Episode

I Am A Scientist On Pluto. We Have 4 Months Left Before Matter Dies | Sci-Fi

Podcast
Galactic Horrors
Published
May 22, 2026
Duration seconds
3343
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not_requested
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https://shows.acast.com/galactic-horrors/episodes/i-am-a-scientist-on-pluto-we-have-4-months-left-before-matte
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https://sphinx.acast.com/p/open/s/66477018b68429001342b9a2/e/69faf2b72a1dd3f1a873b33a/media.mp3
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Summary

đź“– Written by Galactic Horrors On a Pluto research base built to study the outer dark, an astrophysicist helps confirm a proof that should be impossible: the solar system is drifting toward a region where the weak nuclear force ceases to function. It is not an explosion, invasion, or visible catastrophe. It is a mathematical weather front in deep space, one that will eventually make ordinary matter stop behaving like matter. The team has four months to refine the calculation, search for any survivable loophole, and decide how much of the truth humanity can bear before panic destroys the observatories and data networks they still need.      The first real contact with the phenomenon comes through a test probe sent across the invisible boundary. For thirteen seconds, it transmits from a state where matter no longer bonds in any meaningful human sense, yet the signal remains patterned, coherent, and horrifyingly self-descriptive. The probe reports itself as “still conscious” after physical dissolution, forcing the team to confront the possibility that identity may briefly persist as a loose informational echo even when the body has come apart at the particle level. The proof is no longer abstract. Something can pass through the end of matter and continue long enough to describe it.      Then Pluto loses contact with Earth for six hours and receives a complete reply dated four months after the predicted dissolution. The future Earth transmission does not beg for rescue. It calmly instructs the Pluto team to stop trying to save matter. This is the premise’s central fracture: either the message is a fake, a physical echo created by the boundary, or evidence that humanity’s future has already passed through the event and become something…