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List of technology in the Dune universe

Technology is a key aspect of the fictional setting of the Dune series of science fiction novels written by Frank Herbert, and derivative works. Herbert's concepts and inventions have been analyzed and deconstructed in at least one book, The Science of Dune (2007). Herbert's originating 1965 novel Dune is popularly considered one of the greatest science fiction novels of all time,[1] and is frequently cited as the best-selling science fiction novel in history.[1][2] Dune and its five sequels by Herbert explore the complex and multilayered interactions of politics, religion, ecology and technology, among other themes.

The Butlerian Jihad, an event in the back-story of Herbert's universe, leads to the outlawing of certain technologies, primarily "thinking machines", a collective term for computers and artificial intelligence of any kind. This prohibition is a key influence on the nature of Herbert's fictional setting.[3] In Dune, ten thousand years after this jihad, its enduring commandment remains, "Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind."[4]

Atomics edit

Atomics is the term used to refer to nuclear weapons in the Dune universe.[5] Like real-world nuclear weapons, atomics presumably derive their destructive force from nuclear reactions of fission or fusion, and Herbert notes that "radiation lingers" after their use.[5] However, the author never delves into the specifics of the technology or explores in detail how it may have evolved by the time of Dune's far-future setting.

In the initial Dune novels, the Great Houses of the Landsraad own "family atomics" as heirlooms, keeping a secure, hidden cache as weapons of last resort in their wars.[5] Though such possession is necessary to secure power, the use of atomics against humans violates the chief prohibition of the Great Convention, the "universal truce enforced under the power balance maintained by the Guild, the Great Houses, and the Imperium".[6] Paul Atreides notes in Dune that "The language of the Great Convention is clear enough: Use of atomics against humans shall be cause for planetary obliteration."[5] The atomics themselves act as a military deterrent—any House which violates the Great Convention flagrantly (such as using atomics openly in warfare) faces massive retaliation from any number of the other Houses.[5] As Paul notes via epigraph in Dune Messiah (1969), "any Family in my Empire could so deploy its atomics as to destroy the planetary bases of fifty or more other Families".[7]

A stone burner is a conventional weapon that uses atomics for fuel. Whether they are covered by the Great Convention is discussed several times in the series, with the opinion that while they "skirt the intentions of the law" they do not warrant retaliation. The explosion and radiation can be precisely adjusted depending on the desired effect.[7] Stone burners emit "J-Rays", a form of radiation that destroys the eye tissue of anyone surviving the initial radiation blast.[7] If of sufficient power, a stone burner can burn its way into the core of a planet, destroying it:

Paul remained silent, thinking what this weapon implied. Too much fuel in it and it'd cut its way into the planet's core. Dune's molten level lay deep, but the more dangerous for that. Such pressures released and out of control might split a planet, scattering lifeless bits and pieces through space.[7]

The original series edit

In Dune, Paul uses an atomic device on the surface of Arrakis to blast a pass through the Shield Wall, a desert mountain range protecting the planet's capital. He considers this act to be in accordance with the Great Convention because the atomics are not used against humans, but rather against "a natural feature of the desert".[5] A stone burner is used in an attempt to assassinate Paul in Dune Messiah; he survives but is blinded for the rest of his life.[7] In God Emperor of Dune (1981), the God Emperor Leto II notes that since his 3,500-year reign began he has "searched out all of the Family atomics and removed them to a safe place".[8]

Prequels edit

In the Prelude to Dune prequel trilogy by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (1999–2001) it is revealed that a renegade House of the Landsraad had devastated the capital of the Corrino Padishah Empire, Salusa Secundus, with atomics and rendered the planet essentially uninhabitable. Padishah Emperor Hassik Corrino III had relocated the Imperial throne to the planet Kaitain, and the attacking House had been subsequently exterminated. During the events of the series in 10,175 A.G., Padishah Emperor Shaddam IV uses atomics to destroy House Richese's artificial laboratory moon of Korona. Part of Shaddam's plan to ensure his own spice monopoly, the explosion causes a quarter of the planet Richese's population to go blind from the resulting light produced by the destruction of the Richesian mirrors stored on Korona. Finally, the persecuted Earl Dominic Vernius plans to use atomics to attack Kaitain; when his hidden base on Arrakis is discovered by the Padishah Emperor's Sardaukar army, Vernius ignites a stone burner to destroy himself and as many of the Sardaukar as he can.[9]

The Legends of Dune prequel series (2002–2004) establishes that the first human victory of the Butlerian Jihad (the crusade against the thinking machines) is the 200 B.G. destruction of Earth and the Earth Omnius using atomics. "Pulse atomics" calibrated for use against the gel circuitry of the thinking machines are also used at the end of the war to systematically wipe out every single machine-controlled planet.[10] It is this action, and the millions of human slaves who are killed in it, which ultimately leads to the ban on atomic warfare in the Great Convention. It also contributes to the development of the feud between the Harkonnens and Atreides.

Axlotl tank edit

Axlotl tanks are a fictional biological technology in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert. Axlotl technology is also mentioned in Herbert's novels Destination: Void and The Jesus Incident but not elaborated upon.

A trade secret of the Tleilaxu, an axlotl tank is a "device for reproducing a living human being from the cells of a cadaver",[11] a type of clone called a ghola.[7] Axlotl tanks are eventually revealed to be semi-artificial uteri created by transforming women into biological factories.[11] Later in the series, the Tleilaxu scientists also use the axlotl tanks to replicate the spice melange, previously only available on the desert planet Arrakis where it is created naturally as part of the life cycle of giant sandworms.[11]

The original series edit

The tanks are briefly mentioned in Dune Messiah (1969) as the source of the Duncan Idaho ghola.[7][a] Their nature is a well-guarded Tleilaxu secret. During his 3500-year reign which ends in God Emperor of Dune (1981), Leto II purchases countless Idaho gholas produced for him in the tanks.[8]

Within the 1500 years between the events of God Emperor of Dune and Heretics of Dune (1984), the Tleilaxu discover an artificial method of producing the spice melange in their axlotl tanks as well.[11] Some melange users, like the Bene Gesserit, prefer the natural melange of Arrakis to the Tleilaxu substitute, claiming increased potency.

In Heretics of Dune, Miles Teg recalls how his Bene Gesserit mother Lady Janet had said that "No one outside of [the Tleilaxu] planets has ever reported seeing a Tleilaxu female." Wondering whether the Tleilaxu breed or simply rely on the tanks to reproduce, Miles had asked, "Do they exist or is it just the tanks?" Janet confirmed that females do indeed exist. Later in Heretics, Teg's own daughter, Reverend Mother Darwi Odrade, theorizes that the axlotl tanks may be, in fact, "surrogate mothers"—Tleilaxu females somehow transformed.[11] Soon, the current Duncan ghola recalls his repeated "births" from the tanks:

The axlotl tanks! He remembered emerging time after time: bright lights and padded mechanical hands. The hands rotated him and, in the unfocused blurs of the newborn, he saw a great mound of female flesh—monstrous in her almost immobile grossness…a maze of dark tubes linked her body to giant metal containers.[11]

In Chapterhouse: Dune (1985), the last remaining Tleilaxu Master Scytale is coerced into revealing the means of creating the tanks to the Bene Gesserit Sisterhood.[12]

Sequels edit

In Hunters of Dune (2006) and Sandworms of Dune (2007), the novels by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson which complete Frank Herbert's original series, the Bene Gesserit on the no-ship Ithaca use the captive Scytale's knowledge to create their own axlotl tanks from Bene Gesserit volunteers. The Rabbi, leader of the group of "secret" Jews on board, is upset when his follower Rebecca, a "wild" Reverend Mother, volunteers herself for the process.[13][14]

Prelude to Dune edit

In the Prelude to Dune prequel trilogy (1999–2001) by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (set immediately prior to the events of 1965's Dune), the Tleilaxu attempt to create artificial melange called ajidamal using axlotl technology; the best results are gained by using a Bene Gesserit sister to create an axlotl tank. However, the project ultimately fails.[9]

Cymek edit

A cymek is a type of cyborg, or machine-human hybrid, in the fictional Dune prequel universe. They appear in the Legends of Dune prequel trilogy (2002–2004) by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson. The only organic part of a cymek is its brain; in the series, living humans willingly have their brains transplanted into large mechanized bodies with the intent of extending life indefinitely.[10] The technology is later revived in the prequel novel Mentats of Dune (2014).

Legends of Dune edit

Over 11,000 years before the events of Frank Herbert's Dune (1965), a group of 20 ambitious humans see the stagnation of the Old Empire and realize that their small band can take control of it with the aid of thinking machines. Calling themselves the Titans, they rule humanity for a hundred years and rename themselves after famous historical and mythological figures, most notably Agamemnon, Ajax, Barbarossa, Dante, Hecate, Juno, Tlaloc and Xerxes.[10]

Ten years into their reign, their leader Tlaloc is killed in a freak accident. Realizing their mortality and limited lifespans, they seek a way to extend their lives. Juno is inspired by the cogitors, ancient philosophers whose brains had been installed in fluid-filled canisters so that they might analyze the universe indefinitely; they are living and retain awareness and consciousness, and the ability to communicate should they choose. The Titan Agamemnon is the first to become a cymek, his brain transplanted into a canister which, through special interfaces, is installed into a large, fearsome, and weaponized body. In cymek form, the remaining 19 Titans are virtually unstoppable, and continue their tyrannical rule of the universe for another 90 years. Growing complacent, the Titans are themselves overthrown and enslaved by Omnius, a sentient computer network given too much autonomy; Omnius controls the universe for the next 900 years. The Titans recruit humans from the enslaved, Omnius-controlled "Synchronized Worlds" to become neo-cymeks, footsoldiers who could more fully understand human strategy and thought processes than machines.[10]

A small group of worlds, united as the League of Nobles, resist the initial Titan rebellion and remain free from machine rule. With the thinking machines ever-persistent in their intent to enslave or destroy all humans, the League initiates the Butlerian Jihad, mankind's century-long crusade against the machines. The humans are ultimately victorious, destroying all but one hidden copy of Omnius as well as the Titans, the neo-cymeks and all thinking machine forces. With all thinking machine technology henceforth banned, new organizations arise, composed of humans who had developed specialized skills during the Jihad to replace and exceed technology, including the Spacing Guild, Mentats, and the Bene Gesserit.[10]

Great Schools of Dune edit

In Mentats of Dune (2014), a group of new cymeks are created by the human Dr. Ptolemy using the brains of failed Guild Navigators. Funded by Josef Venport as a counter to Manford Torondo and his fanatical mobs of anti-technology Butlerians, these cymeks are more advanced than their predecessors; a team of them manages to destroy a sandworm on Arrakis, though they are destroyed themselves. Ptolemy himself later willingly undergoes the surgery to have his brain placed in a cymek.

