Booth Peninsula is a barren place, far away in the Arctic region of Canada's frozen east coast. A lonely outpost, the world’s main spaceport, was built on it, from which the rocket departed and headed for the same lonely moon base. Li Huai had read it and was looking forward to seeing it, but realized that Magellan's flight marked another change in the rapidly changing history of the conquest of space.

One hour passed. The small valley was cleared by tourists. The crew is required to take off, such as at the control station, the sum of the graphs, and observe the energy output. The rest of the crew were tied to the bed. According to special requirements, observe in the control room, half-lying like other people, sit on a chair, and tie it tightly.

Haines said when supervising the kidnapping activities: "No one knows if this is necessary. But we don't have any chance." He went to the dormitory and did the same thing.

Lockhart looked at the dial in front of him, waiting for the load to increase. There was a muffled noise over the head when the generator was generating electricity. Detmar called out a mysterious number every few seconds, and the colonel checked it. The two astronomers were idle, looking at the audience. They did the calculations long ago.

"Time," pressed the button and called to the colonel. The gong sounded throughout the dormitory. He moved the lever slowly.

The surge in pressure that Li Bai waited for him to read always happened at takeoff. But there is no such pressure. He lay on the chair and clenched his arms. Gradually, he realized a strange feeling. He seemed to become dizzy and full of unexpected energy. He felt an impulse to giggle, and then he lifted his foot to find it surprisingly quick. Around him, other people stirred in their seats, as if caught by the same impulse.

Now he felt helpless and became dizzy. When the blood in his body surged, his head jumped up. His heart began to beat violently.

"We are losing weight," Clyde murmured from the chair, and Li Bai knew that the ship was taking off nervously.

The great generators begin to resist the gravity of the earth, and as their power moves upward to match the gravity of the earth, the weight of all objects during the swing is reduced accordingly. Lockhart's first step was simply to reduce the earth's pull to zero.

Soon, this was achieved. Magellan gained weightlessness internally. Those who looked outside from the bunkers in the surrounding mountains saw huge tears trembling and began to slowly rise above the cradle of its beam. It floated upwards gently, and slowly moved away as the centrifugal force of the earth began to manifest in the huge mass of the metal bubble.

In the same tests conducted or in actual satellite flights, the crew experienced zero gravity, and so far no one has felt too uncomfortable. The overall structure of the ship trembled, and Li Bai realized that the inner sphere containing the air space was hanging freely on his sports field.

Lockhart sounded the second gong, and then turned a new control knob. The change in the tone of the generator made them faintly heard, creating a new change. The boat seemed to jump up suddenly, as if something had caught it. The feeling of weightlessness disappeared suddenly, and then I felt dizzy and suddenly hanging upside down.

Shockingly, Li Badi felt himself hanging from the low floor, and the floor turned into a ceiling. He opened his mouth and shouted because he thought he was about to jump onto the hard metal on the ceiling, which was hanging so steeply below him.

Then there was a feeling of rotation, a side twist that made him sway on the belt. When I arrived, the room seemed to be moving. The curved bottom of the control room suddenly turned into a floor, and turned into a wall, skewed and eerie. Then it moved again, and surprisingly, when the hemispherical room returned to its normal state, Li Wei fell back into his upholstered seat.

Lockhart bent down, carefully moving the joystick little by little. Clyde bent down and looked at the audience, calling out a small correction.

Now, Li Huai finally felt the pressure he expected. His weight steadily increased, returned to normal, and then increased. He found himself breathing intently, forcing his lungs to resist the increasing weight of his ribs.

"Stand up," his buzzing eardrum heard someone say-it could be Oberfield. "We don't need to accelerate by more than one gram. Take it easy."

The weight is immediately reduced. Then the pressure disappeared. Everything seems normal. Lockhart sat down and began to loosen his belt. Others followed suit.

In one observer, Li Huai caught a glimpse of the blackness of outer space, while in another observer, the gray-green broad bowl of the earth spread below. In the third time, he saw a disc like the scorching sun.

"Is everything going well?" he asked Clyde quietly.

The redhead looked up at him and smiled. He said: "Better than we expected on our first flight."

"We are now holding onto the sun tightly. We are falling towards the sun; not just falling, but pulling ourselves toward the sun faster so that we can maintain normal gravity pressure. We are going soon." We started to rotate the sphere of living space from the beginning. This was the reason why everything seemed to be reversed at the time, and it was also the reason why everything returned to normal. "

Lee nodded. "But this means that we are now in an upside-down state relative to the earth!"

"Of course." Clyde said. "But in space, everything is strictly relative. We are no longer on Earth. We are an independent object in space, falling toward the sun through space."

"Why the sun?" Li Bad asked. "I thought our first goal was to become a planet of Venus?"

"It's difficult to repair Venus from such a close Earth. Instead, we lock onto the sun and pull us inward. When we get closer to the orbit of Venus, we will reverse and pull up toward Venus." answer.

"Isn't that very risky?" Li Hao asked, remembering some brief introductions he had given him. "This runs counter to your plan."

Lockhart raised his head quickly. "Yes, you are right." He admitted. "But in such a trip, we must learn to improvise and do it quickly. We made this decision when we took off."

Li Badi felt chilled for a while. Then he realized that everyone else on the ship had always known-they were amateurs on this flight, everything they did was improvised in one way or another, and they must always offend Risk of serious errors.

Was locked on the sun the first such mistake?

Gradually, the ship settled down. As Li Huai discovered, for most crew members in this space flight, there is nothing to do. The channel is pre-drawn, and its layout will cause the spacecraft to fall towards its target-into a narrow, curved track. The ship will pass a certain time at a certain speed or acceleration, during which time the ship will traverse a specific part of the drawn route.

Then, at a specified moment, the speed will be checked, the attraction of the sun will be reversed, and then the ship will try to brake and prevent its fall toward the big sun. If the calculation is correct, it should have crossed the orbit of the planet Venus at the same position and about the same time as Venus itself when the fall stopped. In this way, the ship reached the planet.

Now that all these calculations have been completed, once completed, it can be started on the ship’s control panel. In fact, there are very few intervals between them, except for astronomical observations, checking the performance of the stellar device, monitoring the damage caused by meteors and micro-meteors, and following normal meal and sleep schedules. These people set up a 24-hour earth time plan, divided the crew into three eight-hour shifts, and directed them accordingly.

Li Huai has no time for him. Although the space available for ten people is limited, there is always something to learn and think about.

When Russell Clyde got off work, he spent a lot of time with Lee Bad. They watched the black depth of the interplanetary space surrounding them on a wide screen. The earth shrank into a brilliant green disk, and before them, the narrow crescent near Venus could be seen gradually growing. The rosy Mars is sharp and small, it is a russet spot, which is beyond the green of the earth. Stars-Li Huai has never seen so many stars-the gritty light is dotted with a brilliant bit of light-the millions of suns in the Milky Way and the Milky Way beyond us.

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