Rendezvous With Rama

align="center" bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Rendezvous with Rama
lign="center" colspan="3"|
lign="center" bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Novel by Arthur C. Clarke
lign="left" valign="top"|Released colspan="2" valign="top"|1972
lign="left" valign="top"|Original publisher (U.S.) colspan="2" valign="top"|Harcourt Brace Jovanovich
lign="left" valign="top"|Genre colspan="2" valign="top"|Science fiction
gcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Professional reviews
lign="left" valign="top"|SF Reviews.Net valign="top"|T. M. Wagner valign="top"|link
gcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Awards
lign="left" valign="top"|Hugo Award valign="top"|Best Novel valign="top"|1974
lign="left" valign="top"|Nebula Award valign="top"|Best Novel valign="top"|1973
lign="left" valign="top"|Jupiter Award valign="top"|Best Novel valign="top"|1974
Rendezvous with Rama is a novel by Arthur C. Clarke first published in 1972. Set in the 22nd century, the story involves a thirty-mile-long cylindrical alien starship that passes through Earth's solar system on its way to somewhere else, and a group of human explorers sent to examine it. The story is told from the point of view of the humans, and the nature and purpose of the starship and its creators remains enigmatic. A movie based on this novel, starring Morgan Freeman, is said to be in development. The "Rama" of the title is the starship, which is initially mistaken for an asteroid and named after the Hindu deity. (By the 22nd century, we are told, scientists have run out of Roman mythological figures to name astronomical bodies after.) The book was meant to be a stand-alone, but the final sentence of the book convinced almost everyone who read it that there would be at least two more sequels:
And on far-off Earth, Dr Carlisle Perera had as yet told no one how he had woken from a restless sleep with the message from his subconscious still echoing in his brain: The Ramans do everything in threes.
Facing such enormous pressure, Clarke paired up with Gentry Lee for the remainder of the series, but some fans consider these sequels as inferior to the original.

Books in the series

Gentry Lee also wrote two further novels set in the same Rama Universe.

Design and geography of Rama

Rama is, in design, similar to an O'Neill habitat, with a large cylindrical interior that rotates to provide approximately one gee of artificial gravity. Unlike most O'Neill habitat designs, however, Rama is equipped with several space drives, giving it maneuvering capability. Rama contains a body of water, the Cylindrical Sea, which wraps around the cylindrical interior "surface" of Rama about halfway between the ends. In the center of the Cylindrical Sea is an island of mysterious purpose, named New York by the astronauts due to its tall towers. The Sea divides Rama into Northern and Southern Hemicylinders; beyond these are the North and South Poles, which are circular walls capping the interior space. The North Pole contains Rama's airlocks; the South Pole contains its drive systems. Other collections of "buildings" are found on the "surface", arbitrarily named London, Paris, Moscow, Bombay, Beijing, and Tokyo.

Effects on science and history

The initial search program that detects Rama in the first two chapters of the book, Project Spaceguard, is a program to detect near-Earth objects on Earth-impact trajectories, initiated after a fictional disastrous asteroid strikes Italy, destroying Padua and Verona, and sinking Venice. A real Spaceguard project, named after the project in Rendezvous, was initiated some years later. After interest in the dangers of asteroid strikes was heightened by a series of Hollywood disaster movies, the United States Congress gave NASA authorization and funding to support Spaceguard.

 

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