Face Dancer edit

Face Dancers are a fictional servant caste of sterile humanoid shapeshifters in Frank Herbert's Dune universe. Created by the Bene Tleilax, they are able to physiologically change their appearance to impersonate other people. Face Dancers possess full sentience, but also genetically programmed loyalty to the Tleilaxu Masters. They are used by the Tleilaxu throughout the universe to replace people whom the Tleilaxu find useful, usually killing the originals. In this way they may infiltrate and control various groups in the universe. Face Dancers are "Jadacha hermaphrodites", able to change their gender at will.[7] In Heretics of Dune (1984), Herbert describes a pair of Face Dancers in their natural state: "Two small men as alike as twins. Almost chinless round faces, pug noses, tiny mouths, black button eyes, and short-cropped white hair that stood up from their heads like the bristles on a brush."[11] The Tleilaxu are able to control Face Dancers by forcing them into a hypnotic state with a predefined sound, often a specific humming or whistling noise. In Heretics of Dune, Master Waff attempts to control his Face Dancer duplicate of Hedley Tuek: "Humming sounds like the noises of angry insects came from his mouth, a modulated thing that clearly was some kind of language."[11]

Original series edit

In Dune Messiah (1969), Tleilaxu Face Dancer Scytale enters into a conspiracy with the Bene Gesserit, Spacing Guild and House Corrino to remove Paul Atreides from the Imperial throne. Scytale is the architect of a multi-pronged plot against Paul centered on the Tleilaxu ghola Hayt, a reincarnation of Paul's friend Duncan Idaho who has been programmed to unwittingly destroy Paul psychologically, and failing that, kill Paul when triggered by an implanted command. Scytale also kills and replaces the Fremen girl Lichna to infiltrate Paul's household and lure him to an assassination attempt outside the safety of his stronghold. Paul's Bene Gesserit training allows him to detect the substitution, but he allows the plot to play out. All of these schemes fail to eliminate Paul, but set the stage for Scytale's final ploy: the unlocking of Duncan's memories in Hayt illustrates that the Tleilaxu can provide Paul with a fully realized ghola of his deceased concubine Chani, in exchange for his abdication. Paul refuses, and kills Scytale.[7]

Over 3,500 years later in God Emperor of Dune (1981), Tleilaxu Face Dancers kill and replace nearly everyone in the Ixian embassy on Arrakis as part of an assassination attempt on Paul's seemingly immortal son, the God Emperor Leto II Atreides. Though these Face Dancers are more imperceptible than ever before, Leto and the Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother Anteac are able to detect the impostors thanks to the Bene Gesserit techniques of acute observation.[8] Another 1,500 years later in Heretics of Dune (1984), the Tleilaxu have perfected their Face Dancers, who are now perfect mimics, able to copy the memories and consciousness of the people they imitate. Virtually undetectable to all but the Bene Gesserit, these Face Dancers begin to replace leaders in the Imperium as a means for the Tleilaxu to seize control. The plan fails as, over time, the Face Dancers come to believe they are the people they have copied, and elude their genetically-programmed loyalty to the Tleilaxu Masters.[11] In Chapterhouse: Dune (1985), Duncan Idaho notes that the mysterious observers Daniel and Marty resemble Face Dancers, but atypically autonomous ones.[12] Daniel and Marty later confirm that they are independent Face Dancers, noting "[The Tleilaxu] gave us the power to absorb the memories and experiences of other people ... The Masters should've known we would gather enough of them one day to make our own decisions about our own future."[12]

Sequels edit

In Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson's 2006 continuation of the original series, Hunters of Dune, the leaders of the Lost Tleilaxu have been killed and replaced by their own advanced Face Dancers, who cannot be detected by even the Bene Gesserit. The Face Dancer leader, Khrone, serves Daniel and Marty in their plot for domination of the universe, but has separate schemes of his own. Khrone's Face Dancers have secretly gained control of many power bases across the Empire, and Daniel and Marty are revealed to be new incarnations of mankind's ancient enemies, thinking machine leader Omnius and his second-in-command Erasmus, introduced in the Legends of Dune prequel trilogy by Brian Herbert and Anderson.[13]

In the series finale, Sandworms of Dune (2007), it is revealed that Khrone and his legions of autonomous Face Dancers seek to overthrow their machine "masters". Secretly in control of Ix and its technology production, Khrone manipulates the Spacing Guild and New Sisterhood, setting them up for disastrous failure in their final battle against the thinking machine forces of Omnius. When Khrone asserts dominance over even the machine empire, a smug Erasmus activates a fail-safe built into all enhanced Face Dancers, instantly killing Khrone and all of his minions across the universe.[14]

Ghola edit

A ghola is a fictional humanoid in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert. Similar to clones, they are "manufactured" human duplicates grown in an axlotl tank from cells collected from a deceased subject. A true ghola is initially shown to be the resurrection of a corpse through regrowth of damaged tissues, while later gholas in the series are more accurately described as clones—grown from genetic material extracted from a few cells (e.g. a small scraping of skin taken moments before death). Through specific stresses, gholas can be made to recall the memories of the original, including their moment of death. In Herbert's Dune series, the technological process is developed and initially monopolized by the Tleilaxu;[7][15] in later novels the process is also used by the Bene Gesserit.[12]

The first ghola featured in the series—Hayt in 1969's Dune Messiah—is a resurrection of the corpse of Duncan Idaho.[16] Later gholas are grown from a few cells, as in the case of subsequent Idaho gholas provided to Leto II, as described in God Emperor of Dune (1981).[8] The Tleilaxu can control their creations by forcing them into a hypnotic state with some predefined sound (often a specific humming or whistling noise) that has been pre-conditioned into each ghola.[b][c][d]

Csilla Csori analyzes the concept of recording and restoring memories in the essay "Memory (and the Tleilaxu) Makes the Man" in The Science of Dune (2007).[17]

The original series edit

Before the events of Dune: Messiah, gholas are merely physical copies without the memories of their original incarnations. The ghola Hayt is programmed by the Tleilaxu to kill Emperor Paul Atreides under post-hypnotic suggestion. The attempt fails but, as hoped by the Tleilaxu, the stress of attempting to kill someone who was deeply loved in the ghola's previous life breaks the mental barrier between the ghola's consciousness and the life memories of the original. Hayt recovers the full memories of the original Duncan Idaho. The Tleilaxu are now able to offer Paul a similar ghola "resurrection" of his deceased beloved Chani to gain leverage over him, but he refuses.[7]

In God Emperor of Dune, over Leto II's 3,500-year reign he has, as constant companions, a series of Duncan gholas with restored memories of the original Idaho but not the memories of the previous gholas. They are perfectly reconstructed incarnations made from a few cells, created as needed in the time span of one to two years. In this novel, one of the Duncans recalls how, as a blank ghola, he was tasked to kill a Face Dancer duplicate of Leto's father and Duncan's friend, Paul, and the psychological stress awakened his memories.[8] Fifteen hundred years later in Heretics of Dune (1984), Leto is dead and the Bene Gesserit are the consumers of Duncan gholas. The current Idaho ghola recovers the memories of the original like his predecessors; however, the later attempt by the Honored Matre Murbella to sexually imprint him results in his recovery of the memories of all his ghola incarnations.[11] It is later determined that the Tleilaxu had mixed the cells from multiple Idaho gholas to make this one—however recovery of genetic material from every incarnation would have been impossible for the Tleilaxu, indicating the development of some form of prescient or metaphysical awareness.[12]

Though intense psychological trauma is the key to unlocking the memories of a ghola, the actual situation contrived to accomplish this is specific to each individual. When military genius Miles Teg is killed in Heretics of Dune, a ghola of him is born in Chapterhouse: Dune (1985) on orders from Teg's own daughter, Bene Gesserit leader Darwi Odrade.[e] His former memories are unlocked using sexual imprinting.[12]

The discovery of how to reawaken a ghola has tremendous consequences for the Tleilaxu Masters themselves; they subsequently use the technology of axlotl tanks and memory recovery to grant themselves effective immortality. Every Master is "recreated" upon his death with recovered memories, accumulating many generations of knowledge and experience and permitting planning on a timespan of millennia.[11]

Dune games edit

There are also mentions of gholas in the Dune games. In Dune 2000 (1998), the Harkonnen Mentat is allegedly a ghola cloned from Tleilaxu flesh vats, and in Emperor: Battle for Dune (2001), House Ordos constantly deploy their own gholas in assassination and infiltration missions. This is particularly effective in tricking the Sardaukar and Fremen into allying with House Ordos. On a much larger scale, they plan to use a ghola of the now-deceased Corrino Emperor to claim the Golden Lion Throne, with the Executrix as the true leaders behind the so-called "puppet Emperor".

