A more recent and more up-to-date story than some that we have read recently, "Catalysis" was published in 1956, the same year as Poul Anderson's first Nicholas van Rijn story, "Margin of Profit."
We have become used to imagining regular space travel in the Solar System. If Triton Station is in danger of becoming uninhabitable, then surely the hundred or so scientists and children who have been living there for years at a time can evacuate? Not if they are visited by a single spaceship only once every few years and there are no spacecraft at the Station.
This is a story about a technical problem with a technical solution and also, of course, a moment of realization for the problem-solver. Our hero's final triumph is that he overcomes his stutter sufficiently to invite a woman colleague to a dance.
A muralist has created a picture of the "green Earth," reminding us of a Heinlein title.
There is a similar Station on Titan. Saturn has 274 known moons so we will not list the names. The Solar System is a lot more than just one star, eight planets, their moons and an asteroid belt. Sf should show us all this. (Maybe it does.)
"The Saturn Game," the opening story of Anderson's Technic History, is about the exploration of the Saturnian moon, Iapetus.
When Anderson mentioned the Saturnian System (also here) in the Time Patrol series, he would not then have known how big it was.
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