The Science Fiction Universe of "Orbital Cloud"

Published Aug 15, 2023, 5:00 AM

Daniel and Kelly talk to Tayio Fujii, author of "Orbital Cloud" 

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Hey Kelly, are you a lottery ticket purchaser?

Uh?

No, As a person who thinks a lot about statistics and probability, I am not a lottery ticket purchaser.

Well, you just got a bet on the high variants events. But let's say that you win a billion dollars someday. What are you going to do with your windfall? Have you thought about that?

Oh?

My gosh, Well, I'd like to think that I'd like work on the world hunger problem, so maybe i'd do something like that. But also I would make a really awesome one lab for myself, probably probably put it into science. What would you do?

I might start my own university where students can go for free and faculty don't have to apply for grants.

WHOA, And then I encourage them to hire me because this university you're talking about sounds fantastic and I would like to work there.

What I definitely wouldn't do is spend any of that money sending myself to space.

Really, you don't want to go to space.

I have zero interest in going to space. How much money would you spend on a ticket to space coming?

I wouldn't know. We're on the same page, but I still seems way too dangerous right now for my taste.

Let's just stay here on Earth and spend our billion dollars on science.

Yeah, that sounds great.

Hi.

I'm Daniel. I'm a particle physicist and a professor at UC Irvine, and I am terrified of fast moving vehicles.

I'm Kelly Wiener Smith, and I'm a parasitologist with Rice University, and I am also sort of petrified of fast moving vehicles, but also maybe in particular fast moving vehicles that have a high probability of exploding.

I recently tested my faith in science and engineering because A took a helicopter flight for the first time last week.

WHOA, how did you get that opportunity?

My daughter and I were on a road trip around the West Coast and we took a chopper ride through the Grand Canyon, which was pretty spectacular.

That does sound awesome, But are you saying you were scared or was it moving slow enough that it wasn't scary.

I was terrified. There's so much angular momentum in that thing, you know, some little thing goes wrong, it just pulls itself apart. And my daughter was scared. She thought, is this thing really safe? And I know the numbers, I know the statistics. It's much safer to get in the helicopter than it was to drive to the helicopter. But still it was terrifying, and so I had to reassure her, even though inside I was also terrified.

Well, it's also you know, the unknown things that could happen that maybe you're not expecting, which is sort of what makes the book that we are going to talk about today, you know, makes Base Treble sound even more petrifying and.

So Welcome to the podcast. Daniel Jorge Explain the Universe, a production of iHeartRadio, in which we explore everything that can and does happen in our universe, how things come apart, how things come together, how everything works. We talk about black holes, we talk about white holes, we talk about galaxies, we talk about particles. We talk about everything that happens in the universe, and sometimes we talk about things that happen in fictional universes. My friend and co host Jorge can't be with us today, but I'm very happy to have Kelly, our hosts on these science fiction episodes, joining us today. Kelly, thanks very much, Thank you.

So much for having me. I love every time you email me and you're like, hey, how about we read a science fiction book for work, And I'm like, this is this My life is the best.

Science fiction is so much fun to read. You know, as a scientist, you spend all of your days struggling against the boundaries of the laws of physics. It's so much fun to have creative people also contributing, you know, thinking about other ways universes could be, what the laws of physics might be, or setting stories in our universe and figuring out like how to solve problems. I just love the connection between the creativity of writing science fiction and the creativity of actually exploring our universe.

Yeah, and this book was particularly exciting because it's set almost essentially in our time exactly, and the world is very similar to our world, and so it's interesting to think about, well, it's just a few things were different. What might our world be like? And so yeah, it's a really fun book to think about.

Yeah.

I love when science fiction tells us about how we could live, how we might live, and also explores, like, you know, the consequences of technology and how it can affect and change people's lives. You know, we can lift up one nation to make it more powerful, it can give access to people who were excluded from the mainstream. Technology really can completely revolutionize our society, and I love seeing science fiction writers try to anticipate that and to explore that.