Heighliner edit

A heighliner is a type of fictional starship used for interstellar travel in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert. These enormous spaceships are the "major cargo carrier of the Spacing Guild's transportation system".[18]

Duke Leto Atreides speaks of them in Dune (1965):

A Heighliner is truly big. Its hold will tuck all our frigates and transports into a little corner — we'll be just a small part of the ship's manifest.[5]

Heighliner operation requires a Guild Navigator, who uses a limited form of prescience (made possible by their use of the drug melange), to safely guide the ship across space at "translight" speeds.[7][19] Navigators are confined to giant tanks, completely immersed in highly concentrated orange spice gas.[7] Unable to land, heighliners jump from point to point, parking in planetary orbits, though the ship itself does not technically move. Special laws govern travel aboard a heighliner; heighliners are considered neutral territory and all acts of war aboard heighliners carry stiff penalties.[5] Leto notes that while they are traveling to Arrakis it is quite likely they will share cargo space with Harkonnen vessels, but neither will be aggressive to each other for fear of losing shipping privileges.

It is mentioned in God Emperor of Dune (1981) that while history books credit Aurelius Venport with designing the first Spacing Guild ship, it was actually Venport's mistress, Norma Cenva, who gave him the design.[8] In the Legends of Dune prequel trilogy (2002–2004), Norma invents heighliners during the Butlerian Jihad.[10] The Prelude to Dune prequel trilogy (1999–2001) establishes that in subsequent millennia, the ships are manufactured on the planet Ix.[9] During the events described in the 2001 prequel Dune: House Corrino, a heighliner is expertly spacefolded into a cavern under the surface of Ix, incapacitating an occupying army during the Atreides-led liberation of the planet. In the novel, heighliners are noted to be more than 20 kilometers long.[20]

Holtzman effect edit

The Holtzman effect is a fictional scientific phenomenon in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert, beginning with the 1965 novel Dune. The effect is never explained in detail, but it makes (among other things) defensive force shields and instantaneous space travel possible through its application in Holtzman shields, foldspace or Holtzman drives, suspensors, and glowglobes.[18] Herbert defined the Holtzman effect as "the negative repelling effect of a shield generator."[21] Its discovery is explored in the Legends of Dune prequel trilogy by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (2002–2004).[10]

Holtzman shield edit

In Dune, the Holtzman effect has been adapted to produce personal defensive shields which permit penetration only by objects that move below a pre-set velocity.[22][f][23] Paul Atreides notes in Dune, "In shield fighting, one moves fast on defense, slow on attack ... The shield turns the fast blow, admits the slow kindjal".[5]

The interaction of a lasgun beam and a Holtzman field results in subatomic fusion and a nuclear explosion.[24] The magnitude of this blast is unpredictable; sometimes it destroys only the shielded target and gunner, sometimes the explosion is more powerful than atomics.[25] Using lasguns in a shielded environment can result in military and environmental catastrophe, though at one point in Dune, Duncan Idaho deliberately allows shield/lasgun contact as a discouragement to his enemies,[5] and in Chapterhouse: Dune, Miles Teg directs the creation of lasgun/Holtzman-field shield drone-mines for use against the Honored Matres. By the time of God Emperor of Dune (1981), God Emperor Leto II has banned shields throughout his empire "to avoid such explosive interactions."[8]

The vibrations of an active shield will drive a sandworm on Arrakis into a killing frenzy, drawing them from across territorial lines to attack the shield.[26] For this reason, the native Fremen eschew them. It is noted in Children of Dune (1976) that the Fremen have developed a small shield generator known as a "pseudo-shield" to attract and madden a worm, for use as an ersatz bomb.[27]

Holtzman drive edit

The effect is used in this case to fold space at the quantum level, allowing the Spacing Guild's heighliner ships to instantaneously travel far distances across space without actually moving at all. However, the chaotic and seemingly non-deterministic quantum nature of "foldspace" requires at least limited prescience on the part of the human navigator; otherwise the absurdly complex mathematics involved in producing reliable physical projections of such events would only be possible with advanced computers, which are strictly prohibited because of mankind's crusade against thinking machines, the Butlerian Jihad. To this effect, the Guild produces melange-saturated Navigators who intuitively "see paths through foldspace" in this way.[5] This stumbling block is overcome several thousand years after the events of Dune when Ixian scientists develop mechanical replacements for Guild Navigators.[11]

Kevin R. Grazier analyzes the concepts of folding space and faster-than-light travel in the essay "Cosmic Origami" in The Science of Dune (2007).[28]

Suspensors edit

Hovering devices called suspensors utilize the "secondary (low-drain) phase of a Holtzman field generator" to nullify gravity "within certain limits prescribed by relative mass and energy consumption."[29] Suspensors are used in chairs, tables, and structures that are too massive to be physically sound, among other uses. In Dune, the grotesquely obese Baron Vladimir Harkonnen utilizes suspensor belts and harnesses to buoy his flesh and allow him to walk.[g] In Dune, Jessica theorizes that suspensors, like shields, attract sandworms.[26]

Kevin R. Grazier analyzes the concept of anti-gravity technology in the essay "Suspensor of Disbelief" in The Science of Dune (2007).[30]

Glowglobes edit

A varied use of the Holtzman effect is the glowglobe. This device is a small glowing sphere that floats gracefully above a surface like a portable, personal sun, and is typically tuned to a yellowish color.[5] Herbert describes it as a "suspensor-buoyed illuminating device, self-powered (usually by organic batteries)."[31]

Ixian Probe edit

An Ixian Probe is a fictional device in Frank Herbert's Dune universe used to capture the thoughts of a person (living or dead) for analysis.[32] Ixian Probes are mentioned in Herbert's Heretics of Dune (1984).[32]

As described in Heretics of Dune, the probe is an interrogation device of Ixian manufacture which "can raid the mind even of a dead person".[11] However, the substance shere blocks the effects of the probe, and will protect a person who has taken it even in death.[11] The probe itself or how it works are not described, but when Miles Teg sees a T-Probe for the first time, he believes it is an Ixian Probe.[11] The T-Probe consists of a hood with a series of electrodes attached to the skull, controlled by an operator; the notable difference is that shere has no effect against a T-Probe.[11]

Lasgun edit

A lasgun (pronounced /ˈlzɡʌn/) is a fictional directed-energy weapon, specifically a laser gun, in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert. In Terminology of the Imperium, the glossary of the 1965 novel Dune, Herbert provides the following definition:

LASGUN: continuous-wave laser projector. Its use as a weapon is limited in a field-generator-shield culture because of the explosive pyrotechnics (technically, subatomic fusion) created when its beam intersects a shield.[24]

The interaction of a lasgun beam and a Holtzman field results in subatomic fusion and a nuclear explosion.[24] The magnitude of this blast is unpredictable; sometimes it destroys only the shielded target and gunner, sometimes the explosion is more powerful than atomics.[33] Using lasguns in a shielded environment can result in military and environmental catastrophe, though at one point in Dune Duncan Idaho deliberately allows shield-lasgun contact as a discouragement to his enemies.[5] In God Emperor of Dune (1981), lasgun fire is described as "blue arcs";[8] a lasgun is noted to be "heavy" in Chapterhouse: Dune (1985).[12] A cutteray is described in Dune as a "Short-range version of a lasgun used mostly as a cutting tool and surgeon's scalpel".[18]

No-chamber/No-ship edit

 
A no-ship, from the cover of Chapterhouse: Dune (1985)

A no-chamber is a fictional stealth technology in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert. Originally called a no-room in Herbert's God Emperor of Dune (1981),[8] it is a construct that hides anything inside from prescient vision and long-range instruments.[34] A no-globe is a larger construction of no-chambers, and a no-ship is a no-chamber in starship form, with enough limited prescience to be capable of interstellar travel without the use of a Guild Navigator.[11]

The original series edit

In God Emperor of Dune, Leto II deduces that the new Ixian Ambassador Hwi Noree had been "born" in what would come to be known as a no-room to shield her creation and upbringing from him.[8] Hwi had been created by the Ixians from the cells of Leto's friend/nemesis Malky but as Malky's direct opposite–using Tleilaxu ghola technology–designed to be irresistible to Leto.[8] The no-room is an improvement upon a device the Ixians had previously created for Leto to record his thoughts into a written journal and hide them from prescient vision.[8]

In Heretics of Dune (1984), Miles Teg, the Bene Gesserit Lucilla and the Duncan Idaho ghola hide in a no-globe on Gammu, created by the Harkonnens millennia before when the planet had been called Giedi Prime.[11] It is a sizeable complex, noted to be "very ancient but the chambers are still intact and functioning".[11] The exact era of its creation is not specified, but it is written that "Gammu was Giedi Prime, a Harkonnen place ... They were rich ... Rich enough to accomplish the secret installation of a no-room ... even of a large no-globe ... Bribes, third-party purchases, many transshipments ... The Famine Times were very disruptive and before that there were all those millennia of the Tyrant ... When the Harkonnens kept their heads down or lost them."[11]

No-ships are in use at the time of Heretics of Dune; like no-chambers, anything inside a no-ship is hidden from prescient vision and other means of detection, and the ship itself is invisible to sight or photography.[11] However, a no-ship has much greater technological capability than a no-chamber, as it can perform the functions of a Guild Navigator.[11] Specifically, a no-ship's navigation machine is capable of enough limited prescience to successfully navigate its way through foldspace.[11] Teg steals a massive no-ship from the fierce Honored Matres on Gammu in Heretics of Dune, and its Great Hold alone is noted to be one kilometer in length, large enough to transport an adult sandworm.[11] In Chapterhouse: Dune (1985), the Bene Gesserit initially confine Duncan and Murbella to this no-ship on Chapterhouse for their own protection from prescient spying. As Murbella becomes the leader of a New Sisterhood composed of both the Bene Gesserit and Honored Matres, Duncan and Teg flee Chapterhouse with Sheeana and other passengers on the no-ship.[12]

