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e uses a space field. I think I can duplicate it." "And how long will it take you to do this work?" "About a week," Craven told him. "Perhaps a little longer, perhaps a little less. But once we go, we'll go as fast as Manning does. We'll be short on power, but I think I can do something about that, too." Chambers took a chair beside the desk. "But do we know the way home?" "We can find it," said Craven. "But there are no familiar constellations," objected Chambers. "He dragged us out so far that there isn't a single star that any one of us can identify." "I said I'd find the Solar System," Craven declared impatiently, "and I will. Manning started out for it, didn't he? I saw the way he went. The Sun is a type G star and all I'll do is look for a type G star." "But there may be more than one type G star," objected the financier. "Probably are," Craven agreed, "but there are other ways of finding the Sun and identifying it." He volunteered no further information, went back to work with the pad and pencil. Chambers rose wearily from his chair. "Tell me when you know what we can do," he said. "Sure," Craven grunted. * * * * * "That's the Sun," said Craven. "That faint star between those two brighter ones." "Are you sure of it?" demanded Stutsman. "Of course. I don't make blunders." "It's the only type G star in that direction," suggested Chambers, helpfully. "Not that, either," declared Craven. "In fact, there are several type G stars. I examined them all and I know I'm right." "How do you know?" challenged Stutsman. "Spectroscopic examination. That collector field of ours gathers energy just like a burning glass. You've seen a burning glass, haven't you?" He stared at Stutsman, directing the question at him. Stutsman shuffled awkwardly, unhappily. "Well," Craven went on, "I used that for a telescope. Gathered the light from the suns and analyzed it. Of course it didn't act like a real telescope, produce an image or anything like that, but it was ideal for spectroscopic work." They waited for him to explain. Finally, he continued: "All of the stars I examined were just type G stars, nothing else, but there was a difference in one of them. First, the spectroscope showed lines of reflected light passing through oxygen and hydrogen, water vapor and carbon dioxide. Pure planetary phenomena, never found on a star itself. Also it showed that a c
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