And that's absolutely what this book does. And what book did we read for today's episode, Daniel.

And so On today's episode, we're going to be talking about the science fiction Universe of Orbital Cloud by Tayo Fuji. This is a really fun book that takes place in the near future. Kelly and I both read this book and encourage you to pick it up. It's a lot of fun and it's a really impressive display of like the technical mastery of the author. It's like very detailed, very specific. A lot of the plot points really rely on like understanding the science and how things actually work.

But I feel like often when you get a book that's really good about the science, sometimes you don't get characters that are good. Also, there's like, you know, you can be good at the engineering, but maybe you're not also good at describing people. And this book, I think does a really nice job of having like an interesting plot, interesting characters, and solid science. I was personally very impressed with his breath.

I was curious what your thoughts were about it, especially like the space international law and all the treaties and the intrigue and all that stuff. But first let's tell our listeners a little bit about what this book is about. It was published originally in Japanese and then translated a few years later, and in my mind, it's something like a space spy techno thriller. You know, you have countries battling against each other in space, but you know it's not like a shooting war. It's more like, you know, information and maneuvering. I got some sort of like Hunt for Red October vibes. You know, it's like political and this espionage and all sorts of stuff. How did you see the book?

Well, so, first of all, I should admit that I've never seen Hunt for Red October, and I regret that like every couple months, because I feel like it gets referenced all the time, and I'm like, oh yeah, I gotta watch that. But yeah, no, I got those vibes too, although although I'll say that it like, yes, there was the espionage web aspect of it, but you know, there were also these very real weapons that were up in space too, and so yeah, I had some of that also. But I'll watch Hunt for Red October. So the next time it gets brought up, I'm on the ball.

I don't know how you can exist in the nerd done without having seen that movie.

When I've spent two years studying Russian and I'm interested in Soviet history, and so it comes up a lot because it's US versus the Soviets in that right, Yeah, like every movie back then.

So what is this book about. It takes place over a few days in twenty twenty, and it involves a lot of sort of amateur characters, people watching the sky. There's a guy who runs a meteor predicting website who's following something in space and notices something strange happening in the trajectory of an object that was launched by North Korea. So it's a lot of different characters all around the world sort of seeing things happening in space and trying to put together. What's going on?

Yeah, and they all actually, for the most part work together, which I hope is what would happen, but I'm not always so optimistic. There's also a rich dude who is doing a stunt trip to his orbital hotel and he's bringing his daughter with him, and like, you know, you read it for the first time, or you start reading the book and you think to yourself, oh, is this supposed to be Elon Musk, And then it turns out he made his millions from a company that is very clearly meant to be PayPal in fiction or in this fictional universe, and you're like, Okay, I get it. This is definitely supposed to be Elon Musk. So there's an Elon Musk character who is going to space in his orbital hotel for the first time and has a big stunt, like I guess show how safe it is? He takes his daughter with him.

M hmm exactly. But then it turns out maybe space isn't so safe because these amateurs watching the sky notice that this object that North Korea launched has a sort of strange trajectory. It's not really following like your typical gravitational trajectory. It's sort of maneuvering in space in a way that surprises everybody, and suddenly people panic, like, hold on, is this some sort of new weapon. Have the North Koreans developed this thing called the rod from God that can you drop payloads from space? Or maybe they're like targeting this orbital hotel that the Elon Musk character has built. So all of a sudden there's this sort of change in the power balance in space. People think, oh, this is new technology. Maybe now we were no longer safe, whereas a moment ago we thought of ourselves as safe. I think that's really interesting how they explores the sort of power dynamics and how very quickly things can change with new technology.

And absolutely if some country not only got the power to knock out you know, the International Space Station, the Chinese space station that's up there, any tourist stuff, but also all of our satellites that we use for GPS or communication or something, that would be an incredible power if they were willing to wield it for evil purposes, and it would of course break all sorts of international law. But yes, you could certainly cripple a country like the US if you suddenly took out all of our satellites, we'd be in trouble. And so now that we've got you all petrified of the idea that yourself's not going to work anymore or your credit card, how plausible is the science here, Daniel could something like this happen?

