Stellaris can you abandon planets Continue Fictional images of The Deneb Planetary Systems of stars, apart from the Sun and solar system, are a major element in many scientific fiction. The general use of Deneb can be named in fictional works for its metaphorical (or mythological) associations, or as a bright dot of light in the Earth's sky, but not as a place in space or the center of the planetary system: Chi Xi (206 BC - 220 AD), the night of the sevens, a festival in honor of the legend of the Han dynasty. A young cowherd Nya Lung (Altair) meets by chance and marries a Nŭ weaver (Vega), the seventh daughter of the Heavenly Goddess; they live happily together and have a couple of children (its wing stars β and γ Aquila). The goddess, enraged by the fact that Nŭ married a mere mortal, orders her house to resume his day job, weaving colorful clouds. Nya Len follows her, but does not go unnoticed by her mother, who angrily uses her studs to scratch a wide river in the sky - the Milky Way - to permanently separate the lovers. Once a year all the magpies in the world squeeze over them and fly to heaven to form a bridge over the star of Deneb in Swan so they can be together for one night. High Sierra (1941), a film written by John Huston and W. R. Burnett, and directed by Raoul Walsh. On the way to a planned robbery in the Sierra Nevada mountains, Roy Earle (Humphrey Bogart) meets Velma (Joan Leslie). Under the night sky one romantic evening, he points to various stars to it: ROY ... you see different stars at different times. They change over the course of the year. See another bright star of the variety northeast of Vega? It's Deneb in the constellation Cygnus, I think. I get kind of rusty... Eden (1959), a novel written by Stanislav Lem. The crew of the spaceship - captain, doctor, engineer, chemist, physicist and cybernetics - emergency land for an unknown reason in the alien world, which they call Eden. They make a series of increasingly strange discoveries, culminating in contact with a totalitarian dual civilization ruled by a dictatorship that denies its existence and thus cannot be destroyed. After a day of sad events, the crew sit around the camp stove to talk, then: ... When they put out the stove, they plunged into total darkness. The stars above him sparkled intensely in what seemed a particularly low sky. Deneb, the physicist said softly. The men looked up... Cygnus X-1 (1977-1978), the duoology of Progressive Rock Songs by Rush. In this allegory, the space explorer uses the Cygnus X-1 black hole as a portal to Olympus, where he faces the Nietzsche conflict, formulated from the perspective of Greek mythology, between the Apollo and Dionysian worldviews. The star Deneb (also in Swan, four times closer to Earth) serves as its guiding star to a more distant, invisible singularity: I set a course east of the Lyra / Flying in the light via the Milky Way / . / Headed to the heart of the Swan /Headlong in mystery . In the lead below, most of the literary references to Deneb occurred in the account of the years after 1943, the banner of the year of the star as cynosure, when its spectrum was chosen as one of the stable anchor points by which the spectra of all other stars would be classified. A break of 30 years followed, until around 1990 there was a cluster of works of new interest to the star. Stellaris: Infinite Frontiers (2016), a book based on the game Stellaris (also 2016). The story unfolds in Deneba, a pre-installed empire of the Commonwealth of Man. Toumel (No1940- ), novels and plays by M.A.R. Barker. Deneb is the home star of the bajaka six-legged beast riding (riding beasts are extremely rare on Takumel), found in the mountains and grassy plains of the Tane Peninsula, west of Mu'lavuga. #15. Star of Horror (1943) and other books from the series Captain The Future, a number written by Edmond Hamilton. Captain Future Curtis Newton, a brilliant scientist and adventurer who roams the solar system solving problems, fix bugs, and defeat supervillains. All planet systems and many satellites and asteroids are habitable, and most of them are inhabited by humanoids. Future and its buddies Future People visit the planet Aar in the Deneb system (see chart), which is the origin of earthly people as well as many humanoid races throughout the solar system and beyond. Uncommon Sense (1945), a story by Hal Clement. After his crew of two-man mutinies, skipper Laird Cunningham disables his space boat and maroons the ship on the sun-blasted'moonlike planet Deneb. Dead Ahead (1950), a short story published as The Ultimate Quest in Super Science Stories and written by Jack Vance as John Holbrook. The spaceship of