Walking over to the translucent holographic screen, Orion opened the mission bar and tapped to receive the task.
[Reward Task begins! (Can be abandoned at any time without consuming additional points)]
[Description: Seeing as the host is so diligent, this system will give you a great gift!]
[Requirements: Finish reading a list of books (0/15), finish reading literature (0/50), finish a set of experiments (0/1)]
[Reward: 8000 Physics experience, 4000 Biochemistry experience. Wreckage.]
Orion: ????
Where's the promised great gift?
Even if you don't give branch technology, what the hell is a wreckage?
However, the system didn't want to respond, it didn't even want to give a description.
Orion guessed that the wreckage was probably something like a "sample", only it was broken? If it was fixed, it could be used, or if it wasn't fixed, it could be reverse-engineered to make some technology out of it.
Thinking about it, Orion's expression was a bit subtle.
In the past, he had always wanted to draw a star destroyer or something like that, but this was the first time he had prayed to this damn system not to give him something so unpredictable that it wouldn't be able to be used. If he really drew the wreckage of a star destroyer, apart from making a big news, it seems to have no meaning for him .......
Putting this reward aside, Orion looked at the attribute panel.
He now had 5100 points of physics experience, and these 8000 experiences was enough for him to raise physics to LV2. It just so happened that he was planning to take Physics as his second degree, and this task could be said to have come at quite a timely moment.
As for the 4000 points of biochemistry experience, take it, the more experience this thing has, the better anyway.
Before leaving the system space, Orion confirmed the book list, just like that experience reward distribution, most of them were books on physics, and a few were books related to material chemistry. And those literature, similarly, were focused on such fields.
As for the experiment, Orion also briefly looked at it, titled "Real-time in situ observation of lithium dendrite formation in lithium-ion battery electrodes", and below that there was also a description of the experiment, and the experimental data to be collected.
Pulling out a piece of draft paper from the drawer, Orion copied the list of books and put a tick at the end of the book "The-Coming-of-Materials-Science".
The book was written by Professor Robert W. Cahn, a Fellow of the Royal Society, and a bigwig in the field of materials science. The best thing about the book is that it takes a lot of the specialised stuff and writes it up as a popular science book, giving a systematic and comprehensive treatment of almost all the major materials classes and the main issues that have been of concern to generations of materials scientists.
Orion wanted to read this book last year when he was working on the project with Roger, but he just couldn't find the time to read it, and this time it appeared in the system's book list, so it's true that the heroes have the same vision!
In a happy mood, Orion hummed a little song and went to the library.
After entering the library and looking through almost two shelves, he quickly found the book he was looking for, The-Coming-of-Materials-Science.
YOU ARE READING
Orion Crest, Series_1
Science FictionIt is a memoir that depicts the history of human civilization hundreds of years into the future. In the next hundreds of chapters, Orion guides humanity towards the stars. How would you feel if someone said to you that our earth, our solar sy...