So this is a really fun book because Wow, did the author do their homework? Oh my gosh. It's so clear that it was really important to him that every element of this book be plausible. I think he wanted the characters to be really living within the confines of science. And you know, his background is he is an engineer, and so I think he's trying to share sort of that joy of solving puzzles within these rules. You know, you can't just break the rules and say I'm going to magic away this problem, and so in the book, the characters can't magic away stuff. So there's a lot of really interesting science in this book, includes like computer science and space technology and physics. One of the espionage bits in the story involves changing how automatic translation engines will translate like Korean into English, so that it changes what people hear when they're watching a speech. So you're watching a speech by the dictator of North Korea, for example, And you're relying on this automatic translation, and you can manipulate what people here if you manipulate also these translation engines. And I thought that was really fascinating, a very clever and sort of troubling idea.

I agree, it was both petrifying and clever and troubling. And has anything like this ever happened before? Or did he come up with this?

It's a totally plausible idea because the way a lot of these translation engines work is they just sort of like scrape the web for information. You want to know how to translate between English and Korean. You don't like sit down with a bunch of experts who teach your computer how to do it. You just get a bunch of examples and you just learn the mapping. So you need pages that are written in one language and in the other language, and the computer learns between them. And so just as chat GPT is learning from the web, they just like scrape text from the Internet, so they rely on the fact that it's written by humans and it's correct, and then they learn that mapping. And so if you pollute that sample, if you insert a bunch of new stuff into the web that has incorrect translations that you want to insert into like English Korean translation, then that's totally possible. You would absolutely do that, because the assumption they're making when they're doing this training is that all the human text out there is basically correct, none of it's like maliciously incorrectly written. And there actually is a sort of hilarious and tragic example of incorrect text being pumped into you know, the sort of textosphere, which is a few years ago they discovered that there was one guy writing a bunch of articles in the Scots language. Right, so you know, Scottish people part of the UK, you know, speak English obviously, but they also have their local dialect Scots, which is related to English but not identical. And there was some American teenager, probably this kid watched too many Austin Powers movies in which there's you know, some Scottish characters, et cetera, and he just thought, oh, I'm going to write a bunch of articles in Wikipedia in the Scots language. But he didn't know Scots, and so he just wrote them sort of as like English written in a Scottish accent. But he wrote like gibberish and not sense and just like made up a bunch of stuff.

Oh my gosh, but and so like how many how many articles did he write? Like how committed was he to this endeavor.

For being something that was not malicious? It was really impressively deep. He wrote twenty three thousand articles. About a third of the entire Scots Wikipedia at the time was created by this one guy who didn't speak Scotts. You just like writing in a joking accent.

This is why teenagers should not be allowed to have free time, like they don't do good things with it.

There was an interview with a professor who's like an expert in the Scots language, and he said, quote, this is going to sound incredibly hyperbolic and hysterical, but I think this person has possibly done more damage to the Scot's language than anyone else in history.

Oh my gosh, worse than Mel what was it Mel Gibson? And didn't he do a.

Worse than all those English kings that's killed all those Scottish people and suppressed Scottish culture. Anyway, the point is that you can actually pollute what's out there if you now go and write a translator that goes from English to Scotts. You're probably picking up a lot of this bologna that this American teenager created, and so now it's a lot harder to learn that translation. So this is totally plausible. It's really happened in our world that you can pollute the sort of ocean of information from which AI is learning to connect languages.

So what you're saying is that North Korea is going to hire this teenager and we're all going to be in a lot of trouble. And I think after the break, we should talk about the weapon that the North Koreans were wielding in this book. So let's take a quick break.

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Right, so that there's a corruption of information, and there's also actually these weapons that are going into space. So Daniel tell us about these weapons.

