Alcohol Clouds Freezing Chamber: Dark Days Are Coming by Adnan Somani

Alcohol Clouds Freezing Chamber: Dark Days Are Coming by Adnan Somani

Author:Adnan Somani [Somani, Adnan]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Published: 2018-05-23T22:00:00+00:00


Since the components of the alcohol clouds did not resemble any of the terrestrial chemical elements, it was hard to find out how to handle them. They were inert, non-reactive elements. No covalent bond, no ionic bond, no polar covalent bond, no reduction reaction. Not unlike noble elements, they had a shell full of electron-like particles, so they did not attach to other elements’ molecules. They did not have extra electrons to form covalent bonds. Their ionization energy were extremely high, so they could not form ions.

When the alcohol clouds’ components were subjected to high pressure (coming from the akasha towers), they formed bonds with oxygen, nitrogen, and fluoride. Pressure broke their original bonds and they created new bonds with the earthly elements. Factors like light intensity or the temperature of the atmosphere could affect the process. The result was a more complex and less harmful chemical, salts that the akasha towers could capture in filters.

This was how they should be able to extract aquilite, orionite, and phoenite from the atmosphere. However, their infrastructure was imperfect, and they needed help with the high pressure. This was where they needed Sam’s space engineering knowledge.

Complicated equations appeared in his head. It was like a dark mental laptop screen, with glowing bright yellow numbers, letters, and symbols. It made sense. He could comprehend everything in a few seconds – the mental connection that Alicia offered flooded him with information. It was incredible, the work the Washington scientists have done. They have almost solved the issue that wiped out most of humankind.

His heart was running. Now he could sense the complex algorithms that Washington space engineers and software engineers have set up. He could see a kaleidoscope of various aerospace sciences, environment control, fluid dynamics, energetics, information processing, and he could understand everything.

Then it was over. He – or Alicia – lost the mental bond. His conscious was clear, he was there, back in the control panel room, surrounded by the blinking lights of equipment. He felt delighted. Since he woke up, not knowing who he was and where he was, he felt satisfied and happy. He knew that they were going to be alright. They would get rid of the alcohol clouds.

Then his gaze fell upon Alicia. She looked very pale, but otherwise unharmed. She sent him a confident smile.

“Are you alright?” Sam asked. He felt less light-hearted now.

That exhausted yet triumphant smile grew wider. Her deep set, green eyes were bright, her sharp face looked pretty now.

“I couldn’t be any better.”

“You look tired.” She looked wiped out.

“It’s not that easy to keep up the connection,” she nodded, looking into the space ahead of her. She was talking to herself rather than him. Then she looked back at him. “You think of my skills as tentacles. Now, they aren’t tentacles. They are waves. Resonations. Like the waves of sound.

“That woman, that Dr. Clarke, the one who discovered this . . . she’s a genius. She should receive a Nobel Prize.”

“She did receive one. She and her two fellow scientists.



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