Ph.D. in Botany and has applied for the post of lecturer/ Professor. She joins a High school as a temporary teacher and is entrusted with the task of leading a group of ten students on a trekking /camping expedition. On the way they meet a guy who seems to be a trouble maker but later, he proves to be a pillar of strength. Early morning their camp is attacked by Bears and they flee taking a different route. But they are lost. They enter a lost world where people are living, in hiding, for over 250 years. Their technology is much advanced as compared to ours. Their world is called ‘Utopia’ but now it is changing due to an oppressive ruler, meaning the ills of our world have manifested in Utopia too. They are trapped in the time of this hidden world and want to help the people there fight against the oppressive ruler and his cronies. The oppressive ruler wants to make a number of Time Machines by using the brains of the scientists who died in harness at the site of the experiments. They all decide to help the good citizens of ‘Utopia’ the lost world. The huge brains are destroyed and the Orbs of the scientists escape from the huge pulsating Brain to help them in their mission of destroying the Huge brains at other centers. In this process, the crystals that are used in the hypnotizing guns are almost finished and to get more they split up to go to the 'Magical World' through a curtain which is actually a portal. The Magical World is a flat man made Earth-like satellite, which was made as a joke to taunt the scientists 7000 years ago, and which is still operational. Here they meet the inhabitants. They are fascinated with the advancement of science especially the talking chips and the flying cars. They see a completely different world where animals, plants, rocks, water etc. can talk. Before you touch anything you need to seek permission. They also meet the Aliens called the 'Crocodile Race' who have come to the Magical World (the flat satellite) to get supplies. They see a spaceship being guided to land by the scientists of the Magical World. They also see the inside of the mountain where the controls are situated which help in maintaining the environment of the Magical World. They get an invite from the Aliens to visit ‘Titan’ the satellite of Saturn where the Crocodile race has settled. At present they are on the mother Ship going to Titan. **************************** Will try to post a chapter in a week now.

RenuKakkar · Romance
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149 Chs

Talking to the Aliens (Part 2)

I am talking about 7000 years ago, at that time, about 7000 years ago, Earth had a colony on the moon, that too on the dark side of the moon. They had started to live there within a protective dome that maintained the atmosphere, gravity, water, soil, etc. which were essential to sustain life there, just like on Earth. They had brought their families to the Moonbase. Life on the moon was difficult and they got most of their supplies from the Earth, but many food items they had started growing themselves. During that time the scientists had built a flat satellite as a joke and called it the 'Magical World'. It too was situated on the dark side of the Moon.

Scientists wanted to move further ahead and check up the entire solar system. Like in the present times, probes had been sent to various planets in the solar system.

The habitability of any natural satellites is considered after seeing whether it has the environment which would be hospitable to life. At that time the strongest satellites were the icy satellites of Jupiter called Castillo, Julie, Vance, and Steve. Then there were those of Saturn called Europa, Enceladus, and Titan. But life in most would only exist at the subsurface level. The moons of Mars called Phobos and Deimos. Hence, there were only three natural satellites—the Moon of Earth, and moons of Mars called Phobos and Deimos which were slightly outside the habitable zone

Though even today, life on Earth is considered to be at surface level the fact is that half of the Earth's biomass lives below the surface. Europa and Enceladus exist outside the circumstellar habitable zone which has historically defined the limits of life within the Solar System as the zone in which water can exist as a liquid at the surface.

Then detecting Exomoons ( moons outside our solar system) was extremely difficult, it still is. This is because the current methods are limited to transit timing. Some scientists estimate that there are as many habitable exomoons as habitable exoplanets. Given the general planet-to-satellite mass ratio of 10,000, large Saturn or Jupiter sized gas planets in the habitable zone are thought to be the best candidates to harbor Earth-like moons.

Most astrobiologists consider liquid water to be an essential prerequisite for extraterrestrial life.

A stable orbit is also essential. A moon having an orbital period less than about 45 to 60 days will remain safely bound to a massive giant planet.

An atmosphere is important in developing prebiotic chemistry, sustaining life and for surface water to exist. Most natural satellites in the Solar System lack significant atmospheres, the sole exception being the moon of Saturn called Titan.

Then there is the sputtering, a process whereby atoms are ejected from a solid target material due to the bombardment of the target by energetic particles, presents a significant problem for natural satellites. All the gas giants in the Solar System, and likely those orbiting other stars, have magnetospheres with radiation belts potent enough to completely erode an atmosphere of an Earth-like moon in just a few hundred million years. Strong stellar winds can also strip gas atoms from the top of an atmosphere causing them to be lost to space.

To support an Earth-like atmosphere for about 4.6 billion years (Earth's current age), a moon with a Mars-like density is estimated to need at least 7% of Earth's mass. One way to decrease loss from sputtering is for the moon to have a strong magnetic field of its own that can deflect stellar wind and radiation belts. Large moons can have magnetic fields; it has been found on Ganymede which has its own magnetosphere, even though its mass is only 2.5% of Earth's. Alternatively, the moon's atmosphere may be constantly replenished by gases from subsurface sources, as though by some scientists to be the case with Titan

The effects of tidal acceleration need to be relatively modest on planets, it can be a significant source of energy for natural satellites and an alternative energy source for sustaining life.

Tidal effects could also allow a moon to sustain plate tectonics, which would cause the volcanic activity to regulate the moon's temperature and create a geodynamic effect which would give the satellite a strong magnetic field.

Axial tilt and climate are equally essential. Provided gravitational interaction of a moon with other satellites can be neglected, moons tend to be tidally locked with their planets. In addition to the rotational locking mentioned above, there will also be a process termed 'tilt erosion', which has originally been coined for the tidal erosion of planetary obliquity against a planet's orbit around its host star. The final spin state of a moon then consists of a rotational period equal to its orbital period around the planet and a rotational axis that is perpendicular to the orbital plane.

The mass of the moon is not too low compared to the planet, it may, in turn, stabilize the planet's axial tilt, i.e. its obliquity against the orbit around the star. On Earth, the Moon has played an important role in stabilizing the axial tilt of the Earth, thereby reducing the impact of gravitational perturbations from the other planets and ensuring only moderate climate variations throughout the planet. On Mars, however, a planet without significant tidal effects from its relatively low-mass moons Phobos and Deimos, axial tilt can undergo extreme changes from 13° to 40° on timescales of 5 to 10 million years.

We had explored Europa, Ganymede, and Lo of the planet Jupiter. We also explored Enceladus, Dione, and Titan of the planet Saturn. Finally, we explored Triton of the planet Neptune and Charon of the planet of Pluto.

Titan, the satellite of Saturn was considered the most suitable. Its atmosphere was similar to that of the early Earth, although somewhat thicker. The surface had some lakes and others were hydrocarbon lakes. Some parts of Titan had cryovolcanos, as well as methane rain and snow. Titan is shielded from the solar wind by a magnetosphere, like on Earth.