So in the book, they have this weapon. They call it the rod from God, which is a really funny name for a weapon, but it's terrifying, right. The idea is to take a big, heavy object, launch it into space, and then drop it on someone. And this is essentially just taking advantage of the kinetic energy. You have something really high up in the gravitation a well, and it falls to Earth and as it falls down it speeds up. It gains a lot of kinetic energy and when it impacts it's like a meteor. You know. It's the reason why the dinosaurs were wiped out. There wasn't a nuclear weapon. Nobody blew up a fusion bomb. It's just a massive amount of energy delivered to the Earth's surface, which doesn't take high technology as long as you can get something heavy up really far above the Earth and then drop it into the gravitational well. But it's how it hits the planet. It can be devastating.

Yeah, So I did a little bit of research on these rod from God proposals when we were working on our spacebook, and there are some pretty good arguments against not using them. Like one, you know, the fact that it's heavy is super important, which is also going to make it super expensive, because every pound you send into space is still pretty pricey these days. Also, it's sort of hard to direct this kind of weapon relative to like, you know, a missile that you can in some cases maybe turn or point, and so it needs to be almost always over a potential target at all times. And then finally, this weapon, so as you mentioned, like asteroids were pretty bad for the dinosaurs, you know, they were also bad for everyone because they created this like cloud that impacted the climate. And so this is a kind of weapon that can cause problems for people who aren't necessarily the target. But still a very scary weapon. And I guess the final argument that usually goes against these things is that you can do all of these things with weapons we already have from Earth. So I spend the money to send it up into space, and then you have to worry about maintaining this weapon. But still, yes, Rod from God comes up in sci fi. I actually I think the idea came from a sci fi novel first and then got explored by the US Air Force. And to be honest, I didn't know that the Air Force's Project Thor had gotten as much attention as it did. I ended up doing a little research after reading your outline.

Yeah, this is something the Air Force has actually thought about. They like read about it in science fiction of the is that possible? And so they explored the idea of dropping basically a tungsten telephone pole from space. And you know, this thing would reach like mock ten and it would have the yield of a nuclear weapon without any fallouts. So from that perspective, it's like less dangerous. You know, you worry about like nuking other countries and then the fallat drifting across the ocean or whatever. In this case, there is no radioactive fallout. But as you say, it's super expensive. They calculated it cost like two hundred and thirty million dollars per shot. Oh my gosh, because you know, tungsten is expensive. The thing that makes it powerful is also the thing that makes it heavy, and so that's pretty tricky. I think you'd have to like mine the tungsten in space to make this thing more effective. But hey, I'm not here giving the Air Force, you know, good ideas for futuristic weapons.

Why, I'm not too worried. That's pretty far off in the future, I think, being able to mine that much tungsten and use it for weapons.

But then they also have this other interesting technology in the book, which are anti satellite weapons. So if you have now things in space that can attack you, you want to have ways to defend yourselves. And so in the book there's a long thread at Norad where they're talking about, like what could we do to attack a satellite to help defend ourselves, and it refers to this technology this as M one forty is anti satellite missile, essentially shooting a missile from Earth into space to attack a satellite. So what do you know about anti satellite technology in our universe in reality telling.

Well, so, I guess this is one of the ways that the rod from God actually is a good weapon. Like if you it's pretty hard to mess up a giant's slug of tungsten, and so like if you are sending it towards Earth and someone shoots it, probably that giant's lug of tungsten is still coming towards you. But in terms of actually shooting at like, you know, like a GPS satellite or something. This is something that a number of countries have done already from the ground. China, the US, Russia, and India have all shot their own satellites out of the sky just to show that they can, so that other people know that they have that power. I think that in all of those cases it was from the ground shooting to space, as opposed to the method that's used in this book, where you climb on an airplane and then the airplane shoots at the weapon. I could be wrong about that, but anyway, so anti satellite weapons are a thing that exists right now. In the time between when his book was published and when it came out, Russia shot down one of their satellites and it got some news because the ISS folks had to jump to their return vehicle because there was some concern that the debris caused by the satellite getting blown up was going to hit the ISS and puncture it and expose everyone to the vacuum of space. Russia, of course, claimed that everybody was making a big deal over nothing and it was nowhere near the ISS. But anyway, so these sorts of weapons are real.

