He was just over three quarters of the way to the target.
He wondered how the other eleven pilots of the squadron were doing…but shrugged off the question. His AI would alert him if the tenuous data link with another fighter snapped. That hadn’t happened yet, so the chances were good that the others all were out there, as bored and, paradoxically, as nervous as he was.
In another eleven subjective minutes, he would begin the deceleration phase of the strike, but that would be handled by his AI. Coordination of the timing within the flight of twelve gravfighters had to be exact, or they would drop down to combat speed scattered all over the sky, rather than in attack formation.
He spent the time studying the world now just two and a half light hours ahead.
His AI had last updated his target data from
His Starhawk’s forward sensors, at this speed, were all but useless. Radiation from ships around Eta Bootis IV was strongly distorted both by relativistic effects and by the “dustcatcher,” a high-gravity zone maintained ahead of the fighter at near-
According to the most recent electronic intelligence, though, there were fifty-five ships there-almost certainly all Turusch-orbiting Eta Bootis IV or on final approach. And there
He moved his hands within the control field. On the mirrored black surface of his Starhawk, three sensor masts detached from the hull and swung out and forward, each two meters long at the start, but unfolding, stretching, and growing to reach a full ten meters from the ship. The receivers at the ends of the masts, spaced equidistant around the fighter, extended far enough out to let them look past the nebulous haze of the dustcatcher. As Gray watched, the inner circle of light on the cockpit display grew sharper and brighter. Incoming radiation was still being distorted by the Starhawk’s velocity, of course, but now he could see past the distortion of the singularity, and even take advantage of the dustcatcher’s gravitational lensing effect.
Bright flashes silently popped and flared across the display now, however. Extended, the sensor masts were striking random bits of debris-hydrogen atoms, mostly, adrift in the not-quite-perfect vacuum of space and made deadly by the gravfighter’s speed. Impact at this speed with something as massive as a meteoric grain of sand could destroy the mast; his AI had to work quickly.
The data came up less than five seconds later, and with a feeling of relief Gray retracted the sensor masts back into the hull, safe behind the blurring distortion of the dustcatcher. The fighter’s artificial intelligence had sampled the incoming radiation, sorting through high-energy photons to build a coherent picture of what lay ahead.
Resolution was poor. Only a few ship-sized targets-the most massive-could be separated from the distortion- induced static. The AI did its best to match up the handful of targets it could see now with those that had been visible to
Fifteen targets. Gray had hoped there would be more, but it was something with which to work. Fifteen large starships appeared to be in stable, predictable orbits around the target world, their orbital data precise enough to allow a clear
The actual targeting and munitions launch were handled automatically by the AI-net, requiring only Gray’s confirmation for launch. So long as there was no override from Commander Allyn, all eleven Starhawks would be contributing to the PcB, the Pre-engagement
Release would be at a precisely calculated instant just before deceleration. He checked the time readouts again. Five minutes, twelve seconds subjective to go.
He worked for a time trying to get a clearer look at the objective. The visual image was blurred, grainy, and heavily pixilated, but he could make out the planet, Eta Bootis IV, sectioned off by green lines of longitude and latitude, the shapes of continents roughed in. Fifteen red blips hung in space about the globe, most so close they appeared to be just skimming the globe’s surface, and he could see their motions, second to second, as the AI updated their locations. A white blip on the surface marked the objective-General Gorman’s slender beachhead. It was on the side of the planet facing Gray at the moment, the planet’s night side, away from the local sun, but in another two hours objective, it would be right on the planet’s limb-local dawn.
Additional red blips flicked on, a cloud of them, indistinct and uncertain, centered around and over Gorman’s position. Those marked enemy targets for which there was no orbital data and that most likely were actively attacking the Marine perimeter. Or rather, they
He opened his fighter’s library, calling up the ephemeris for Eta Bootis and its planets. He scrolled quickly through the star data, then slowed when he reached the entry for the fourth planet.
PLANET: Eta Bootis IV
NAME: Al Haris al Sama, (Arabic) “Guardian of Heaven” Haris; Mufrid.
TYPE: Terrestrial/rocky; sulfur/reducing
MEAN ORBITAL RADIUS: 2.95 AU; Orbital period: 4y 2d 1h
INCLINATION: 85.3; ROTATIONAL PERIOD: 14h 34m 22s
MASS: 1.8 Earth; EQUATORIAL DIAMETER: 24,236 km = 1.9 Earth
MEAN PLANETARY DENSITY: 5.372 g/cc =.973 Earth
SURFACE GRAVITY: 1.85 G
SURFACE TEMPERATURE RANGE: 30?C — 60?C.
SURFACE ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE: 1300 mmHg
PERCENTAGE COMPOSITION: CO2 30.74; SO2 16.02; SO3 14.11; NH4 13.63; OCS 12.19; N2 5.55; O2 3.85; CH3 2.7; Ar 0.2; CS2 variable; others ‹800 ppm
AGE: 2.7 billion years
BIOLOGY: C, N, H, S8, O, Se, H2O, CS2, OCN; SESSILE PHOTO-LITHOAUTOTROPHS IN REDUCING ATMOSPHERE SYMBIOTIC WITH VARIOUS MOBILE CHEMOORGANOHETEROTROPHS AND CHEMOSYNTHETIC LITHOVORES…
Gray broke off reading at that point, shaking his head. The squadron had been briefed on the native life forms on Haris, but he’d bleeped past the recorded lectures. He wouldn’t be
Hell, from what he
Whatever was growing on Haris’s surface wasn’t going to be very bright. In fact, the chances that it would