At this mont, the closest star to Xiao Yu was Star C. Its color was yellow-white, indicating a surface temperature higher than that of the Sun. Correspondingly, its mass was also greater—about 1.8 tis the mass of the Sun.
Depending on surface temperature, stars present different colors, ranging from low to high: red, yellow, white, and blue. Generally, the higher a star’s surface temperature, the greater its mass, though this isn’t absolute. For instance, red giants also appear red, yet they are many tis larger than red dwarfs. Their red color is due to entering the final stages of stellar life, where their volu expands and temperature drops.
Star C was a yellow-white star—the largest in the Aquila IV system. Currently, the poor little planet orbited around it. Xiao Yu’s destination was this very star.
Normally, planetary orbits around a star are predictable. Take Earth: its distance from the Sun at any given point in the year is nearly constant, leading to a stable orbit. But this planet was different. At the sa point in its orbit, it could be found in wildly different positions from one cycle to the next. That ant its orbit was extrely unstable. It wasn’t like a proper planet—it was more like one of those errant cots drifting in from interstellar space.
Clearly, this instability was caused by gravitational perturbations from the other stars in the system. The disruptions were so severe that the planet frequently changed its host star.
Xiao Yu had begun observing the planet a full year before arriving at Aquila IV. Over that year, the planet had switched host stars six tis—an average of once every two months. Its orbital instability was evident.
Only after entering the vicinity of this quintuple star system did Xiao Yu begin to grasp its strangeness.
Since there’s no diffuse scattering in the vacuum of space, all celestial objects—be they planets or spacecraft—have a clear light/dark divide when near a star. The side facing the star is day; the far side is night. But not here. In this system, there was no such thing as night. No matter the angle, front or back, Xiao Yu’s fleet was lit up by starlight.
As Xiao Yu gathered data from the stars, he continued his approach. Now, he was just 300 million kiloters from the planet.
He had fully entered the interior of the Aquila IV system.
At this distance, Xiao Yu suddenly observed all five stars flash simultaneously. In that instant, the positions of the five stars shifted by about 0.3 degrees. But in the very next mont, they returned to normal—as if the shift had never occurred.
The phenonon imdiately put Xiao Yu on high alert.
“What happened? Can they teleport?” Xiao Yu frowned, retrieving all observational data from that mont and analyzing it in detail.
But the results only deepened his confusion. All paraters—mass, luminosity, orbital data—appeared completely normal. This made him question whether his instrunts had malfunctioned.
Yet he quickly dismissed the thought. A single instrunt failing could be explained. But for thousands of devices to simultaneously malfunction? The odds were astronomically low.
Xiao Yu’s pulse quickened with excitent.
“This phenonon… I can’t explain it yet. But the girl’s diary did say the Grand Unified Theory was hidden sowhere in this system. Could this bizarre phenonon be related to it?”
It was the most plausible explanation.
“At present, I don’t know what causes this effect or how it operates. But if I stay here long enough, I’ll figure it out. If I can explain this phenonon, I might be very close to grasping the Grand Unified Theory.”
Xiao Yu grew more energized. The unknown wasn’t terrifying—it was failing to discover the unknown while believing you had mastered everything. Just like during Newton’s ti: people thought they had fully grasped the workings of the universe through the three laws of motion. Using them, they even discovered Uranus and Neptune. As a result, scientific progress stalled—until Einstein and other geniuses identified new phenona, researched them, and proposed new theories. Only then did humanity leap forward into the atomic age.
Quantum chanics and relativity had both erged from that era—driving humanity to explore the unknown and acquire more knowledge.
Xiao Yu’s ship steadily approached the planet and entered orbit.
Up close, Xiao Yu got a clear view of its surface.
A smooth, black crystalline terrain. There were no significant elevations, no mountains, no valleys.
“Truly pitiful,” Xiao Yu murmured, his sympathy for the planet rising.
Its surface conditions clearly spoke of prolonged tornt. The black landscape was composed of once-molten rock. It wasn’t hard to imagine: ti after ti, it had drifted near a star, only to be scorched by imnse stellar heat—lting the surface rock—then cooled and solidified as it drifted away, only to be lted again next cycle…
In this cycle of lting and solidifying, all geological detail had been erased.
It had no atmosphere. Even if it once had one, it had long since been stripped away by relentless solar bombardnt. Now, it lay just 50 million kiloters from Star C—less than half the Earth-Sun distance. And given Star C’s activity exceeded the Sun’s by a large margin, even Earth’s atmosphere would be stripped away in a million years at this range.
Under the light of Star C, its surface temperature reached 400°C. At this temperature, its rocky terrain emitted a faint red glow, like a terrifying hell of molten lava.
Besides Star C, Stars D and E were also not far—170 million and 200 million kiloters away. From this planet’s surface, Star C looked as large as a millstone, dozens of tis brighter than the Sun. Star D appeared basketball-sized, slightly dimr than the Sun. Star E resembled a soccer ball—faintly red and only one-tenth as bright as the Sun—but still a thousand tis brighter than a full moon.
Three stars illuminated this hellish world.
The rear side of the planet was even more surreal. It was tidally locked to Star C, aning it always faced that star with the sa side. On its far side, 770 million and 800 million kiloters away, were Stars A and B. From that distance, they shone with brightnesses tens to hundreds of tis greater than a full moon, bathing the surface in a dusky golden hue—similar to twilight on Earth. Anyone reading a book here wouldn’t need additional light to see the words.
The night-side temperature hovered around 10°C.
This was the world where Xiao Yu intended to settle.
“The environnt isn’t great… I’ll just have to make do,” he thought with a wry smile.
Compared to the Aquila three system and the Arrow Beast howorld, this place was a far cry from livable.
But here, Xiao Yu began his preparations.
First, a large particle collider was essential. But placing it in orbit around a star would be inappropriate. So Xiao Yu opted to scale it down and have it orbit the planet instead. Next, aside from researching unknown phenona, he also planned to continue upgrading his fleet—so massive shipyards were a must.
Since there were no gas giants here, acquiring fuel was a problem. To address this, Xiao Yu had to conduct mining surveys on the planet to extract nuclear fission fuel as a replacent for fusion fuel.
In Xiao Yu’s plan, fusion fuel was ergency-only. Energy in the Aquila IV system would co mainly from solar and fission sources.
To gather enough construction materials, he also had to build underground bases to shield against stellar heat—further increasing the workload. But Xiao Yu wasn’t in a hurry. Cracking the Grand Unified Theory was a long-term endeavor, and he had no illusions of a quick breakthrough.
After launching several satellites for geological exploration and gaining detailed planetary data, Xiao Yu deployed heavily modified robots to the surface and began building his base.
Amidst this flurry of activity, Xiao Yu didn’t neglect observation of the five stars.
Three days after arriving, he once again witnessed the strange stellar shift phenonon—this ti, from the planet’s night side.
Two huge, bright “moons” suddenly vanished from Xiao Yu’s view—reappearing in slightly different positions, about 0.6 degrees offset. The shift lasted about 1/3000 of a second before returning to normal—as if nothing had ever happened.
“It’s happening again…” Xiao Yu’s eyes lit up with excitent.
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