"Well, it"s there, just the same. What"s the use of arguing the fact? What other information about the star is given?"
"A name."
"Ah! What is it?"
"Alpha."
There was a short pause, then Pelorat said eagerly, "That"s it,old man. That"s the final bit of evidence. Consider the meaning."
"Does it have a meaning?" said Trevize. "It"s just a name to me,and an odd one. It doesn"t sound Galactic."
"It isn"t Galactic. It"s in a prehistoric language of Earth, the same one that gave us Gaia as the name of Bliss"s planet."
"What does Alpha mean, then?"
"Alpha is the first letter of the alphabet of that ancient language. That is one of the most firmly attested scraps of knowledge we have about it. In ancient times, `alpha" was sometimes used to mean the first of anything. To call a sun `Alpha," implies that it"s the first sun. And wouldn"t the first sun be the one around which a planet revolved that was the first planet to bear human life Earth?"
"Are you sure of that?"
"Absolutely," said Pelorat.
"Is there anything in early legends you"re the mythologist,after all that gives Earth"s sun some very unusual attribute?"
"No, how can there be? It has to be standard by definition, and the characteristics the computer has given us ate as standard as possible,I imagine. Aren"t they?"
"Earth"s sun is a single star, I suppose?"
Pelorat said, "Well, of course! As far as I know, all inhabited worlds orbit single stars."
"So I would have thought myself," said Trevize. "The trouble is that that star in the center of the viewscreen is not a single star,it is a binary. The brighter of the two stars making up the binary is indeed standard and it is that one for which the computer supplied us with data. Circling that star with a period of roughly eighty years,however, is another star with a mass four-fifths that of the brighter one. We can"t see the two as separate stars with the unaided eye, but if I were to enlarge the view, I"m sure we would."
"Are you certain of that, Golan?" said Pelorat, taken aback.
"It"s what the computer is telling me. And if we are looking at a binary star, then it"s not Earth"s sun. It can"t be."
71.
Trevize broke contact with the computer, and the lights brightened.
That was the signal, apparently, for Bliss to return, with Fallom tagging after her. "Well, then, what are the results?" she asked.
Trevize said tonelessly, "Somewhat disappointing. Where I expected to find Earth"s sun, I found a binary star, instead. Earth"s sun is a single star, so the one centered is not it."
Pelorat said, "Now what, Golan?"
Trevize shrugged. "I didn"t really expect to see Earth"s sun centered. Even the Spacers wouldn"t settle worlds in such a way as to set up an exact sphere. Aurora, the oldest of the Spacer worlds, might have sent out settlers of its own and that may have distorted the sphere,too. Then, too, Earth"s sun may not have moved at precisely the average velocity of the Spacer worlds."
Pelorat said, "So the Earth can be anywhere. Is that what you"re saying?"
"No. Not quite `anywhere." All these possible sources of error can"t amount to much. Earth"s sun must be in the vicinity of the co-ordinates. The star we"ve spotted almost exactly at the co-ordinates must be a neighbor of Earth"s sun. It"s startling that there should be a neighbor that so closely resembles Earth"s sun except for being a binary but that must be the case."
"But we would see Earth"s sun on the map, then, wouldn"t we?
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