In Heretics of Dune and Chapterhouse Dune it is suggested that certain characters of Atreides ancestry have the ability to use their prescient powers to "see" no-ships.[11][12] This ability to nullify no-field invisibility is unleashed in Miles Teg after he is interrogated with a device called a T-Probe.[12] Teg's subsequent ghola duplicate also retains that unique ability after his memories are re-awakened.[12]

Sequels edit

In Hunters of Dune (2006) and Sandworms of Dune (2007), the novels by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson which complete Frank Herbert's original series, the fleeing no-ship is named the Ithaca by its passengers in homage to the long journey of the mythological Greek hero Odysseus to his home of Ithaca. Accompanying Duncan, Teg and Sheeana are some 150 refugees, including the (apparent) last Tleilaxu Master Scytale, some Bene Gesserit Sisters, and a group of secret Jews. They seek a new world onto which to introduce the captive sandworms on board, as well as a new home for the Jews, but are in constant pursuit by the Unknown Enemy who seek to ensnare the ship in an inescapable tachyon net. With the help of genetic material possessed by Scytale, the passengers of the Ithaca begin growing gholas of historical heroes such as Paul Atreides and Lady Jessica to assist them in the final battle they know is coming against the Unknown Enemy.[13][14]

Prelude to Dune edit

In the Prelude to Dune prequel trilogy (1999–2001) by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson, the creation of the Harkonnen no-globe is attributed to a man named Chobyn.[9] He invents the technology and builds the no-globe for Baron Vladimir Harkonnen immediately prior to the events of Dune (1965).[9] However, Chobyn is killed and the technology lost[9] until it is reinvented by the Ixians millennia later during the reign of Leto II.[8]

Ornithopter edit

An ornithopter (from Greek roots ornithos-[35] "bird" and pteron "wing"[36]) is an aircraft that flies by flapping its wings.

In the Dune universe, ornithopters (or 'thopters) are one of the primary modes of transportation on Arrakis. Herbert describes ornithopters as "Aircraft capable of sustained wing-beat flight in the manner of birds" in his 1965 novel Dune.[18] The craft achieve takeoff primarily though the beat of their wings, with jet power assisting in propulsion and stabilization:

Leto fed power to the wings, felt them cup and dip—once, twice. They were airborne in ten meters, wings feathered tightly and afterjets thrusting them upward in a steep, hissing climb.[5]

The wings themselves, consisting of "delicate metal interleavings", are adjustable in length through a "retractor bar" or manually.[5] They are fully extended when the jetpods are used little or not at all:

The Duke kicked on the jet brakes. The ship bucked as its tail pods whispered to silence. Stub wings elongated, cupped the air. The craft became a full 'thopter as the Duke banked it, holding the wings to a gentle beat.[5]

The wings are shortened when more jet thrust is used or the 'thopter uses the "jet-boost" alternative mode of takeoff, and tip to assist in braking.[5]

In the 1984 film adaptation, ornithopters are depicted with small, folding, non-flapping wings. According to the film's designers, propulsion is provided via an antigravity device called an "etherbender", which is shown but never mentioned in the film itself. In the 2000 Sci Fi Channel miniseries Frank Herbert's Dune, the craft have wings that appear to incorporate tiltrotor technology. In the 2021 film adaptation, ornithopters are depicted with four or eight foldable, flapping wings on either side, resembling those of a dragonfly,[37] a design that director Denis Villeneuve had conceived when he read the novel at a young age.[38] Villeneuve's VFX team used actual helicopters as placeholders, which they later replaced with computer-generated ornithopters. Two 12-ton practical ornithopters were built and taken to Budapest and the Jordanian desert for filming. VFX production supervisor Paul Lambert explained, "These machines had a fully hydraulic ramp to open and close, and were lifted by cranes for take off and landing. CG wings were added in post."[39]

Stillsuit edit

 
Fremen Chani (Zendaya) and Stilgar (Javier Bardem) wearing stillsuits in Dune (2021)

A stillsuit is a fictional body suit in Frank Herbert's Dune universe, worn by the indigenous Fremen of the desert planet Arrakis to maintain their body moisture in the harsh environment.[40]

Description edit

As described in the 1965 novel Dune, a stillsuit is a "body-enclosing garment" of Fremen design which performs the "functions of heat dissipation and filtering bodily wastes" to reclaim moisture.[18] Perspiration, urine, and the saliva expelled during respiration are captured by the stillsuit and filtered, and reclaimed water is made available for drinking through a tube at the neck. Walking and breathing provide the pumping action to move water through the filtration process and provide the necessary heat exchange. Without a stillsuit, the average person on Arrakis could lose more than 10 liters of water daily through their pores, but the stillsuit reduces that loss to 5 milliliters.[40] Imperial Planetologist Liet-Kynes describes the stillsuit in Dune:

It's basically a micro-sandwich—a high-efficiency filter and heat-exchange system. The skin-contact layer's porous. Perspiration passes through it, having cooled the body ... near-normal evaporation process. The next two layers ... include heat exchange filaments and salt precipitators. Salt's reclaimed. Motions of the body, especially breathing and some osmotic action provide the pumping force. Reclaimed water circulates to catchpockets from which you draw it through this tube in the clip at your neck ... Urine and feces are processed in the thigh pads. In the open desert, you wear this filter across your face, this tube in the nostrils with these plugs to ensure a tight fit. Breathe in through the mouth filter, out through the nose tube. With a Fremen suit in good working order, you won't lose more than a thimbleful of moisture a day".[5]

Due to its scarcity on Arrakis, water and its preservation are sacred to the Fremen.[40]

Analysis edit

In his essay "Stillsuit" in The Science of Dune (2007), John C. Smith analyzes Herbert's stillsuit and its feasibility in the real world as described. Smith suggests that "Stillsuits designed using strict literal interpretations from the Dune books probably would not work and most likely would cook the wearer like a Crock-Pot ... However, engineering solutions can be envisioned for all the suit's shortcomings."[41]

T-Probe edit

A T-Probe is a fictional device in Frank Herbert's Dune universe used to capture the thoughts of a person (living or dead) for analysis.[42] T-Probes appear or are referred to in Herbert's Heretics of Dune (1984) and Chapterhouse: Dune (1985),[11][12] as well as the sequels Hunters of Dune (2006) and Sandworms of Dune (2007) by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson.[43][44]

As described in Heretics of Dune, the probe is a non-Ixian interrogation device brought by the Honored Matres from the Scattering. It is attached to the body through a series of "medusa contacts" placed around the skull and on major nerve centers. An operator can increase or decrease the power supplied to the probe to maximize its efficacy while at the same time not overloading the nervous system of the subject. While being subjected to the probe, Miles Teg's Mentat thinking deduces that not only can it "command his body as though he had no thinking part in his own behavior", but also "The whole spectrum of his senses could be copied into this T-probe and identified ... The machine could trace those out as though it made a duplicate of him."[42] The probe builds a 'digital framework' of the person which can be subjected to stimuli, and will respond as the person would. The T-Probe also causes massive, virtually unendurable pain in a living subject. Shere only prevents the T-Probe from recovering memories directly (as it does for the Ixian Probe) and does not impede any of the other features. Memories can still be guessed at from the model the probe constructs. The T-Probe is what causes Miles Teg's brain to change its structure, giving him the blinding speed and amazing abilities seen at the end of Heretics of Dune. This mental alteration continues in Teg even after being 'reborn' as a Tleilaxu ghola in Chapterhouse Dune.[12]

Weirding Module edit

A Weirding Module is a fictional sonic weapon introduced in and specific to Dune, the 1984 David Lynch film adaptation of Frank Herbert's 1965 novel of the same name. In the film, the device is a sonic beam weapon that translates specific sounds into attacks of varying potency, used by House Atreides and later by the Fremen armies. In the novel, Paul Atreides and his mother Lady Jessica teach the Fremen the Bene Gesserit martial arts called the "weirding way" by the Fremen; an indirect reference to this detail is made in the scene where Jessica physically overpowers Fremen leader Stilgar at their first encounter.

Lynch is said to have adapted the weirding way into the Weirding Module because he did not like the idea of "kung-fu on sand dunes".[45] The change literalizes Paul's line "My own name is a killing word". In the novel, the Fremen shout his Fremen name, "Muad'Dib", as a battle cry; in the film, the Fremen are surprised to find that saying "Muad'Dib" is a powerful trigger for the Weirding Module.

The Weirding Module appears in the computer games Dune (1992) and Emperor: Battle for Dune (2001), and the concept is adapted into "sonic tanks" for the games Dune II (1992) and Dune 2000 (1998). There is no reference to this technology in the original novels.

Other technologies edit

In Dune Messiah, the ghola Hayt is provided by the Tleilaxu with metallic artificial eyes, which they boast "improved on the original." Survivors of atomic stone burner blasts are typically blinded, but the superstitious Fremen in Paul Atreides' armies tend to believe that Tleilaxu eyes "enslave their users", and that a union between metal eyes and human flesh "must be sinful."[7] The Bene Tleilax also produce biological products other than gholas and Face Dancers. Chairdogs are living and partially sentient creatures used for seating which possess the ability to shape themselves to fit their occupant. Some characters dislike sitting on an animal and prefer normal chairs. A slig is a hybrid livestock animal—a cross between a large slug and a Terran pig—first mentioned in Heretics of Dune and considered a culinary delicacy. Despite being the producers of sligs, the Tleilaxu themselves do not consume the animals, having designed them to facilitate what they see as the degrading decadence and spiritual bankruptcy of all cultures but their own.