the main character of the story Tiram passes by Deneb: Dead ahead was Deneb - the line of their path around the universe. A Place in the Sun (1956), a short story written by Stephen Marlowe as C. H. Thames, published in Amazing Stories. Elan (personality) of Special Agent Johnny Mayhem is instantly transferred from Canopus to Deneb City on Deneb IV, the site of recent civil unrest where a dead body waits for him in cold storage. Sense of Power (1958), the story of Isaac Asimov. The Land Federation is at war with Deneb, and it depends on portable devices like digital pocket calculators that will be unavailable until after 1971. Later, Asimov essentially refused to use such stories in his stories. star names like Deneb. I'm a Stranger Here Myself (1960), a story by Mack Reynolds, published in Amazing Stories. Deneb mentioned in the A couple of foreigners at the bar. The Machine That Won the War (1961), the story of Isaac Asimov. This story also includes the war with Deneb. Roadside Picnic (1972), a short novel by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky (English trance 1977). Aliens from the star Deneb visit the Earth and stay briefly in six areas that subsequently became known as the visiting zone. Hyperion (1989), the first novel in the Hyperion Cantos series by Dan Simmons. Humanity has spread across the galaxy, and makes wasteful, casual use of farcaster technology to travel instantly between any two points in space (to its ultimate street). Deneb Drey (Deneb III, german) and Deneb Vir (Deneb IV) are habitable planets in the Deneb system. Rowan (1990) and other novels in the series Tower and Beehive by Anne McCaffrey. Jeff Raven is a native of Deneb VIII, home to a large number of unprepared Wild Talents (1993- ), a series of novels written by David Weber. The star of the Deneb system, where honorverse rules of war, Deneb agreements (similar to the Geneva Conventions) were agreed upon with the sponsorship of the Solarian League. The film and television Star Trek Elements in this subsection all refer to the work in the film, television and print franchise originated by Gene Roddenberry. Where No Man Has Gone Before (1966), the second pilot episode of Star Trek: The Original Series, written by Samuel A. Peeples. Powerful and dangerous newly minted telepath Gary Mitchell remembers with his old friend Captain Kirk about a wild coastal vacation that they once spent together on Deneb IV, a planet of paranormal adepts, where he has already demonstrated high mental potential. Mitchell decorates his side of the account with a story about an intense romantic encounter with a Denebian woman. I, Mudd (1967), an episode of Star Trek: The Original Series written by Gene Roddenberry and David Gerrold (in the credits). Mr Spock reads the penalty for fraud on Deneb V as death by the method chosen by the guilty party. Before he is interrupted by Harry Mudd, he reads available options like death by electric shock, gas, phaser, and hanging. Mudd was found guilty of fraud by the Denebians (a.k.a. Deneb V) who imprisoned him after consulting with Vulcans that they had illegally sold the full patent rights to the Vulcan Mudda fuel synthesizer. Mudd finds himself in the circumstances of an episode adrift in a ship rendered unnavigable, being bombarded by Denebians for his prison break and stealing a ship on Deneb V. (Compare Riegel: Mudd's Women.) Problem with Tribbles (1967), an episode of Star Trek: The Original series written by David Gerrold. The USS Enterprise pulls into the K7 Deep Space Station, where the trouble immediately begins with the crew of a Klingon battle cruiser on the shore to leave, and Suffers infestation of tribles, adorable fluff balls that breed without borders and have everything in sight. Things go from bad to worse as Korax, the Klingon first officer, calls Captain Kirk Denebian the devil's slime and many of the tribbles die from an unknown cause, it later emerged to be an unintended consequence of the Klingon conspiracy. The station, however, remains infected, with the rogue trader who submitted them charged to clean them all; but on board the Enterprise, Scotty transported them to a linging ship. Encounter at Farpoint (1987), a two-hour pilot episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, written by Gene Roddenberry and directed by Corey Allen. Captain Pickard and the crew of the newly built USS Enterprise-D explore the mysterious Farpoint station in orbit around Deneb IV, which the mysterious Bundy offers to the Federation - all this when he toils under the subjective gaze of a powerful alien creature that calls himself Kew.
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