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#Interstellar 2914
guillotineman · 10 months
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leiawritesstories · 3 years
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Another Place
Nessian Week, Day 5: Alternate Universe (AU) Day
Yes, I took the prompt literally. ;)
Word count: 2914
Warnings: fuzzy science, fuzzy space mumbo jumbo, language
Skye Penderwick belongs to Jeanne Birdsall. All other characters belong to SJM. 
@nessianweek
~~~~~~
“I’m heading out, Doctor.”
Dr. Nesta Archeron, who held a PhD in astrophysics, looked up from her desk. “All right, Skye, thanks for everything. See you tomorrow?”
“Absolutely. Don’t forget to sleep, Dr. Arch!”
“Never do, Dr. Pen!”
The other astrophysicist’s snort of laughter floated down the hall. “Yeah, right.”
Fine, maybe there were nights when Nesta stayed up into the wee hours of the morning, scribbling calculations on the chalkboards and in her notes, combing through theories of all the great scientists before her, adding bits and pieces to her own theory, and generally ruining her sleep schedule with badly timed, random “a-ha!” moments. But to be fair, seven years of developing a theory of alternate universes would do that to a person. 
Seven years ago, she’d run across an anomaly on a deep-space image that didn’t match anything ever recorded or observed by any scientist, ever. And yet it was small enough that most scientists could easily overlook it; it blended into the edge of the nebula that was the focus of the image. Nesta had noticed it, though, and that small imperfection, the wrinkle in the darkness of space, rooted into her mind and stayed there, leading her to question what the hell that blur was and why the hell it was there.
Which in turn led her down the murky rabbit hole of various theories of wormholes and other flaws in space-time, none of which aligned with her observations. And then down the even murkier rabbit hole of theories (of varying degrees of coherence) of parallel and alternate universes. The alternate universe idea in particular intrigued Nesta, and she spent weeks researching every bit of information available, noting how it lined up with her observations, and finally coming to a realization that this image her team had captured could serve as visible, concrete evidence in favor of a theory of alternate universes.
She’d drafted the first bit of her theory and formed a small team to develop it by the next morning.
After five years, countless different images of the anomaly, multiple variations on complex equations, much screaming, and three lifetimes’ worth of coffee, Dr. Nesta Archeron hit a wall.
Literally and figuratively.
Because when she ran into what seemed like an insurmountable block, she punched the nearest wall as hard as possible.
The cracks still radiated across one wall of her lab.
That block, and her efforts to break through it, introduced her to Dr. Skye Penderwick, a brilliant American astrophysicist who, coincidentally, also happened to be fascinated by the theory of alternate universes, despite having no theory of her own. She’d been working at the same facility as Nesta for several months before the two actually met, and within days of Nesta inviting her into her lab, she’d proposed a potential solution to the Archeron team’s roadblock.
It worked.
Nesta offered her a collaborator position that very day. Skye accepted.
Two years later, they were on the edge of breakthrough. Both of them knew it. Both of them saw clearly where their calculations, their notes, their carefully chronicled, detailed observations of the motion of the anomaly, and their years of hard work were leading. The theory Nesta so elegantly posited was nearly complete. All the two self-described space nerds needed was something, anything, to hint beyond scientific explanation that on the other side of that anomaly laid an alternate Earth.
Unfortunately, that something hadn’t shown up quite yet.
For, despite all the remarkable achievements of space science--lightspeed travel, quantum leaping, imaging software capable of capturing formations’ minute details, even the discovery of other habitable planets in faraway galaxies--nobody had yet been able to present a coherent, plausible theory of an alternate universe.
Yet.
Sighing, Nesta pushed back from her desk and walked to the back of her laboratory. She placed her index finger in a barely visible indent in the pristine white wall. A panel slid silently open, revealing a space illuminated by a soft blue glow. A nondescript grey-and-cobalt pressure suit hung neatly in a glass case. Nudging the panel closed, Nesta opened the case and removed the pressure suit.
Hers.
For her…uncatalogued trips. Trips to the station her team had planted by the anomaly. 
Trips which Nesta took regularly. She couldn’t risk any of her team traveling; each and every one of them was needed in the lab. No, it was her job and hers alone to make a regular leap to the station, check on their telescopes, and observe the anomaly up close.
She’d never tried to cross it. Not that she believed there was no passage; in fact, she’d painstakingly detailed the fascinatingly inexplicable illusion of a gap that appeared once every year, and had always failed to conclude if there truly was a gap.
Hence tonight’s little jaunt to the station. That gap had just appeared, and since it only showed for sixty hours, she had to go now.