Herbert's series of Dune novels have numerous other technologically advanced devices. In Dune (1965), water is scarce on the desert planet Arrakis; the native Fremen use a type of air well called a windtrap to condense moisture from the air and collect it in vast catch basins.[18] They also collect moisture from the dead using a device called a deathstill.[5] The Fremen accomplish long-distance coded communication using a distrans, a steganographic device that produces a "temporary neural imprint" on the nervous system of bats or birds. The message imprint is carried within the animal's normal cry, and can later be separated out using another distrans.[18] A palm lock is a lock or seal keyed to a specific human hand, a solido is a projected three-dimensional image, and a poison snooper is a device which can detect poisons by analyzing radiation in the "olfactory spectrum".[18] In Dune, the Baron Vladimir Harkonnen employs a cone of silence, a sound-deadening field used for privacy, though it does not visually obscure lip movement.[5] In Heretics of Dune (1984) Herbert mentions an Ixian damper, a similar, portable device described as a "black disc" which is buoyed midair by suspensors. It hides words from anyone without the proper coded translator, and projects distortions that hide the precise movements of lips and the sounds of voices.[11] A filmbook is a shigawire imprint, used for training and education, which carries a mnemonic pulse that imprints information and corresponding images in the reader's mind.[18]

Herbert mentions other unnamed technologies in the Dune series. In Dune, the Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother Mohiam "tests" young Paul Atreides using a box that inflicts pain through "nerve induction". It is described as "a green metal cube about fifteen centimeters on a side", with one open side revealing a blackness so dark that no light penetrates it. Paul is forced to place his hand into the box and not remove it until Mohiam allows him. He experiences first coldness, tingling, then itching, followed by "the faintest burning" which soon intensifies to the point that "he could feel skin curling black on that agonized hand, the flesh crisping and dropping away until only charred bones remained". The pain stops, and when he is permitted to remove his hand, it is unmarked and unharmed.[5] This device is later referred to as the "agony box" in Heretics of Dune, and is noted to be used for interrogation as well.[11] Carol Hart analyzes the concept of inflicting pain without injury in the essay "The Black Hole of Pain" in The Science of Dune (2007).[46]

In God Emperor of Dune (1981), Moneo Atreides uses a memocorder, a tiny handheld device described as "a dull black Ixian artifact whose existence crowded the proscriptions of the Butlerian Jihad".[8] In the same novel, the Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother Anteac writes a message to be sent to her Sisterhood:

On Anteac's lap lay a small square of inky black about ten millimeters on a side and no more than three millimeters thick. She wrote upon this square with a glittering needle—one word upon another, all of them absorbed into the square. The completed message would be impressed upon the nerve receptors of an acolyte-messenger's eyes, latent there until they could be replayed at the Chapter House.[8]

In Heretics of Dune, Reverend Mother Lucilla recognizes a device called a hypnobong in use on the street, witnessing a passerby lean into a concave basin and then lift his face "with a shudder ... staggering slightly, his eyes glazed". She notes that the device is "outlawed on all of the more civilized worlds".[11]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Both mentions of the tanks are spelled "axolotl" in Dune Messiah, but Herbert spells the term "axlotl" in all later novels in the series.
  2. ^ In Dune Messiah, the Tleilaxu dwarf Bijaz hums to activate dormant programming in the Duncan Idaho ghola Hayt to induce him to kill Paul Atreides: "He began to hum, a keening, whining monotonous theme, repeated over and over…Hayt stiffened, experiencing odd pains that played up and down his spine…The sound made Hayt think of ancient rituals, folk memories, old words and customs, half-forgotten meanings in lost mutterings."
  3. ^ In Heretics of Dune, Master Waff tries to control his Face Dancer duplicate of Hedley Tuek: "Humming sounds like the noises of angry insects came from his mouth, a modulated thing that clearly was some kind of language."
  4. ^ In Chapterhouse Dune, Scytale sees an opportunity to control/influence the Duncan Idaho ghola and thus effect his escape from the Bene Gesserit when he thinks: Somehow, I must contrive it that Idaho and I meet intimately. There's always the whistling language we impress on every ghola.
  5. ^ Though the replacement Teg is called a ghola, Herbert notes that he is technically a clone because the cells used to create him had been taken from the original just prior to his death, rather than from a corpse.
  6. ^ Charles L. Harness uses a similar concept in his 1953 novel Flight into Yesterday.
  7. ^ In both (1984 and 2021) Dune films and the 2000 miniseries Frank Herbert's Dune, the Baron floats or levitates rather than walk on the ground himself.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Touponce, William F. (1988), Frank Herbert, Boston, Massachusetts: Twayne Publishers imprint, G. K. Hall & Co, pg. 119, ISBN 0-8057-7514-5. "Locus ran a poll of readers on April 15, 1975 in which Dune 'was voted the all-time best science-fiction novel…It has sold over ten million copies in numerous editions.'"
  2. ^ . PNNonline.org (Internet Archive). March 18, 2003. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved September 28, 2007. Since its debut in 1965, Frank Herbert's Dune has sold over 12 million copies worldwide, making it the best-selling science fiction novel of all time…Frank Herbert's Dune saga is one of the greatest 20th Century contributions to literature.
  3. ^ Lorenzo, DiTommaso (November 1992). "History and Historical Effect in Frank Herbert's Dune". Science Fiction Studies. #58, Volume 19, Part 3. DePauw.edu. pp. 311–325. from the original on October 17, 2012. Retrieved July 21, 2009.
  4. ^ Herbert, Frank (1965). "Terminology of the Imperium: Jihad, Butlerian". Dune.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Herbert, Frank (1965). Dune.
  6. ^ Herbert, Frank (1965). "Terminology of the Imperium: Great Convention". Dune.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Herbert, Frank (1969). Dune Messiah.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Herbert, Frank (1981). God Emperor of Dune.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Herbert, Brian; Kevin J. Anderson (1999–2001). Prelude to Dune.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Herbert, Brian; Kevin J. Anderson (2002–2004). Legends of Dune.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Herbert, Frank (1984). Heretics of Dune.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Herbert, Frank (1985). Chapterhouse: Dune.
  13. ^ a b c Herbert, Brian; Kevin J. Anderson (2006). Hunters of Dune.
  14. ^ a b c Herbert, Brian; Kevin J. Anderson (2007). Sandworms of Dune.
  15. ^ Herbert, Frank (1985). Heretics of Dune. Gholas: humans grown from a cadaver's cells in Tleilaxu axlotl tanks.
  16. ^ Herbert (1969). Dune Messiah. …our wise Sardaukar commander had Idaho's corpse preserved for the axolotl tanks. Why not? This corpse held the flesh and nerves of one of the finest swordsmen in history, an adviser to the Atreides, a military genius. What a waste to lose all that training and ability when it might be revived as an instructor for the Sardaukar…He was killed here on Arrakis…a grievous head-wound which required many months of regrowth.
  17. ^ Csori, Csilla (2007). "Memory (and the Tleilaxu) Makes the Man". In Grazier, Kevin R. (ed.). The Science of Dune: An Unauthorized Exploration into the Real Science Behind Frank Herbert's Fictional Universe. Psychology of Popular Culture. Dallas, TX: BenBella Books. pp. 167–175. ISBN 978-1-933771-28-1.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i Herbert, Frank (1965). "Terminology of the Imperium". Dune.
  19. ^ Herbert, Frank (1965). "Appendix III: Report on Bene Gesserit Motives and Purposes". Dune.
  20. ^ Herbert, Brian; Kevin J. Anderson (2001). Dune: House Corrino.
  21. ^ Herbert, Frank (1965). "Terminology of the Imperium: Holtzman Effect". Dune.
  22. ^ Herbert, Frank (1965). "Terminology of the Imperium: Shield, Defensive". Dune. Shield, Defensive: the protective field produced by a Holtzman generator. This field derives from Phase One of the suspensor-nullification effect. A shield will permit entry only to objects moving at slow speeds (depending on setting, this speed ranges from six to nine centimeters per second) and can be shorted out only by a shire-sized electric field.
  23. ^ Horton, Rich. . Archived from the original on June 7, 2011. Retrieved January 8, 2020.
  24. ^ a b c Herbert, Frank (1965). "Terminology of the Imperium: Lasgun". Dune.
  25. ^ Herbert, Frank (1965). Dune. Ace. pp. 145–146. ISBN 0-441-17271-7. Jessica focused her mind on lasguns ... The white-hot beams of disruptive light could cut through any known substance, provided that substance was not shielded. The fact that feedback from a shield would explode both lasgun and shield did not bother the Harkonnens ... A lasgun/shield explosion was a dangerous variable, could be more powerful than atomics, could kill only the gunner and his shielded target.
  26. ^ a b Herbert, Frank (1965). Dune. Jessica: Perhaps suspensors are another thing to avoid in the open desert. Maybe they attract the worms the way a shield does.
  27. ^ Herbert, Frank (1976). Children of Dune.
  28. ^ Grazier, Kevin R. (2007). "Cosmic Origami". In Grazier, Kevin R. (ed.). The Science of Dune. pp. 177–206. ISBN 978-1-933771-28-1.
  29. ^ Herbert, Frank (1965). "Terminology of the Imperium: Suspensor". Dune.
  30. ^ Seger, Ges; Grazier, Kevin R. (2007). "Suspensor of Disbelief". In Grazier, Kevin R. (ed.). The Science of Dune. pp. 207–216. ISBN 978-1-933771-28-1.
  31. ^ Herbert, Frank (1965). "Terminology of the Imperium: Glowglobe". Dune.
  32. ^ a b Herbert, Frank (1984). Heretics of Dune. Ace (1987 ed.). pp. 93.
  33. ^ Herbert, Frank (1965). Dune. Ace. pp. 145–146. ISBN 0-441-17271-7. Jessica focused her mind on lasguns, wondering. The white-hot beams of disruptive light could cut through any known substance, provided that substance was not shielded. The fact that feedback from a shield would explode both lasgun and shield did not bother the Harkonnens. Why? A lasgun-shield explosion was a dangerous variable, could be more powerful than atomics, could kill only the gunner and his shielded target.
  34. ^ Herbert, Frank (1985). Heretics of Dune. Berkley Books. p. 457. ISBN 0-425-07669-5. The no-ship sat there creaking, a glistening steely ball whose presence could be detected by the eyes and ears but not by any prescient or long-range instrument.
  35. ^ "Definition of ornitho-". Dictionary.com. from the original on December 9, 2021. Retrieved November 12, 2021.
  36. ^ "Definition of -pter". Dictionary.com. from the original on May 18, 2022. Retrieved November 12, 2021.
  37. ^ Ahmed, Sahil (October 20, 2021). "Dune's Dragonfly Aircraft Were Actually Operable". Screen Rant. from the original on October 21, 2021. Retrieved November 1, 2021.
  38. ^ Cardy, Simon (October 28, 2021). "Dune: How Denis Villeneuve Designed the Ornithopters". IGN. from the original on October 28, 2021. Retrieved November 1, 2021.
  39. ^ Desowitz, Bill (November 5, 2021). "Dune: How Denis Villeneuve's VFX Team Created Desert Power for the Sandworms and Ornithopters". IndieWire. from the original on November 5, 2021. Retrieved November 12, 2021.
  40. ^ a b c McCoy, Joshua Kristian (June 15, 2023). "Dune: The Stillsuit, Explained". Game Rant. from the original on September 13, 2023. Retrieved March 6, 2024.
  41. ^ Smith, John C. (2007). "Stillsuit". In Grazier, Kevin R. (ed.). The Science of Dune. pp. 127–141. ISBN 978-1-933771-28-1.
  42. ^ a b Herbert, Brian (2003). Dreamer of Dune: The Biography of Frank Herbert. Macmillan (2004 ed.). p. 129.
  43. ^ Herbert, Brian; Kevin J. Anderson (2006). Hunters of Dune. Macmillan (2007 ed.). p. 59.
  44. ^ Herbert, Brian; Kevin J. Anderson (2007). Sandworms of Dune. Macmillan. p. 296.
  45. ^ Anderson, Martin (May 9, 2008). "Top Ten Screen Screams". Den of Geek. from the original on January 23, 2010. Retrieved August 28, 2010.
  46. ^ Hart, Carol (2007). "The Black Hole of Pain". In Grazier, Kevin R. (ed.). The Science of Dune. pp. 143–150. ISBN 978-1-933771-28-1.

