Magi Craft Meister

33-25 Latest report

"But did you have a clan you've been hiding from for 400 years"

Reinhardt is impressed.

"So it's doomed... I don't think it's human resources."

Milowina sympathized.

"But that's unusual. Gin won't take care of him till the end."

Reinhardt said with a slightly strange face.

"Oh, there's a couple of reasons. One is because of the Antarctic Survey Fleet, and the Long-cycle Planet."

"I know that."

"Besides, Lance didn't want to be too baked."

"Really?

I make faces like Reinhardt suffers from understanding.

"If you know what Jin is capable of, you're going to know how grateful it is that you can help."

"... um, he seems to take in knowledge of 'people' as well, and because of that, he has a lot of pride"

"Yeah, is that what happens? My personality is dragged by knowledge, what the hell."

"I want to find out more, but I just couldn't do that"

Anyway, Jen thought it would be disrespectful to the producer to do it out of curiosity.

And the thought seems to have made sense to Reinhardt as well.

"Oh, I know how that feels, Jin"

I don't feel good about the pieces I've created being disassembled and analyzed on my own. That's the thing.

"It's not as if it's urgent. I didn't want to get involved right now because it's easy for those things to happen."

"I'm sure you do,"

Reinhardt laughed and drank the wine.

"Then it's Long Cycle Planet."

The feast was over, and when everyone began to relax and drink tea, Jen decided to make another report.

It is information from an unmanned probe sent from the moon (unique).

"Please, old man."

"Yes, Master (My Lord)"

The magic projection window (magic screen) installed on the wall of the cafeteria lights up.

There was a 'long-cycle planet' that was approaching, backed by pitch-black space.

That gets bigger gradually.

"Oh!"

"This is footage of an hour shrinking to a second."

'Long-cycle planets' rapidly approaching.

"... um, I don't know, all over the place?

Saki shares her honest thoughts.

Yes, the planetary surface was full of irregularities.

"Probably collided with cosmic dust floating in space."

At uninterrupted speeds of hundreds of kilometers per second, even if the sand grains hit, it should be a tremendous shock, Jen says.

"Still, that's a desolate surface"

From a clear view, there doesn't seem to be any atmosphere. Nothing icy, truly a desolate star.

It seems to be rotating slowly, with craters on the surface without 10,000 times.

"Then there won't be any creatures."

It looked like a vacuum, so it was thought that microorganisms would not even survive.

Even while Jens says that, the planet in the video grows bigger.

Its speed began to drop slightly. Looks like we're synchronizing speed.

"We'll be in orbit soon."

Old man explains the situation.

"Well, this was a recording."

Jens still remember that.

"How many days ago was that?

Old man answers such a question of Lisia.

"Two days ago."

"I see. You're in orbit now, aren't you?

"That's what seems to be happening"

The footage reflects the surface of The Long Period Planet. Looks like we're in satellite orbit.

"I knew you were full of craters"

"There are no creatures."

"On the contrary, there is no air. No water either. No ice, either."

"After this, we will unload the small probe"

Quiet faces to explain from you, old man.

The footage switched and the surface approached. And I guess I landed, the footage switched again, and I saw the horizon.

"Looks like you landed."

Jen shrugs.

The video moves sideways. Looks like it's spinning 360 degrees all the way. It is the same wilderness either way.

And then the next footage that goes down.

Convex areas are full of craters and collapses. The recesses are filled with ragged rock chips.

but.

"Is that a magic crystal?

Saki raised her voice when she saw the rock chips that filled the valley.

'Mr. Saki is right. About 10% of the rock chips are magic crystals. "

"I knew it.... so that silver rock over there isn't misrilled silver ore?

"That's correct too."

Saki's wise eye, a leading alchemist and a mineral maniac like this, seems to be one of the best members.

'It's a vacuum, so it doesn't oxidize, it doesn't seem to lose its radiance'

Some metal minerals, such as natural silver and natural copper, oxidize and lose their radiance and color, but this is not the case in vacuum, so they keep their original color.

"Hmm, you must have plenty of resources"

This is Toa. First of all, if you're interested in materials, let's call them alchemists with all their parents and daughters.

"But you can't see any plants. Probably no microbes, either?

You affirm what Goose said.

'Yes. At least, it looks like there are no known organisms/microbes'

"I guess."

Milowina agreed.

"A world of scorching heat if you approach the solar seran, extreme cold if you stay away. If it collides with cosmic dust, the impact is not extraordinary. … it would be stranger to have life on such a planet."

"You're right, Mr. Milowina. Look, the silver plane you see over there, isn't that a tin or lead melted and solidified pond?

When approaching the sun, the surface temperature will probably rise to several hundred degrees Celsius. Therefore, tin and lead, which are metals with low melting points, appear to have melted.

And if you get away from the sun, you get cold and coagulate. It is very significant that we can see these situations.

Because the choice to deal with life forms is extremely different from not having them.

'It was yesterday that we landed. The investigation is on the way, but we still know that there are abundant rare metals such as Mithril Adamantite'

"It would be nice to mine it and collect it."

This is a steering arena. The wealth of resources will still be fascinating to creative engineers.

"First of all, what's the path?"

Jen expressed his biggest concern.

'As it stands now, the closest we can get to Ars is the 18th of October, and it should pass between two and four million kilometers away'

"Two million kilometers..."

Compared with the solar system, the average distance between the Earth and the Sun is 150 million kilometers.

It is said that Lexel's closest distance to Earth, said to be the closest comet in history, is 2.19 million kilometers.

Perhaps, but since the mass will be far greater than that of the comet, it will not affect Ars at all.

"I wonder what you need..."

It was Jen who contemplates.