Yeah, and that's really the downside of it is that if we have like a war, we're shooting each other's satellites, we could fill the near space environment with garbage and we could make it impossible for anybody to get off planet. We have an episode about space junk and this concern that as soon as you have enough space junk, it becomes exponential of banging into itself and destroying all the satellites, and then space is just filled with junk and you can't launch anything safely, which would be terrible in lots of ways.

Yeah, Kessler syndrome. We want to avoid that for sure, exactly.

I think there was actually a program in the Air Force, it's called ASM one thirty five where they were to launch a missile from an F fifteen doing this crazy supersonic climb. I was reading about how they did test it in nineteen eighty five and just droida Solar Observation satellite and the junk still was floating around for twenty years. They track each piece of junk after this explosion, and the last piece deorbited in two thousand and four, So it's not like space cleans itself up very quickly either, like you make a mistake, it could be decades before we could launch something into space again.

So then I was wrong. There has been they have tested this from a plane shooting the satellite thing before, so that's super interesting. And I think the country that got the most flat for this test was China because they shot a satellite that was still at a sort of higher orbit and so all the junk it created stayed up there for much longer most people when they shoot down their satellites, it's much lower, so the junk is going to deorbit sooner. And I think the international community went after China, whereas they usually don't make a huge fuss about this stuff because they had sort of polluted the space environment so much. But anyway, okay, so that's been tested.

Cool, cool, scary, I'm Lacheria. One of the key technologies in this book, The thing that allows the North Koreans to sort of like Steelers had to manipulate this rocket in orbit without having propulsion on it, is this idea of a space tether. The sort of central plot device in the book is that they're watching this North Korean satellite and they're expecting it to just to be tumbling, but then it's maneuvering and they're wondering like how did they do that? And so this space tether technology is what allows the North Koreans in the book, having stolen it from the Iranians to sort of maneuver this object in orbit and you know maybe target areas with their rod from God.

So how do these tethers work?

So these space teathers are super fascinating. Again, the author has been like very diligent because there is real physics here, like you can't actually use these things to manipulate the path of things in orbit. Especially space teather is just a long wire. You have an object in space and you have a very very long wire attached to it. If you're moving through a magnetic field, then you can take advantage of the Lorentz force and you can either turn your motion into electrical energy. You can like become a generator by turning the motion of your wire through a magnetic field into current in the wire, so you can generate power, or if you can dump power into the wire. If you can create current on the wire, then you get a force between the wire and the magnetic field and you can use that essentially to steer, so you get something like an electronic rudder where you can control your motion through the magnetic field and basically position your satellite anywhere you want it at least steer it somewhat.

So could we actually have this and why don't we? Or should we? Let the author explain that later in the interview.

This is totally plausible. The physics is solid, you know, it's all just the Lorentz force. You're either turning kinetic energy into electrical energy or electrical energy into kinetic energy. Both of those actually work, and people have explored this. NASA had a mission in two thousand and two called the pro Seds mission, which was going to have a fifteen kilometer tether attached to an object that was going to explore like electrodynamic propulsion. The advantage again here is that you don't need propellant. You know, most of the time when you're maneuvering in space, you have to throw some mass off your ship. You want to change direction to push away by throwing something in the other direction to conserve momentum. And so this would allow you essentially to swim through the magnetic field indefinitely because you will never run out of propellant. So this is a very cool idea, totally plausible. My one question when I was reading about this was whether the magnetic field of the Earth really was strong enough to give the effects in the book. But we asked the author about it, and he gave us a very fun answer about it when we talked to him. All right, and so enough of me and Kelly talking about this book that we didn't write. We were very excited to talk to the author about how he wrote such a fun book with so many interesting characters and so much cool space technology and space dynamics and space law and space politics. And we're very happy that the author was willing to join us. So here's our interview with Taio Fuji. So it's my great pleasure to welcome to the podcast, mister Taio Fuji, author of Orbital Cloud TYO. Thank you very much for joining us on the podcast.

