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Ganymede North

Bryce Science Fiction posted on Feb 13, 2011
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Description


There were some comments about my rather boring star background last time. I could point out that in the glare of a bright planet, you'd hardly see any stars at all. But where's the fun in that. It's art, after all. So in this image, I did some Photoshop for the star background, using Ron's Flames and Smoke brushes for the nebula effect, and then added lens flares for two bright stars. Plus another flare to the artifact. Planets, ship, little spacemen and artifact all rendered in Bryce. Thanks for viewing, commenting and favoriting. --- You'd think an artifact at Ganymede's North Pole would be obvious, but when the first orbital probes photographed the area, it was in shadow. There was a glint of something infrared, but it was dismissed as an imaging artifact, not a real one. The Third Jupiter Expedition landed on Ganymede in 2039, but in the equatorial zones, and the North Pole was again in shadow. It wasn't until the Japanese mission of in 2043 that the Artifact was noticed, glinting under a drawn-out sunset. With barely enough fuel for a polar landing, the two Japanese astronauts, Shima and Hara, could do little but record the inscriptions on the artifact's cylindrical base platform and make a failed attempt to scrape a few samples before they returned to their lander and hurried back to orbit. It wasn't until six years later, the after the next dawn over Ganymede's North Pole that the Archimedes arrived and Commander John Tate took one of his lander's down to the pole. As the previous expedition had recorded, the base of the oddly shaped twelve-sided monument was inscribed in five distinct scripts. It was a veritable Rosetta stone, had any one of those languages been decipherable. Tate discovered that the crystalline structure that had defeated the Japanese instruments was diamond and that the artifact's base was a gold-nanocarbon amalgam nearly as strong as the crystal. It was nearly impossible to date the artifact itself, but by looking at micrometeorite damage from the disturbed soil around the base, it had erected, or last been excavate, anyway, about fifty thousand years prior. Tate's best guess was that the Artifact was a survey marker, a hypothesis borne out by the discovery of similar markers at the North Poles of Londo around Alpha Centauri and on Gram, the largest moon of Siegfried in the Tau Ceti system. But those discoveries were a century in the future. It was another century beyond that before the Alimeen revealed that the markers were in fact survey monuments from the Grand Federation of Races, far to coreward. We still don't know exactly what the inscriptions mean. --Norton's Guide to Ganymede: A Tourist's Handbook, Norton Press, 2512

Comments (10)


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NefariousDrO

8:13PM | Sun, 13 February 2011

That is so cool! Reminds me of "2001", but with your own unique and creative twist. I love that relic! I would say that I didn't thing the previous star field was boring, in fact I liked how it was done, considering how our neighborhood is kind of dull, when you think about it. But then, I'd argue that's a good thing: most of the really picturesque nebulae are in fact pretty lethal places, but as you say, "It's Art!" after all. Nice work!

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grafikeer

9:01PM | Sun, 13 February 2011

One area I wish had more options to it is the stars in Bryce...not very versatile,and can't be seen in,say,a late afternoon image.You did really well with what you pulled off here,the nebula works very well.Love the lander,and the overall scene!

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kjer_99

9:22PM | Sun, 13 February 2011

Great stuff!--both the writing and the render.

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peedy

11:59PM | Sun, 13 February 2011

Fantastic scene. Corrie

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jmb007

5:55AM | Mon, 14 February 2011

bonne image

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Bambam131

1:54PM | Mon, 14 February 2011

Very nice picture and the story is very well thought out. I only have one suggestion and that is the maneuvering thrusters on the landers seem quite big for the size of the ship. The terrain, background, starfield and Jupiter looks great by the way. Wonderful presentation, Keep them coming!!! Cheers, David

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wblack

5:46PM | Mon, 14 February 2011

Excellent work my friend -- I think you're probably right about star fields in close proximity to planets, but as you say, it is art -- and you've done excellent work here at creating realistic nebula. I like your Lander models -- sort of a Soviet/Russian does Space-X Dragon feel to them -- and I think NefariousDrO nailed it -- you've captured somehow the feel of 2001-with the text and story being completely your own -- really fine work all around.

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SIGMAWORLD

4:00PM | Sat, 19 February 2011

Interesting.

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Seaview123

5:47PM | Mon, 07 March 2011

"All these worlds are yours except Europa. Attempt no landing here. Use them together, use them in peace..." I saw the 2010 movie recently, and this pic reminds me of it. Nice job on the artistic space background, too.

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e-brink

4:03PM | Sat, 10 January 2015

You always carry such great attention to detail and this is no exception to that rule. Excellent backstory.


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