"Space family Stone (1952)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Heinlein Robert A)'And two!
'And - ' Castor's chant was blanked out by the blazing 'white noise' of the jet; the Rolling Stone cast herself into the void.
VI - BALLISIICS AND BUSTER
Blasting off from Luna is not the terrifying and oppressive experience that a lift from Earth is. The Moon's field is so weak, her gravity well so shallow, that a boost of one-g would suffice - just enough to produce Earth-normal weight.
Captain Stone chose to use two gravities, both to save time and to save fuel by getting quickly away from Luna - 'quickly' because any reactive mass spent simply to hold a spaceship up against the pull of a planet is an 'overhead' cost; it does nothing toward getting one where one wants to go. Furthermore, while the Rolling Stone would operate at low thrust she could do so only by being very wasteful of reactive mass, i.e., by not letting the atomic pile heat the hydrogen hot enough to produce a really efficient jet speed.
So he caused the Stone to boost at two gravities for slightly over two minutes. Two gravities - a mere nothing! The pressure felt by a wrestler pinned to the mat by the body of his opponent - the acceleration experienced by a child in a school-yard swing - hardly more than the push resulting from standing up very suddenly.
But the Stone family had been living on Luna; all the children had been born there - two gravities was twelve times what they were used to.
Roger's headache, which had quieted under the sedative his wife had prescribed for him, broke out again with renewed strength. His chest felt caved in; he fought for breath and he had to read and reread the accelerometer to convince himself that the ship had not run wild.
After checking over his board and assuring himself that all was going according to plan even if it did feel like a major catastrophe he turned his head heavily. 'Cas? You all right?'
Castor gasped, 'Sure Skipper . . . tracking to flight plan.
'Very well, sir.' He turned his face to his inter-com link. 'Edith -'
There was no answer. 'Edith"
This time a strained voice replied, 'Yes, dear.'
'Are you alnght?'
'Yes, dear. Meade and I. . . are all right. The baby is having a bad time.'
He was about to call the power room when Castor reminded him of the passage of time. 'Twenty seconds! Nineteen! Eighteen -'
He tumed his eyes to the brennschluss timer and poised his hand on the cut-off switch, ready to choke the jet if the autopilot should fail. Across from him Castor covered him should he fail; below in the power room Hazel was doing the same thing, hand trembling over the cut-off.
As the timer flashed the last half second, as Castor shouted, 'Brennschluss!', three hands slammed at three switches - but the autopilot had beaten them to it. The jet gasped as its liquid food was suddenly cut off from it; damper plates quenched the seeking neutrons in the atomic pile - and the Stone was in free orbit, falling toward Earth in a sudden, aching silence broken only by the whispering of the airconditioner.
Roger Stone reswallowed his stomach, 'Power room!' he rasped. 'Report!'
He could hear Hazel sighing heavily. 'Okay, son,' she said feebly, 'but mind that top step - it's a dilly!'
'Cas, call the port. Get a doppler check.'
'Aye aye, sir.' Castor called the radar & doppler station at Leyport. The Rolling Stone had all the usual radar and piloting instruments but a spaceship cannot possibly carry equipment of the size and accuracy of those mounted as pilot aids at all ports and satellite stations. 'Rolling Stone to Luna Pilot - come in, Luna Pilot.' While he called he was warming up their own radar and doppler-radar, preparing to check the performance of their own instruments against the land-based standards. He did this without being told, it being a co-pilot's routine duty.
'Luna Pilot to Rolling' Stone.'
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