Thank you very much for inviting me to their podcast. Regrat to talking about the off their cloud.

We're glad to have you here.

We loved it, and we'd love to hear about how you got into writing science fiction. What was your path to becoming a successful science fiction author.

I was a computer software.

Engineer and especially the developing their computer graphics software for the commercial usage.

Then in the.

Nineteen eleven May nineteen eleven March elevens we call the huge ealth quake in Japan.

All that time then ten thousand people has gone away ba tsnami. We know that.

But the two days after the Skushima Nuclear Park brand got the boomed exploded the all the news source and the medias. It changes their mentioning about the tsunami disaster. But also they turned to the reporting the radioactive dangerousness, honest timing, safely safety. But the news media kept framing that's dangerous. Other radioactive is dangerous and then we cannot live their.

Eye go anger.

Then I was thinking about how to show that we can stand in front of their technology or disaster or the natural natural dis or the crimate change or another many things then, but I was only once engineer.

I'm not scientists.

I was not famous for talking about their disaster nuclear Just then I started to write science fiction. Fiction is their most low cost way to their sending the message to somebody. Then I wrote the first science fiction story about demagogue killing people. I sold ten thousand copies of.

A book.

On the two months was sold. I became the every many writer editor and my publisher editor know my work. Then I then the higher clup of the published, a higher colup, the Japanese science fiction dedicated publisher, that offered me to the publishing the gym, but to becommercial publisher.

Then I agreed.

And rewriting it and changing my job to the engineer employee to their independent writer.

That is such an interesting path. And so I'm wondering you were inspired by an event that happened in modern times? Is that what motivated you to write a book that could be happening in the very near future as opposed to like thousands of years in the future. Were you a science fiction fan before that?

Yes, I was science fiction, big fi science fiction fan. I already have eight hundred books on my books on myself, and I kept the games B.

Hogan and the.

Asimo founder and I was right, especially I love the Woke Up the Power of album.

The wind Up goal will.

Tell us about how you came up with this story. There's so many fascinating interconnected pieces to it. Did you come up with sort of the story first and then figure out how the technology worked? Or were you more fascinated by the technological elements and then figured out a story you could tell with them.

I started the story from there, I start to write a science fiction from the story who do?

What is there?

My either.

My story starting point and about cloud and speaking about Obita God. Then the Weber engineer saved the world? Is a story service call Corp.

Then how I think and when I think?

The uh?

Then the.

I was impressed by how much different knowledge you had of things, so like international law, different space agencies in different countries and how they work. And the knowledge was expansive and beyond just what you would expect from your experience as an engineer. So how long did it take you to get all of that additional information? And how did you go about learning all of those those additional pieces?

I researched to the sleeve or four months?

About that's the internet, the messoud is joining onto the hakasm there Marazon NASA started the of the space up data, discloaded all the data by the Obama governance, and NASA started to let the engineers to the make to something developed something from with using the NASA data space data.

Then I joining it.

Then there I spend two days at the Tokyo University and making a friend and I UH under my I.

Joined UH and with my friend.

Then my friend is more the protagonist model of their crowd. I met many people, some people is appearing in this book.

Do you have a friend like Kazumi who could like i''m sorry to re pronounce the name, but who could like imagine orbital trajectories in his head.

There during the Kazan, I tried to.

Make it their the positioning of their ISS.