External links edit

  • "Science Fiction in the News Articles: Frank Herbert". TechNovelgy.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.

list, technology, dune, universe, technology, aspect, fictional, setting, dune, series, science, fiction, novels, written, frank, herbert, derivative, works, herbert, concepts, inventions, have, been, analyzed, deconstructed, least, book, science, dune, 2007, . Technology is a key aspect of the fictional setting of the Dune series of science fiction novels written by Frank Herbert and derivative works Herbert s concepts and inventions have been analyzed and deconstructed in at least one book The Science of Dune 2007 Herbert s originating 1965 novel Dune is popularly considered one of the greatest science fiction novels of all time 1 and is frequently cited as the best selling science fiction novel in history 1 2 Dune and its five sequels by Herbert explore the complex and multilayered interactions of politics religion ecology and technology among other themes The Butlerian Jihad an event in the back story of Herbert s universe leads to the outlawing of certain technologies primarily thinking machines a collective term for computers and artificial intelligence of any kind This prohibition is a key influence on the nature of Herbert s fictional setting 3 In Dune ten thousand years after this jihad its enduring commandment remains Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind 4 Contents 1 Atomics 1 1 The original series 1 2 Prequels 2 Axlotl tank 2 1 The original series 2 2 Sequels 2 3 Prelude to Dune 3 Cymek 3 1 Legends of Dune 3 2 Great Schools of Dune 4 Face Dancer 4 1 Original series 4 2 Sequels 5 Ghola 5 1 The original series 5 2 Dune games 6 Heighliner 7 Holtzman effect 7 1 Holtzman shield 7 2 Holtzman drive 7 3 Suspensors 7 4 Glowglobes 8 Ixian Probe 9 Lasgun 10 No chamber No ship 10 1 The original series 10 2 Sequels 10 3 Prelude to Dune 11 Ornithopter 12 Stillsuit 12 1 Description 12 2 Analysis 13 T Probe 14 Weirding Module 15 Other technologies 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 External linksAtomics editAtomics is the term used to refer to nuclear weapons in the Dune universe 5 Like real world nuclear weapons atomics presumably derive their destructive force from nuclear reactions of fission or fusion and Herbert notes that radiation lingers after their use 5 However the author never delves into the specifics of the technology or explores in detail how it may have evolved by the time of Dune s far future setting In the initial Dune novels the Great Houses of the Landsraad own family atomics as heirlooms keeping a secure hidden cache as weapons of last resort in their wars 5 Though such possession is necessary to secure power the use of atomics against humans violates the chief prohibition of the Great Convention the universal truce enforced under the power balance maintained by the Guild the Great Houses and the Imperium 6 Paul Atreides notes in Dune that The language of the Great Convention is clear enough Use of atomics against humans shall be cause for planetary obliteration 5 The atomics themselves act as a military deterrent any House which violates the Great Convention flagrantly such as using atomics openly in warfare faces massive retaliation from any number of the other Houses 5 As Paul notes via epigraph in Dune Messiah 1969 any Family in my Empire could so deploy its atomics as to destroy the planetary bases of fifty or more other Families 7 A stone burner is a conventional weapon that uses atomics for fuel Whether they are covered by the Great Convention is discussed several times in the series with the opinion that while they skirt the intentions of the law they do not warrant retaliation The explosion and radiation can be precisely adjusted depending on the desired effect 7 Stone burners emit J Rays a form of radiation that destroys the eye tissue of anyone surviving the initial radiation blast 7 If of sufficient power a stone burner can burn its way into the core of a planet destroying it Paul remained silent thinking what this weapon implied Too much fuel in it and it d cut its way into the planet s core Dune s molten level lay deep but the more dangerous for that Such pressures released and out of control might split a planet scattering lifeless bits and pieces through space 7 The original series edit In Dune Paul uses an atomic device on the surface of Arrakis to blast a pass through the Shield Wall a desert mountain range protecting the planet s capital He considers this act to be in accordance with the Great Convention because the atomics are not used against humans but rather against a natural feature of the desert 5 A stone burner is used in an attempt to assassinate Paul in Dune Messiah he survives but is blinded for the rest of his life 7 In God Emperor of Dune 1981 the God Emperor Leto II notes that since his 3 500 year reign began he has searched out all of the Family atomics and removed them to a safe place 8 Prequels edit In the Prelude to Dune prequel trilogy by Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson 1999 2001 it is revealed that a renegade House of the Landsraad had devastated the capital of the Corrino Padishah Empire Salusa Secundus with atomics and rendered the planet essentially uninhabitable Padishah Emperor Hassik Corrino III had relocated the Imperial throne to the planet Kaitain and the attacking House had been subsequently exterminated During the events of the series in 10 175 A G Padishah Emperor Shaddam IV uses atomics to destroy House Richese s artificial laboratory moon of Korona Part of Shaddam s plan to ensure his own spice monopoly the explosion causes a quarter of the planet Richese s population to go blind from the resulting light produced by the destruction of the Richesian mirrors stored on Korona Finally the persecuted Earl Dominic Vernius plans to use atomics to attack Kaitain when his hidden base on Arrakis is discovered by the Padishah Emperor s Sardaukar army Vernius ignites a stone burner to destroy himself and as many of the Sardaukar as he can 9 The Legends of Dune prequel series 2002 2004 establishes that the first human victory of the Butlerian Jihad the crusade against the thinking machines is the 200 B G destruction of Earth and the Earth Omnius using atomics Pulse atomics calibrated for use against the gel circuitry of the thinking machines are also used at the end of the war to systematically wipe out every single machine controlled planet 10 It is this action and the millions of human slaves who are killed in it which ultimately leads to the ban on atomic warfare in the Great Convention It also contributes to the development of the feud between the Harkonnens and Atreides Axlotl tank editFor the real world amphibian see Axolotl Axlotl tanks are a fictional biological technology in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert Axlotl technology is also mentioned in Herbert s novels Destination Void and The Jesus Incident but not elaborated upon A trade secret of the Tleilaxu an axlotl tank is a device for reproducing a living human being from the cells of a cadaver 11 a type of clone called a ghola 7 Axlotl tanks are eventually revealed to be semi artificial uteri created by transforming women into biological factories 11 Later in the series the Tleilaxu scientists also use the axlotl tanks to replicate the spice melange previously only available on the desert planet Arrakis where it is created naturally as part of the life cycle of giant sandworms 11 The original series edit The tanks are briefly mentioned in Dune Messiah 1969 as the source of the Duncan Idaho ghola 7 a Their nature is a well guarded Tleilaxu secret During his 3500 year reign which ends in God Emperor of Dune 1981 Leto II purchases countless Idaho gholas produced for him in the tanks 8 Within the 1500 years between the events of God Emperor of Dune and Heretics of Dune 1984 the Tleilaxu discover an artificial method of producing the spice melange in their axlotl tanks as well 11 Some melange users like the Bene Gesserit prefer the natural melange of Arrakis to the Tleilaxu substitute claiming increased potency In Heretics of Dune Miles Teg recalls how his Bene Gesserit mother Lady Janet had said that No one outside of the Tleilaxu planets has ever reported seeing a Tleilaxu female Wondering whether the Tleilaxu breed or simply rely on the tanks to reproduce Miles had asked Do they exist or is it just the tanks Janet confirmed that females do indeed exist Later in Heretics Teg s own daughter Reverend Mother Darwi Odrade theorizes that the axlotl tanks may be in fact surrogate mothers Tleilaxu females somehow transformed 11 Soon the current Duncan ghola recalls his repeated births from the tanks The axlotl tanks He remembered emerging time after time bright lights and padded mechanical hands The hands rotated him and in the unfocused blurs of the newborn he saw a great mound of female flesh monstrous in her almost immobile grossness a maze of dark tubes linked her body to giant metal containers 11 In Chapterhouse Dune 1985 the last remaining Tleilaxu Master Scytale is coerced into revealing the means of creating the tanks to the Bene Gesserit Sisterhood 12 Sequels edit In Hunters of Dune 2006 and Sandworms of Dune 2007 the novels by Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson which complete Frank Herbert s original series the Bene Gesserit on the no ship Ithaca use the captive Scytale s knowledge to create their own axlotl tanks from Bene Gesserit volunteers The Rabbi leader of the group of secret Jews on board is upset when his follower Rebecca a wild Reverend Mother volunteers herself for the process 13 14 Prelude to Dune edit In the Prelude to Dune prequel trilogy 1999 2001 by Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson set immediately prior to the events of 1965 s Dune the Tleilaxu attempt to create artificial melange called ajidamal using axlotl technology the best results are gained by using a Bene Gesserit sister to create an axlotl tank However the project ultimately fails 9 Cymek editA cymek is a type of cyborg or machine human hybrid in the fictional Dune prequel universe They appear in the Legends of Dune prequel trilogy 2002 2004 by Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson The only organic part of a cymek is its brain in the series living humans willingly have their brains transplanted into large mechanized bodies with the intent of extending life indefinitely 10 The technology is later revived in the prequel novel Mentats of Dune 2014 Legends of Dune edit Over 11 000 years before the events of Frank Herbert s Dune 1965 a group of 20 ambitious humans see the stagnation of the Old Empire