MystiFACT-or-FICTION response #2 - The Dwarf Planet And The Young Man From KansassteemCreated with Sketch.

in #steemstem7 years ago (edited)

Kansas, 1929.

Blisters covered the pads of his hands and each pitch of the shovel made them throb. Another spray of dirt flew through the air and onto the growing mound beside the ditch.

Clyde brought the shovel to his side, stabbed it into the soft earth, and leaned on it heavily. He took stock of his hole: A 24 by 7 foot rectangle about four feet deep. Just about half way down.

The sun was setting, and Clyde's shoulders caught the light over the top of the pit, casting a long shadow onto the grass. Clyde stopped shoveling and squinted into the dusty sunlight as a tall silhouetted figure approached.

"Clyde."

The word just hung there for awhile. Muron stood over the hole, looking down, chewing on a plug of tobacco. After twenty years of dealing with his son's "oddness", Clyde's father had learned to distill a whole, unspoken chiding into a single word. "Clyde" could mean lots of things. Today "Clyde" meant "Clyde, why in tarnation are'ya diggin that hole?" Other times "Clyde" might mean "Why're ya saving yer allowance to make a damned mirror?" or "What're ya doin in the barn all night 'stead of chasin girls and gettin inta trouble?"

Clyde got back to digging. "Yeah, pa?"

Muron looked over his left shoulder, off toward the corn, and spat. "Sun's goin down, yer ma's makin dinner."

Neither man spoke. A warm, humid summer breeze, the scrape of a shovel in dirt, and the landing of earth on earth were the only sounds for a time.

Muron squinted back down into the pit. "What's this thing fer uhgen?"

This would be the third time Clyde explained it. He kept on shoveling as he did, punctuating his short, annoyed sentences with flings of dirt. "Too much wind up there. And too hot, too. Warps the telescopic mirrors." Dirt flew in a rhythm over Clyde's right shoulder. "A depression should reduce the ambient temperature. And control the air flow."

Muron looked down, unchanged, for a while longer, than slowly turned back towards the corn. He spat again, contemplatively this time. "Tel-oh-scah-pick," he murmured to himself. Then he turned back towards the house and the setting sun. "Well, be in by sundown. Even a genius gottuh eat."

Clyde stopped shoveling and, with a small smile, looked up at his father's back. "Yes, pa." Clyde watched his father walk off toward the farmhouse, through the haze of the late Kansas summer. The sun was half-way over the horizon, and Clyde could just start to make out the moon. I'll see you a lot better, soon enough. But first I've got to finish this dang hole.

He kept on shoveling.


Deep Space, 2015

A golden vessel flies through the blackness of outer space, travelling many kilometers every second. It was shot off of the planet Earth, at speeds 40 times faster than a bullet, and it travels even faster now.

A decade ago, its target was 7.5 billion miles away. The ship was sent to a place never before visited. Smaller than a planet, but bigger than an asteroid - A "Dwarf" - though they still called it a planet when the ship left Earth.

Today the ship has finally arrived. Its sophisticated photographic lenses aim at the prize and begin to record, exactly as planned. When the scans are complete, the ship sends its discovery back towards Earth.

Just over 5 hours later, the scans will be received and meticulously analyzed by scientists who devote their lives to the stars. Those scientists will hail the mission as a success, and, for another brief moment, Earth's attention will be drawn to space once again. The "New Horizons" probe will join a short list of human technological achievements.

But now the ship careens onward, past its target, towards the ends of our solar system, out into the chaos of the solar winds and, perhaps, beyond, into true interstellar space. In doing so it will move beyond human experience and scale, into a place we, ourselves, cannot venture.

Except, aboard that ship are the ashes of one human man, born in a place called Illinois, raised on a thing called a farm, in another place called Kansas. To commemorate that human being, there is an inscription: one which will never be seen by human eyes again, nor understood by any eyes which might one day come upon it. It floats through space, impossibly, right now, and it reads:

Interred herein are remains of American Clyde W.Tombaugh, discoverer of Pluto and the solar system's 'third zone'. Adelle and Muron's boy, Patricia's husband, Annette and Alden's father, astronomer, teacher, punster, and friend: Clyde W. Tombaugh (1906-1997)".



Clyde Tombaugh was born in Illinois in 1906. His family moved to a Kansas in the 20s, where Clyde taught himself how to make the mirrors for a telescope. He dug an 8 foot deep ditch on his parents property to create a better testing environment. He became a renowned astronomer and discovered the dwarf planet Pluto in 1930. He went on to have a long, fruitful life and passed away in 1997. He was cremated and a portion of his ashes interred on the New Horizons space vessel, which arrived beside the dwarf planet Pluto, 7.5 billion miles from Kansas, in 2015.



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Information Sources:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clyde_Tombaugh
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Horizons#Launch

Picture Source

[1]See page for author [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
[2]NASA Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons

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Oh I didn't know that story. Thus is actually a great story!

Thanks, I thought so too! How crazy is that? He had no formal education when he built his own telescopic mirrors on a Kansas farm - in the 1920s! Now he may be the first piece of a human being to leave the solar system. It's crazy.

That is indeed amazing. How someone without any knowledge can lead to advances in a given field of science. This is actually hard to conceive today.

Particularly before the internet. I mean, I could buy a CRISPR set online for a few grand and start doing novel things with it off some youtube videos. This guy was busy being shuttled from noplace to nowhere and learned something far more difficult using only analog sources.

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Yep, this was way before the internet era! No clear access to the information (in particular scientific information... and un-information).

That was a fantastic story! I read it out loud to my wife and started to get a little choked up.

Thanks man! I really appreciate that - I told my wife his story, broad strokes, before I sat down and wrote this, and I almost cried too! She was cool as a cucumber though. :)

I love the way you presented this as a story.

Thank you - it seemed like a perfect package for one.

Upvoted and Resteemed by xx-votesplus, the dropAhead curation team!

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Very nice story. Information links to boot. A very successful post, and a great read. Thanks to @professorbromide comment, (I follow him, he finds some real gems), I was able to read this. The circle still spins.

Thanks for reading - always cool when organic connections start to form.

Thank you for your response to my challenge. This is great! I love it, very creative :)

I'm glad - I tried to take your call for creativity to heart

It is really wonderful article :)
I enjoyed reading your post.. waiting for more :)

I just followed you :) and would like to ask about.. How much one upvote needs of "steam power" to reach 1$?

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