So Dr. Nesta Archeron slid into her pressure suit, fastened the sleek boots and gloves, programmed the correct coordinates into the screen built into the underside of the suit’s left forearm, locked on her helmet, and keyed in the quantum leap sequence.
A blink later, she stood on the steel tiles of her team’s small, simple station deep in the reaches of outer space. Removing her helmet, Nesta allowed herself exactly three minutes to drink in the wonders of deep space.
Then she set the station’s timers for forty-eight hours, sat at the control panel, and piloted her space station/highly advanced spaceship into the gap in the universe.
For it was indeed a gap.
~
Commander Cassian Ilnair released the cockpit hatch of his sleek “interstellar exploration transport,” or, as he called her, the Millenium Falcon. Bloody government and their bloody idiotic pompous names for spaceships. That’s all it was, a spaceship, albeit a highly advanced, highly adaptable one that had carried him and up to four crew safely across nearly every corner of the universe and back to Earth.
Pulling his flight helmet off, he shook out his unruly shoulder-length hair, half- unzipped his navy blue pressure suit, and started postflight checks. 
“She’ll need to be refueled and the usual before she travels again, but other than that, good as new,” he reported to his CO, a woman five feet tall if she was an inch whose impeccable, formidable exploration resumé and take-no-bullshit demeanor made up for her diminutive height. 
“Excellent, Commander. I expect a full report on Disturbance AS-2947C by noon.”
“Yes, ma’am.” Cassian saluted.
“Dismissed.”
As he headed for the shower, Cass stole a glance at his wrist screen, which showed eight-fifteen a.m. Damn space time, he grumbled to himself, throws off my goddamn body clock. Luckily, he’d noted no significant change in that particular disturbance since the last time he visited it two weeks ago. That’d make his report much easier, indeed.
Sure, the disturbance was rippling ever so slightly, but it did that every year at this time and had been doing so since it appeared exactly seven years ago. 
Not a single scientist in all the ranks of the space force could provide a plausible explanation, or even a cohesive theory.
Disturbance AS-2947C was just that, a disturbance. A puzzling, inexplicable snag in the fabric of space time that had just appeared one day and sat around for seven years, following a routine path of motion but not really moving anywhere, just pulsing, and showing a ripple for exactly sixty hours exactly once per year.
Cassian knew his brilliant astrophysicist friend Dr. Emerie Nguyen was developing a theory that AS-2947C was a wormhole, but so far she hadn’t found any evidence to support there being another side to it. So far, all Emerie could say was that this disturbance could very well be the concrete evidence of stable wormholes she and every other member of the space sciences sector had been chasing for years. And yet they were still chasing it. 
He quickly showered and changed into his everyday uniform, slipped his wristband back on, and drew up a quick set of notes for the commodore. At exactly two minutes before noon, he knocked on her office door.
“Enter.”
Cassian stepped into the office, closed the door, and saluted. “Ma’am.”
“At ease, Commander. I believe you’re early today.”
“Some days I try to be punctual, Commodore.”
“I see.” She motioned to the west wall. “Report, Commander.”
Tapping three fingers twice against the wall, Cassian swiped an image from his tablet onto the wall, which doubled as a presentation screen. 
“Today’s imaging of Disturbance AS-2947C shows no remarkable differences from the last set. The formation has not morphed or shifted noticeably in any direction.” He swiped to a new image. “The annual irregularity in the approximate center of the disturbance appeared on schedule roughly three hours before we arrived, making it now roughly seven hours visible.” 
“Any notable observations about the irregularity?”
“No, Commodore. The irregularity is behaving exactly like it has for the six years we’ve observed it. It merely appears as what looks to be the illusion of a gap, holds steady for sixty hours, and disappears. We have never been able to decipher if the irregularity is in fact a gap or if it is simply a change in the observed color.”
“Have you never attempted to pilot your craft towards this irregularity?”
Cassian swallowed. “With all due respect, Commodore, yes. I believe you are familiar with the deep-space engine failure incident of last year?”
“I am.”
“That was my attempt to discover more about the irregularity.”
“Ah.” The commodore tilted her head, her eyes calculating. “Though I never did hear the pilot’s explanation of this failure.”
“First, may I ask what the engineers’ conclusion was?”
“The engineers concluded that the engine failure, which somehow you managed to prevent from becoming catastrophic, was the result of a power failure caused by the change in the conditions of space within the disturbance. They informed me that the engine short-circuited when your craft entered the boundary of the disturbance, but they could not explain or even theorize why.”
