- Koenig tells Paul: "Paul. Try to make contact with them. Use sound, light, radio wave patterns, the entire frequency scale." Sound cannot travel through the vacuum of space.
- The Pyramid Texts of the Old Kingdom date from 3000 BC. These are the hieroglyphics inscribed on the walls of inner chambers of the pyramids at Saqqarah for several 5th and 6th dynasty kings (the earliest is that of Unas, last king of the 5th dynasty). They are mortuary prayers, hymns, and spells intended to protect a dead king or queen and ensure life and prosperity in the afterlife. They are the original texts of what later became known (when compiled into papyrus books) as the Book Of The Dead.
- The idea of "ancient astronauts" visiting early human civilizations such as Ancient Egypt is a ridiculous idea popularised by the discredited books of Erich von Daniken.
- How does Bergman know of the planet Triton? Somehow by name he can locate where a destroyed star is in his "galaxy charts" 2 million light years away. In the story concept, the implication seems to be that the Pyramid Texts describe a star that in historical times became a supernova. The most famous example is by Chinese astronomers, who recorded a star in Taurus which exploded in 1054, creating the Crab Nebula. In 1885, Ernst Hartwig discovered Supernova 1885, also later named S Andromedae, in the Andromeda galaxy, 2 million light years from Earth. It is the first supernova observed outside the Milky Way, and the only one so far in the Andromeda galaxy. The remnant of Supernova 1885 was discovered in 1985, more than 100 years later, by R A Fesen and others, and further observations were made by the Hubble Space Telescope in 1995.
- E C Tubb's novelisation suggests the planet Triton is the moon of Neptune with the same name. Triton is the only large moon with a retrograde orbit. The extreme cold, negligible atmosphere and ice volcanoes are inimical to life. But the fact that it must have been a rogue planetoid that was captured in Neptune's orbit has interesting parallels with the Moon in the series, and the inconsistency of space.
- There is a gross error in astronomical terms as Koenig describes the star pictures: "This is Triton's galaxy. This is Triton's star system. This is Triton's universe. This is Triton's sun." The universe contains all stars and galaxies- it is everything. Perhaps a completely unrelated slide slipped in and Koenig improvised...
- "The analysis shows that the cerebrum, which regulates speech, hearing, and most important in this case, vision, had expanded to three times its normal size." The cerebrum forms 85% of the brain mass, and is the grey matter than covers the white mass of the midbrain. The visual processing centre of the cerebrum is the occipital cortex, located at the rear of the skull. The ball of light is located in the cerebellum, at the bottom of the brain directly above the brainstem. This area controls movement, including learning motor tasks, from walking to riding a bike. Thanks to Meredith Girard
- When Mathias checks out Helena after her return from the Triton probe, he states "Blood pressure's normal, eighty over a hundred and twenty." This is reversed: normally blood pressure is written as the systolic (peak) pressure over the diastolic (lowest) pressure. 120/80 mmHg is a standard adult value. Thanks to Meredith Girard
- Mathias raises a pen to Helena's eyes. "How many do you see?" "Two. I should see four." To check for double vision (diplopia) you move the eyes together right to left or up and down, even then you would see two images, not four. While it is rarely possible to see two images from only one eye, this is exceedingly uncommon and due to rare retinal problems. Moving an object in straight line toward the eyes checks for accomodation, or a person's focusing ability. Thanks to Meredith Girard
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Victor has a photograph of the Andromeda galaxy
on his noticeboard. The large elongated blob in the middle is
M31/Andromeda itself while the small bright spot directly below is M32, a satellite
galaxy. It seems M110 (another satellite galaxy) is faintly visible at upper right. This image shows the position of the supernova S Andromedae. Thanks to Marcus Lindroos
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