Story about machine-life spaceship that eats asteroids in order to spawn
This was in a science fiction novel from the 1970s or 1980s, I think.
There was an alien life form that was machine life, an interstellar spacecraft that traveled to new solar systems, ate asteroids, and used the material to spawn offspring. Sort of a living von Neumann self-replicating space probe. She and her offspring were quite capable of catching and devouring human-built spacecraft.
If I recall correctly, there were aliens living in the solar system's Oort cloud of comets. They were refugees who fled an infestation of the machine life in their home solar system, and were hiding in ours. Part of the plot was the aliens trying to peacefully contact us humans to alert us to the threat. The aliens had detected the machine life queen heading this way, but humans were had not spotted it yet.
The paperback cover was mostly black, with a dark planet and a fan-like spray of sparks radiating from a point.
Does this sound familiar?
story-identification novel
add a comment |
This was in a science fiction novel from the 1970s or 1980s, I think.
There was an alien life form that was machine life, an interstellar spacecraft that traveled to new solar systems, ate asteroids, and used the material to spawn offspring. Sort of a living von Neumann self-replicating space probe. She and her offspring were quite capable of catching and devouring human-built spacecraft.
If I recall correctly, there were aliens living in the solar system's Oort cloud of comets. They were refugees who fled an infestation of the machine life in their home solar system, and were hiding in ours. Part of the plot was the aliens trying to peacefully contact us humans to alert us to the threat. The aliens had detected the machine life queen heading this way, but humans were had not spotted it yet.
The paperback cover was mostly black, with a dark planet and a fan-like spray of sparks radiating from a point.
Does this sound familiar?
story-identification novel
add a comment |
This was in a science fiction novel from the 1970s or 1980s, I think.
There was an alien life form that was machine life, an interstellar spacecraft that traveled to new solar systems, ate asteroids, and used the material to spawn offspring. Sort of a living von Neumann self-replicating space probe. She and her offspring were quite capable of catching and devouring human-built spacecraft.
If I recall correctly, there were aliens living in the solar system's Oort cloud of comets. They were refugees who fled an infestation of the machine life in their home solar system, and were hiding in ours. Part of the plot was the aliens trying to peacefully contact us humans to alert us to the threat. The aliens had detected the machine life queen heading this way, but humans were had not spotted it yet.
The paperback cover was mostly black, with a dark planet and a fan-like spray of sparks radiating from a point.
Does this sound familiar?
story-identification novel
This was in a science fiction novel from the 1970s or 1980s, I think.
There was an alien life form that was machine life, an interstellar spacecraft that traveled to new solar systems, ate asteroids, and used the material to spawn offspring. Sort of a living von Neumann self-replicating space probe. She and her offspring were quite capable of catching and devouring human-built spacecraft.
If I recall correctly, there were aliens living in the solar system's Oort cloud of comets. They were refugees who fled an infestation of the machine life in their home solar system, and were hiding in ours. Part of the plot was the aliens trying to peacefully contact us humans to alert us to the threat. The aliens had detected the machine life queen heading this way, but humans were had not spotted it yet.
The paperback cover was mostly black, with a dark planet and a fan-like spray of sparks radiating from a point.
Does this sound familiar?
story-identification novel
story-identification novel
edited 9 mins ago
Stormblessed
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1,723527
asked May 19 '18 at 0:58
Winchell ChungWinchell Chung
5,98912147
5,98912147
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Lifeburst by Jack Williamson (1984)
Somewhere, eons past, the seekers had begun as weapons - cyborg war machines. Nuclear explosions and powerful lasers meant little to them, for each was larger than ten battleships and subsisted on a diet of heavy metals, preferably radioactive. Soon the seekers began their own Lifeburst, flying to nearby stars, evolving, eating, destroying... our solar system next.
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Lifeburst by Jack Williamson (1984)
Somewhere, eons past, the seekers had begun as weapons - cyborg war machines. Nuclear explosions and powerful lasers meant little to them, for each was larger than ten battleships and subsisted on a diet of heavy metals, preferably radioactive. Soon the seekers began their own Lifeburst, flying to nearby stars, evolving, eating, destroying... our solar system next.
add a comment |
Lifeburst by Jack Williamson (1984)
Somewhere, eons past, the seekers had begun as weapons - cyborg war machines. Nuclear explosions and powerful lasers meant little to them, for each was larger than ten battleships and subsisted on a diet of heavy metals, preferably radioactive. Soon the seekers began their own Lifeburst, flying to nearby stars, evolving, eating, destroying... our solar system next.
add a comment |
Lifeburst by Jack Williamson (1984)
Somewhere, eons past, the seekers had begun as weapons - cyborg war machines. Nuclear explosions and powerful lasers meant little to them, for each was larger than ten battleships and subsisted on a diet of heavy metals, preferably radioactive. Soon the seekers began their own Lifeburst, flying to nearby stars, evolving, eating, destroying... our solar system next.
Lifeburst by Jack Williamson (1984)
Somewhere, eons past, the seekers had begun as weapons - cyborg war machines. Nuclear explosions and powerful lasers meant little to them, for each was larger than ten battleships and subsisted on a diet of heavy metals, preferably radioactive. Soon the seekers began their own Lifeburst, flying to nearby stars, evolving, eating, destroying... our solar system next.
edited May 20 '18 at 13:17
FuzzyBoots
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92.8k12289442
answered May 19 '18 at 22:49
Winchell ChungWinchell Chung
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5,98912147
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