Cassian nodded. “I can theorize why. Commodore, I believe the power failed because, simply put, the way we fuel our crafts does not exist within the disturbance.”
“Are you implying that neither solar nor stellar energy exists within AS-2947C?”
“Yes, ma’am, I am. The instant I entered that region, my engines went completely silent. I had no time to observe anything else, as my immediate reaction was to reverse course and exit, lest I risk total craft failure and being stranded in the deepest parts of space. My craft regained power once outside the disturbance region, and I made it back, despite one of my engines being nonfunctional. As I’ve thought about it over the months, I can only come to the conclusion that the power cut off because there was no available power source.”
Commodore Amren considered Cass’s explanation. “It is logical, and it would explain why the engineers could not determine the cause of the failure. Power source failure, when rectified immediately, leaves behind no visible evidence within the engines of our craft.”
“Commodore, I still want to enter the disturbance. I believe that a craft carrying physical fuel could safely enter the region.”
“Physical fuel became obsolete decades ago, Commander.”
“And yet we still have stores. This is why. We knew there was a chance some mission might need to use fuel rather than energy to power its craft. This is that mission.”
“Commander, I’m afraid I cannot give you clearance to enter the disturbance. Not at the moment, at least. You know the regulations.”
Cassian sighed. “Right, right, seven days between active pilot duty.”
“There is one thing I can do, if you wish.”
“Tell me?”
“You may take a small stationary craft to the observation point. Stations do not qualify as actively piloted craft. I can assign you a seventy-two-hour observation mission, which will allow you to be as close to Disturbance AS-2947C as possible without endangering yourself or your craft, and also will allow you to report any noteworthy changes. Acceptable?”
“Accepted, ma’am. Thank you.”
The commodore nodded once. “I’ll get the assignment written up now. Prepare for launch at 1600 hours.”
Cassian snapped a salute. “Yes, ma’am.”
“Dismissed.”
Four hours later, Cassian’s small observation stationcraft left Earth’s atmosphere, set its destination coordinates, and blinked away into a quantum leap, arriving at the observation point in mere seconds. 
Arrived at destination, the cool, mechanical autopilot voice announced. Artificial gravity effective in sixty seconds.
Cassian sat back, checking his harness. All secure.
Artificial gravity in effect.
Unbuckling, he stood up, pulled off his helmet, and walked to the windows, staring into the fascinating mystery of Disturbance AS-2947C. The irregularity rippled, gently, like he’d seen it do before, taunting him with the possibility of something on the other side. He stood there barely thinking, just marveling at the sight of this enigmatic corner of deep space.
And then the irregularity expanded. And a craft like nothing he’d ever seen flew out.
~
Nesta hadn’t known whether she was sane when she flew into the gap. Hell, she hadn’t known if she was thinking, let alone doing. If wormhole theory meant anything, then she’d expected a moment of terrifying flight through stark blackness that ended in her ship landing in some other, possibly uncharted, part of the universe.
She hadn’t been expecting to see an alien station.
But there it was.
The gap was a tunnel of sorts. And at the other end was a station Nesta didn’t recognize. 
She directed her ship around the foreign station, intending to capture images for examination in her lab. But before she could key in the command to the ship’s cameras, her radio cracked with static. And then someone spoke.
“Who the hell are you?”
Nesta stared at the receiver, then dragged her gaze to the station. Standing in what looked like an observation deck was a man wearing a pressure suit and boots, holding a comm device to his mouth.
“I repeat, who the hell are you?”
“You tell me first. And while you’re at it, what the hell is that station you’re in?”
“It’s a standard observation craft, of course. Unlike whatever alien craft you’re flying.”
“This is a typical exploration ship, you coarse, callous idiot.”
“Like fuck it is.”
“What’s the matter, never seen a woman fly a real ship before?”
“Never seen that particular ship before in my entire life as a pilot. Or in any of my texts.”
“You’re telling me this very real ship I’m flying doesn’t exist?”
“Well, yeah.”
“Then--” Nesta’s eyes widened in shock. “Pilot, may I have your name and credentials?”
“Commander Cassian Ilnair, Earth’s space force.”
“Earth’s space force,” Nesta muttered to herself, scanning through her mind for anything related to that name. Nothing. And then it hit her.
“Commander Ilnair, who leads your nation?”
“My nation?” He seemed confused by the word. “Nations melded into a global government centuries ago. President Amarantha currently heads the Global Council.”
A look of wonder crossed Nesta’s face. “It’s true…it’s true. I can’t believe it.”