and realize that their small band can take control of it with the aid of thinking machines Calling themselves the Titans they rule humanity for a hundred years and rename themselves after famous historical and mythological figures most notably Agamemnon Ajax Barbarossa Dante Hecate Juno Tlaloc and Xerxes 10 Ten years into their reign their leader Tlaloc is killed in a freak accident Realizing their mortality and limited lifespans they seek a way to extend their lives Juno is inspired by the cogitors ancient philosophers whose brains had been installed in fluid filled canisters so that they might analyze the universe indefinitely they are living and retain awareness and consciousness and the ability to communicate should they choose The Titan Agamemnon is the first to become a cymek his brain transplanted into a canister which through special interfaces is installed into a large fearsome and weaponized body In cymek form the remaining 19 Titans are virtually unstoppable and continue their tyrannical rule of the universe for another 90 years Growing complacent the Titans are themselves overthrown and enslaved by Omnius a sentient computer network given too much autonomy Omnius controls the universe for the next 900 years The Titans recruit humans from the enslaved Omnius controlled Synchronized Worlds to become neo cymeks footsoldiers who could more fully understand human strategy and thought processes than machines 10 A small group of worlds united as the League of Nobles resist the initial Titan rebellion and remain free from machine rule With the thinking machines ever persistent in their intent to enslave or destroy all humans the League initiates the Butlerian Jihad mankind s century long crusade against the machines The humans are ultimately victorious destroying all but one hidden copy of Omnius as well as the Titans the neo cymeks and all thinking machine forces With all thinking machine technology henceforth banned new organizations arise composed of humans who had developed specialized skills during the Jihad to replace and exceed technology including the Spacing Guild Mentats and the Bene Gesserit 10 Great Schools of Dune edit In Mentats of Dune 2014 a group of new cymeks are created by the human Dr Ptolemy using the brains of failed Guild Navigators Funded by Josef Venport as a counter to Manford Torondo and his fanatical mobs of anti technology Butlerians these cymeks are more advanced than their predecessors a team of them manages to destroy a sandworm on Arrakis though they are destroyed themselves Ptolemy himself later willingly undergoes the surgery to have his brain placed in a cymek Face Dancer editFace Dancers are a fictional servant caste of sterile humanoid shapeshifters in Frank Herbert s Dune universe Created by the Bene Tleilax they are able to physiologically change their appearance to impersonate other people Face Dancers possess full sentience but also genetically programmed loyalty to the Tleilaxu Masters They are used by the Tleilaxu throughout the universe to replace people whom the Tleilaxu find useful usually killing the originals In this way they may infiltrate and control various groups in the universe Face Dancers are Jadacha hermaphrodites able to change their gender at will 7 In Heretics of Dune 1984 Herbert describes a pair of Face Dancers in their natural state Two small men as alike as twins Almost chinless round faces pug noses tiny mouths black button eyes and short cropped white hair that stood up from their heads like the bristles on a brush 11 The Tleilaxu are able to control Face Dancers by forcing them into a hypnotic state with a predefined sound often a specific humming or whistling noise In Heretics of Dune Master Waff attempts to control his Face Dancer duplicate of Hedley Tuek Humming sounds like the noises of angry insects came from his mouth a modulated thing that clearly was some kind of language 11 Original series edit In Dune Messiah 1969 Tleilaxu Face Dancer Scytale enters into a conspiracy with the Bene Gesserit Spacing Guild and House Corrino to remove Paul Atreides from the Imperial throne Scytale is the architect of a multi pronged plot against Paul centered on the Tleilaxu ghola Hayt a reincarnation of Paul s friend Duncan Idaho who has been programmed to unwittingly destroy Paul psychologically and failing that kill Paul when triggered by an implanted command Scytale also kills and replaces the Fremen girl Lichna to infiltrate Paul s household and lure him to an assassination attempt outside the safety of his stronghold Paul s Bene Gesserit training allows him to detect the substitution but he allows the plot to play out All of these schemes fail to eliminate Paul but set the stage for Scytale s final ploy the unlocking of Duncan s memories in Hayt illustrates that the Tleilaxu can provide Paul with a fully realized ghola of his deceased concubine Chani in exchange for his abdication Paul refuses and kills Scytale 7 Over 3 500 years later in God Emperor of Dune 1981 Tleilaxu Face Dancers kill and replace nearly everyone in the Ixian embassy on Arrakis as part of an assassination attempt on Paul s seemingly immortal son the God Emperor Leto II Atreides Though these Face Dancers are more imperceptible than ever before Leto and the Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother Anteac are able to detect the impostors thanks to the Bene Gesserit techniques of acute observation 8 Another 1 500 years later in Heretics of Dune 1984 the Tleilaxu have perfected their Face Dancers who are now perfect mimics able to copy the memories and consciousness of the people they imitate Virtually undetectable to all but the Bene Gesserit these Face Dancers begin to replace leaders in the Imperium as a means for the Tleilaxu to seize control The plan fails as over time the Face Dancers come to believe they are the people they have copied and elude their genetically programmed loyalty to the Tleilaxu Masters 11 In Chapterhouse Dune 1985 Duncan Idaho notes that the mysterious observers Daniel and Marty resemble Face Dancers but atypically autonomous ones 12 Daniel and Marty later confirm that they are independent Face Dancers noting The Tleilaxu gave us the power to absorb the memories and experiences of other people The Masters should ve known we would gather enough of them one day to make our own decisions about our own future 12 Sequels edit In Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson s 2006 continuation of the original series Hunters of Dune the leaders of the Lost Tleilaxu have been killed and replaced by their own advanced Face Dancers who cannot be detected by even the Bene Gesserit The Face Dancer leader Khrone serves Daniel and Marty in their plot for domination of the universe but has separate schemes of his own Khrone s Face Dancers have secretly gained control of many power bases across the Empire and Daniel and Marty are revealed to be new incarnations of mankind s ancient enemies thinking machine leader Omnius and his second in command Erasmus introduced in the Legends of Dune prequel trilogy by Brian Herbert and Anderson 13 In the series finale Sandworms of Dune 2007 it is revealed that Khrone and his legions of autonomous Face Dancers seek to overthrow their machine masters Secretly in control of Ix and its technology production Khrone manipulates the Spacing Guild and New Sisterhood setting them up for disastrous failure in their final battle against the thinking machine forces of Omnius When Khrone asserts dominance over even the machine empire a smug Erasmus activates a fail safe built into all enhanced Face Dancers instantly killing Khrone and all of his minions across the universe 14 Ghola edit Ghola redirects here For other uses see Ghola disambiguation A ghola is a fictional humanoid in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert Similar to clones they are manufactured human duplicates grown in an axlotl tank from cells collected from a deceased subject A true ghola is initially shown to be the resurrection of a corpse through regrowth of damaged tissues while later gholas in the series are more accurately described as clones grown from genetic material extracted from a few cells e g a small scraping of skin taken moments before death Through specific stresses gholas can be made to recall the memories of the original including their moment of death In Herbert s Dune series the technological process is developed and initially monopolized by the Tleilaxu 7 15 in later novels the process is also used by the Bene Gesserit 12 The first ghola featured in the series Hayt in 1969 s Dune Messiah is a resurrection of the corpse of Duncan Idaho 16 Later gholas are grown from a few cells as in the case of subsequent Idaho gholas provided to Leto II as described in God Emperor of Dune 1981 8 The Tleilaxu can control their creations by forcing them into a hypnotic state with some predefined sound often a specific humming or whistling noise that has been pre conditioned into each ghola b c d Csilla Csori analyzes the concept of recording and restoring memories in the essay Memory and the Tleilaxu Makes the Man in The Science of Dune 2007 17 The original series edit Before the events of Dune Messiah gholas are merely physical copies without the memories of their original incarnations The ghola Hayt is programmed by the Tleilaxu to kill Emperor Paul Atreides under post hypnotic suggestion The attempt fails but as hoped by the Tleilaxu the stress of attempting to kill someone who was deeply loved in the ghola s previous life breaks the mental barrier between the ghola s consciousness and the life memories of the original Hayt recovers the full memories of the original Duncan Idaho The Tleilaxu are now able to offer Paul a similar ghola resurrection of his deceased beloved Chani to gain leverage over him but he refuses 7 In God Emperor of Dune over Leto II s 3 500 year reign he has as constant companions a series of Duncan gholas with restored memories of the original Idaho but not the memories of the previous gholas They are perfectly reconstructed incarnations made from a few cells created as needed in the time span of one to two years In this novel one of the Duncans recalls how as a blank ghola he was tasked to kill a Face Dancer duplicate of Leto s father and Duncan s friend Paul and the psychological stress awakened his memories 8 Fifteen hundred years later in Heretics of Dune 1984 Leto is dead and the Bene Gesserit are the consumers of Duncan gholas The current Idaho ghola recovers the memories of the original like his predecessors however the later attempt by the Honored Matre Murbella to sexually imprint him results in his recovery of the memories of all his ghola incarnations 11 It