Then we we we agree that if we track the two weeks, there is s orpital elements a weekend, the prejudice of their positioning in the one hour, the accuracy with in their brain calculations. That's the real research under the story about Isana is very interesting. He is my friend from friends from the university and the very long friend and he is he made a unique program and he displayed the is position of the ISS on the Google map.

Then everybody can see.

There where is is s S on the on the square.

Then I love that program.

Very small program and on that years Google Maps API was really it's very important things.

Then we love that, so we love that program.

Then many the amateuria uses program and yeah, and one day there is an phone that NASA use it on the Space Sattle mission. That he watched the NASA TV and the Space Attle mission there on the bigger, largest console. The NASA displayed his app on the biggest screen.

And sharing the position.

Wow and the iPhone, I know that the under after that thing there he was invited to Space Suttle launching mission to NASA.

Then he was he watched the launching from the fast price.

Then this story is the basis of the one with the big base of the hopital cloud.

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Okay, we're back and we're talking to Tayo Fuji, the author of Orbital Cloud, about how he wrote such a fascinating and complicated but compelling novel. I really liked how in your story a lot of the contributions to solving the puzzle come from people who are amateurs, and I don't work for NASA or the Space Agency. Maybe they're amateurs but wealthy, or they're professionals but they're underfunded. Is it important to you in our real world that everybody can contribute to cutting edge science and space exploration with whatever skills they have.

My writing the year.

About two twelve thirteen that those of the year the spaces had not the succeeded yet, then I think the amateur can helped work better.

So you mentioned that you were researching and writing in twenty twelve. So in the decades since you wrote the book, what about the trajectory of the space industry has surprised you or disappointed you? Are we about where you expected we would be by now? Or are we falling short.

There with anything on the space development?

Their commercial under non government their space development it get cops see rather than my I imagine writing of Otel Cloud. Of course, the Ronnie Smack the space development on the story models Evil Mask and mask that followed very closely to imagination. His spacics and then starting system is very similar for my story. My imagination was touched by the Evil Mask and another challenge is keeping Then their space development is better than my expect and but the bad thing was a world tension of the geopolitical situation is harder than I thought that I prove relate.

And if given the opportunity, would you like to travel to space personally? If Elon Musk after you see on one of his flights, yeah.

I think the Mask showed that it is possible, and there are many forwer works and better I think. Yeah.

I'm excited by companies like rocket Lab too. I know they're not bringing people the space, but they're doing a good job of lower and the costs and stuff. So your book was translated into English. Did you work with the translator or have you read the translated version?

What?

What was that process like?

The translation was a very standard process.

The publisher, the publisher, high Castle Route, the San Francisco publisher, the selected the translator.

The translator is the payer translation.

And then this is a Mucilba is the group name of the two transfertors.

Then they are living in Japan.

Then, after translation was almost refinished, the two of and then asked me to the accuracy question about accuracy with the but the connect communication was via the publisher Castle, not the direction to me. Then there I only review the translation in English there, but I was so excited when right and during the writing the opital cloud in Japanese edition, there I imagine that of course the many characters speaks English in Japanese edition, or of course then but there I write in Japanese, but I imagine that how they say it in.

Real in English.

Then I was so excited to read in the English edition and with the real English ones, I was so excited. Under that translation is very accurate, very similar to my Japanese one.

Every paragraph is not removed, no one is added.

Well, I'm glad that it's so accurate. Kelly and I have both written books that have been translated into languages we can't read, and I wonder sometimes if my bad jokes work in Turkish, you know, or in Hungarian, but I'll never know. Speaking of accuracy, something about the book really impressed me is that you have all these characters sort of fighting against the rules of science, sort of struggling against nature. You know, how do we solve this problem? And every time they find a solution, it falls within science. You're never inventing new kinds of science. Is it important to you that the science in your book be plausible, essentially that your story take place in our universe? You never like make up new laws of physics?

Yeah, yea, only why on?

One thing that I had told a lie about these book physics, And one thing is the strongness of the magnetic field.

Of the US, and.