“Believe what?”
“Commander, my name is Dr. Nesta Archeron. I’m from an alternate Earth.”
The man standing in the unfamiliar station dropped his comm device. And stared.
“Permission to attempt to dock at your station? We have some items to discuss.”
He sat down on the deck floor and picked up his radio. “Granted, if you can.”
Nesta flew a slow lap around the station, noticing two docking ports, both with airlocks that seemed oddly familiar. Hmm, she thought, airlock design is clearly universal. Aiming for the port closer to the observation deck, she carefully guided her ship into the space and sighed in relief when the hatch clicked into place with the station’s airlock. 
“Connect the airlock to my ship, if you would?”
“What’s the magic word, Dr. Archeron?” Nesta swore she could hear his damn smirk.
“Please connect your airlock to my ship so I can explain myself.”
“Of course.”
Less than two minutes later, Nesta heard the familiar hiss of an airlock sealing into place around her ship’s hatch. 
“Clear for exit, Dr. Archeron.”
“Thank you, Commander.”
Nesta placed her tablet and several images into her pack, slung it over her shoulder, released her exit hatch, and swiftly ascended the ladder into the station. The moment her head cleared, she was looking around, mentally cataloguing every detail of the spacecraft. It was basic, functional, only containing living quarters and an observation lab. 
“Whenever you’re done gaping, Doctor, we can talk.”
Nesta turned to face the commander, who was leaning against a wall just outside the airlock. “There is a difference between observing and gaping, pilot, not that you would know.”
A cocky grin crept across his face. “Naturally, I’m just one of the best pilots in the universe, I wouldn’t know.”
“Your universe,” she corrected.
“What?”
“Your universe, Commander Ilnair. Or has your tiny brain already forgotten what I said about being from an alternate universe?”
He shook his head. “Right. Sorry, I’m still trying to process that.”
“As am I. Show me to the lab?”
“Not much to show, but follow me.” He led her down a short hallway onto the observation deck and laboratory, clearly the main space of the station. “Here we are. I believe you mentioned something about explaining yourself?”
“I did.”
He gestured toward her. “Go ahead.”
So she did.
17 notes · View notes
ernestsdesign · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Futura, commissioned by the Bauer type foundry and designed in 1927 by Paul Renner.Futura is based on the "geometric shapes representative of the Bauhaus period."
Futura was used in a huge range of commercial content including the movie 2001: a soace odyssey, supreme, dominos pizza, Calvin Klein, redbull, absolut vodka, costco, bestbuy and importantly as the Apollo Moon Landing Plaque.
Futura faced a difficult history and "escaped the Nazis and landed on the moon" as Burke reveals how "Renner and his design became surprisingly controversial once the Nazis began to exert control over German culture." The futurs font however managed to become a gloablly acknowledged font af this time period due to its slick design.
I found some type specimens for the futura font in all of which display some intriguing factors makign users adore the final product.
I also noticed a widespread use of the colour red in the futura type specimens which could be the case as this colour visualises the slickness and creates a futuristic appeal to the font.
Research
https://www.sessions.edu/notes-on-design/type-in-history-futura/
http://idsgn.org/posts/know-your-type-futura/
https://www.smithjournal.com.au/blogs/design/2914-a-brief-interstellar-history-of-futura
https://iamheathermoore.wordpress.com/2012/12/12/futura-typeface-the-history/
https://www.fonts.com/font/linotype/futura/story
https://typewritingblog.wordpress.com/2013/02/01/futura-first-font-on-the-moon/
https://www.deviantart.com/mrjackxiii/art/FUTURA-151015463
https://i.redd.it/k9bmck02jxdz.jpg
https://mir-s3-cdn-cf.behance.net/project_modules/max_1200/65d92027357221.56363f325c4c4.jpg
https://mir-s3-cdn-cf.behance.net/project_modules/disp/b019fd8392803.560bc8222e045.jpg
https://www.deviantart.com/revi7970/art/Futura-Type-Specimen-Poster-411708664
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/b6/44/e5/b644e54cc349f415001a381afdc96791.jpg
http://pre06.deviantart.net/1a2d/th/pre/f/2011/020/d/d/futura_typeface_by_gendosplace-d37n1l1.jpg
https://typographyandtea.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/futuraposter.jpg
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/aa/68/47/aa684782e47c26f5189790d060d68e0c--poster-fonts-typographic-poster.jpg
https://www.coroflot.com/sliburd/futura-type-specimen-book
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/f8/87/f5/f887f56ca455e88b6bf3633c492b3552--futura-poster-futura-font.jpg
https://www.behance.net/gallery/11981395/Futura-Type-Specimen-Book
https://mir-s3-cdn-cf.behance.net/projects/202/fc0b5a31059687.Y3JvcCwzMDAwLDIzNDQsMCwzMTU.jpg
https://mir-s3-cdn-cf.behance.net/project_modules/disp/67796925574506.5604c8c2404a2.jpg
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/0c/af/5a/0caf5ad95e32c19148c7784de7872958.jpg
https://mir-s3-cdn-cf.behance.net/project_modules/disp/bb31e012283491.56032da4eb56a.jpg
https://99designs.co.uk/blog/design-history-movements/know-your-typeface-futuras-amazing-past/
https://fontsinuse.com/typefaces/4/futura
https://blog.psprint.com/featured-post/fun-font-history-facts
https://hypebeast.com/2017/3/futura-font-nazi
0 notes
ernestsdesign · 6 years
Text
Futura font research.
Futura, commissioned by the Bauer type foundry and designed in 1927 by Paul Renner.Futura is based on the "geometric shapes representative of the Bauhaus period."
Futura was used in a huge range of commercial content including the movie 2001: a soace odyssey, supreme, dominos pizza, Calvin Klein, redbull, absolut vodka, costco, bestbuy and importantly as the Apollo Moon Landing Plaque.
Futura faced a difficult history and "escaped the Nazis and landed on the moon" as Burke reveals how "Renner and his design became surprisingly controversial once the Nazis began to exert control over German culture." The futurs font however managed to become a gloablly acknowledged font af this time period due to its slick design.
I found some type specimens for the futura font in all of which display
I also noticed a widespread use of the colour red in the futura type specimens which could be the case as this colour visualises the slickness and creates a futuristic appeal to the font.
The futura fonts could be used for various reasons but they excel in their appeal which allows for creative use such as in the type specimen below.
I also found a type specimen which makes heavy use of dots and although it uses only black and white, it is still a really successful tyype specimen.
I have also looked at many more type specimen which use the futura fonts, all of which were successful in their delivery.
Research
https://www.sessions.edu/notes-on-design/type-in-history-futura/
http://idsgn.org/posts/know-your-type-futura/
https://www.smithjournal.com.au/blogs/design/2914-a-brief-interstellar-history-of-futura
https://iamheathermoore.wordpress.com/2012/12/12/futura-typeface-the-history/
https://www.fonts.com/font/linotype/futura/story
https://typewritingblog.wordpress.com/2013/02/01/futura-first-font-on-the-moon/
https://www.deviantart.com/mrjackxiii/art/FUTURA-151015463
https://i.redd.it/k9bmck02jxdz.jpg
https://mir-s3-cdn-cf.behance.net/project_modules/max_1200/65d92027357221.56363f325c4c4.jpg
https://mir-s3-cdn-cf.behance.net/project_modules/disp/b019fd8392803.560bc8222e045.jpg
https://www.deviantart.com/revi7970/art/Futura-Type-Specimen-Poster-411708664
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/b6/44/e5/b644e54cc349f415001a381afdc96791.jpg
http://pre06.deviantart.net/1a2d/th/pre/f/2011/020/d/d/futura_typeface_by_gendosplace-d37n1l1.jpg
https://typographyandtea.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/futuraposter.jpg
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/aa/68/47/aa684782e47c26f5189790d060d68e0c--poster-fonts-typographic-poster.jpg
https://www.coroflot.com/sliburd/futura-type-specimen-book
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/f8/87/f5/f887f56ca455e88b6bf3633c492b3552--futura-poster-futura-font.jpg
https://www.behance.net/gallery/11981395/Futura-Type-Specimen-Book
https://mir-s3-cdn-cf.behance.net/projects/202/fc0b5a31059687.Y3JvcCwzMDAwLDIzNDQsMCwzMTU.jpg
https://mir-s3-cdn-cf.behance.net/project_modules/disp/67796925574506.5604c8c2404a2.jpg
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/0c/af/5a/0caf5ad95e32c19148c7784de7872958.jpg
https://mir-s3-cdn-cf.behance.net/project_modules/disp/bb31e012283491.56032da4eb56a.jpg
https://99designs.co.uk/blog/design-history-movements/know-your-typeface-futuras-amazing-past/
https://fontsinuse.com/typefaces/4/futura
https://blog.psprint.com/featured-post/fun-font-history-facts
https://hypebeast.com/2017/3/futura-font-nazi
0 notes