I calculate it is a thousand times the strong than the actual one in order to the moving the things quickly because their electro dynamics power is very small. The one thing of the physics lie is magnetic string storms the magnet feel The second one is the clock computer clock. I set the atomic clock on the cellphone based circuit, but the atomic clock is not there. One of my friends science fiction writer say that you should set the solar cell on the desert.

Then then they're evening. If the abling it cannot.

Be there the making the enough power, but also that the fictional accuracy was held. Everybody cannot stand there claim you that you're making you you're talking and you you're right. Thing there down almost see.

This you can correct in the second edition. There you go.

Sure and when the movie.

That's right, that's right, they'll have solar sales in the movie.

Yeah, somebody to say the movie.

Yeah. So one of the themes in the book is how space technology and you know, the satellites that we have in orbit are really helpful for the developed countries that have them, and that this contributes to power imbalances. What do you see as the current state of things and do you see any hope that the developing countries will be able to catch up and benefit from space technologies as much as we do in develop countries without like something catastrophic happening.

Yeah, the catastrophic might not be happened because they're too much prey. As is there a launching them things to the orbit. Then there are many the sounds on the eyes is watching their spaces every time, every second under already the wholesales and satirized by one company studying system is covering us and they studying system guys are watching the orbit every second. Of course, under the China already they launched the two space and two space stations and under and they're open to launching the projects to their their.

Can go second.

And the North Korea already the launching the manything to the there and another country is starting to the launching the manzing.

Then the increasing of the player makes to.

The watching by each watching each others, and that makes.

The club thing or the big.

Projects for the big tyrant country may not be appear because there are too many players. Is working on the space basically and the challenge of the spaces that will let our past see to the sky at least, then that makes the interesting is kept on the orbit.

Then I think there.

The club things think may not occur from the space, but also from the ground.

I think wonderful. Thank you again very much for doing us on the podcast today and talking to us about your book and congratulations on it.

So I forgot to tell you that when the op about op the clouds, then the cloud sets the date of the twenty twenty Then why I said this year is because the moon is not shown in Christmas it's a new moon date.

Then I was very love about the when the people looking about the sky if there was a moon, I should describe the position of the moon every time.

Then I've touched when the new moon.

I searched, sir, I should set their the date of the story. This is a seven days story. They're during the new moon.

Terms.

Then I phoned that twenty twenty. It's the best just after the president was changed. Great, then I said a year to the op their credit.

I love that you used the moon phase to figure out when the book was going to be set. That's awesome.

So there are many scientifictsid the science fiction found phone.

That's were is the moon or there.

On the time the moon is on the in front of you? You then everybody cannot see the meteo or other another thing today. Then I once remove the moon, then I phone the new moon comes lights count remove the moon easily, but science fiction cannot do it.

When you read science fiction, do you check the science yourself? Do you think is that accurate? Would the moon be in the sky? Are you that detailed in your reading as well?

Yes, exactly. We cannot escape from the science.

Awesome, awesome, all right, well again, thank you very much for joining us on the podcast. All right, so that was super fun interview. Thanks everybody for joining us, and thank you Kelly for reading this book with me and chatting with us about it today.

Thanks for having me, and thanks again for doing another one of these sci fi episodes where I have an excuse to read a super fun book.

I had a blast, all right, Thanks very much, and we encourage everybody to check out this book. It's a lot of fun. Thanks for listening. Thanks for listening, and remember that Daniel and Jorge Explain the Universe is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. When you pop a piece of cheese into your mouth, you're probably not thinking about the environmental impact. But the people in the dairy industry are. That's why they're working hard every day to find new ways to reduce waste, conserve natural resources, and drive down greenhouse gas emissions. How is us dairy tackling greenhouse gases? Many farms use anaerobic digestors to turn the methane from manure into renewable energy. That can power farms, towns and electric cars. Visit you as Dairy dot COM's Last sustainability to learn more.

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Daniel and Jorge Explain the Universe

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