is later determined that the Tleilaxu had mixed the cells from multiple Idaho gholas to make this one however recovery of genetic material from every incarnation would have been impossible for the Tleilaxu indicating the development of some form of prescient or metaphysical awareness 12 Though intense psychological trauma is the key to unlocking the memories of a ghola the actual situation contrived to accomplish this is specific to each individual When military genius Miles Teg is killed in Heretics of Dune a ghola of him is born in Chapterhouse Dune 1985 on orders from Teg s own daughter Bene Gesserit leader Darwi Odrade e His former memories are unlocked using sexual imprinting 12 The discovery of how to reawaken a ghola has tremendous consequences for the Tleilaxu Masters themselves they subsequently use the technology of axlotl tanks and memory recovery to grant themselves effective immortality Every Master is recreated upon his death with recovered memories accumulating many generations of knowledge and experience and permitting planning on a timespan of millennia 11 Dune games edit There are also mentions of gholas in the Dune games In Dune 2000 1998 the Harkonnen Mentat is allegedly a ghola cloned from Tleilaxu flesh vats and in Emperor Battle for Dune 2001 House Ordos constantly deploy their own gholas in assassination and infiltration missions This is particularly effective in tricking the Sardaukar and Fremen into allying with House Ordos On a much larger scale they plan to use a ghola of the now deceased Corrino Emperor to claim the Golden Lion Throne with the Executrix as the true leaders behind the so called puppet Emperor Heighliner editA heighliner is a type of fictional starship used for interstellar travel in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert These enormous spaceships are the major cargo carrier of the Spacing Guild s transportation system 18 Duke Leto Atreides speaks of them in Dune 1965 A Heighliner is truly big Its hold will tuck all our frigates and transports into a little corner we ll be just a small part of the ship s manifest 5 Heighliner operation requires a Guild Navigator who uses a limited form of prescience made possible by their use of the drug melange to safely guide the ship across space at translight speeds 7 19 Navigators are confined to giant tanks completely immersed in highly concentrated orange spice gas 7 Unable to land heighliners jump from point to point parking in planetary orbits though the ship itself does not technically move Special laws govern travel aboard a heighliner heighliners are considered neutral territory and all acts of war aboard heighliners carry stiff penalties 5 Leto notes that while they are traveling to Arrakis it is quite likely they will share cargo space with Harkonnen vessels but neither will be aggressive to each other for fear of losing shipping privileges It is mentioned in God Emperor of Dune 1981 that while history books credit Aurelius Venport with designing the first Spacing Guild ship it was actually Venport s mistress Norma Cenva who gave him the design 8 In the Legends of Dune prequel trilogy 2002 2004 Norma invents heighliners during the Butlerian Jihad 10 The Prelude to Dune prequel trilogy 1999 2001 establishes that in subsequent millennia the ships are manufactured on the planet Ix 9 During the events described in the 2001 prequel Dune House Corrino a heighliner is expertly spacefolded into a cavern under the surface of Ix incapacitating an occupying army during the Atreides led liberation of the planet In the novel heighliners are noted to be more than 20 kilometers long 20 Holtzman effect editThe Holtzman effect is a fictional scientific phenomenon in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert beginning with the 1965 novel Dune The effect is never explained in detail but it makes among other things defensive force shields and instantaneous space travel possible through its application in Holtzman shields foldspace or Holtzman drives suspensors and glowglobes 18 Herbert defined the Holtzman effect as the negative repelling effect of a shield generator 21 Its discovery is explored in the Legends of Dune prequel trilogy by Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson 2002 2004 10 Holtzman shield edit In Dune the Holtzman effect has been adapted to produce personal defensive shields which permit penetration only by objects that move below a pre set velocity 22 f 23 Paul Atreides notes in Dune In shield fighting one moves fast on defense slow on attack The shield turns the fast blow admits the slow kindjal 5 The interaction of a lasgun beam and a Holtzman field results in subatomic fusion and a nuclear explosion 24 The magnitude of this blast is unpredictable sometimes it destroys only the shielded target and gunner sometimes the explosion is more powerful than atomics 25 Using lasguns in a shielded environment can result in military and environmental catastrophe though at one point in Dune Duncan Idaho deliberately allows shield lasgun contact as a discouragement to his enemies 5 and in Chapterhouse Dune Miles Teg directs the creation of lasgun Holtzman field shield drone mines for use against the Honored Matres By the time of God Emperor of Dune 1981 God Emperor Leto II has banned shields throughout his empire to avoid such explosive interactions 8 The vibrations of an active shield will drive a sandworm on Arrakis into a killing frenzy drawing them from across territorial lines to attack the shield 26 For this reason the native Fremen eschew them It is noted in Children of Dune 1976 that the Fremen have developed a small shield generator known as a pseudo shield to attract and madden a worm for use as an ersatz bomb 27 Holtzman drive edit The effect is used in this case to fold space at the quantum level allowing the Spacing Guild s heighliner ships to instantaneously travel far distances across space without actually moving at all However the chaotic and seemingly non deterministic quantum nature of foldspace requires at least limited prescience on the part of the human navigator otherwise the absurdly complex mathematics involved in producing reliable physical projections of such events would only be possible with advanced computers which are strictly prohibited because of mankind s crusade against thinking machines the Butlerian Jihad To this effect the Guild produces melange saturated Navigators who intuitively see paths through foldspace in this way 5 This stumbling block is overcome several thousand years after the events of Dune when Ixian scientists develop mechanical replacements for Guild Navigators 11 Kevin R Grazier analyzes the concepts of folding space and faster than light travel in the essay Cosmic Origami in The Science of Dune 2007 28 Suspensors edit Hovering devices called suspensors utilize the secondary low drain phase of a Holtzman field generator to nullify gravity within certain limits prescribed by relative mass and energy consumption 29 Suspensors are used in chairs tables and structures that are too massive to be physically sound among other uses In Dune the grotesquely obese Baron Vladimir Harkonnen utilizes suspensor belts and harnesses to buoy his flesh and allow him to walk g In Dune Jessica theorizes that suspensors like shields attract sandworms 26 Kevin R Grazier analyzes the concept of anti gravity technology in the essay Suspensor of Disbelief in The Science of Dune 2007 30 Glowglobes edit A varied use of the Holtzman effect is the glowglobe This device is a small glowing sphere that floats gracefully above a surface like a portable personal sun and is typically tuned to a yellowish color 5 Herbert describes it as a suspensor buoyed illuminating device self powered usually by organic batteries 31 Ixian Probe editAn Ixian Probe is a fictional device in Frank Herbert s Dune universe used to capture the thoughts of a person living or dead for analysis 32 Ixian Probes are mentioned in Herbert s Heretics of Dune 1984 32 As described in Heretics of Dune the probe is an interrogation device of Ixian manufacture which can raid the mind even of a dead person 11 However the substance shere blocks the effects of the probe and will protect a person who has taken it even in death 11 The probe itself or how it works are not described but when Miles Teg sees a T Probe for the first time he believes it is an Ixian Probe 11 The T Probe consists of a hood with a series of electrodes attached to the skull controlled by an operator the notable difference is that shere has no effect against a T Probe 11 Lasgun editA lasgun pronounced ˈ l eɪ z ɡ ʌ n is a fictional directed energy weapon specifically a laser gun in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert In Terminology of the Imperium the glossary of the 1965 novel Dune Herbert provides the following definition LASGUN continuous wave laser projector Its use as a weapon is limited in a field generator shield culture because of the explosive pyrotechnics technically subatomic fusion created when its beam intersects a shield 24 The interaction of a lasgun beam and a Holtzman field results in subatomic fusion and a nuclear explosion 24 The magnitude of this blast is unpredictable sometimes it destroys only the shielded target and gunner sometimes the explosion is more powerful than atomics 33 Using lasguns in a shielded environment can result in military and environmental catastrophe though at one point in Dune Duncan Idaho deliberately allows shield lasgun contact as a discouragement to his enemies 5 In God Emperor of Dune 1981 lasgun fire is described as blue arcs 8 a lasgun is noted to be heavy in Chapterhouse Dune 1985 12 A cutteray is described in Dune as a Short range version of a lasgun used mostly as a cutting tool and surgeon s scalpel 18 No chamber No ship edit nbsp A no ship from the cover of Chapterhouse Dune 1985 A no chamber is a fictional stealth technology in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert Originally called a no room in Herbert s God Emperor of Dune 1981 8 it is a construct that hides anything inside from prescient vision and long range instruments 34 A no globe is a larger construction of no chambers and a no ship is a no chamber in starship form with enough limited prescience to be capable of interstellar travel without the use of a Guild Navigator 11 The original series edit In God Emperor of Dune Leto II deduces that the new Ixian Ambassador Hwi Noree had been born in what would come to be known as a no room to shield her creation and upbringing from him 8 Hwi had been created by the Ixians from the cells of Leto s friend nemesis Malky but as Malky s direct opposite using Tleilaxu ghola technology designed to be irresistible to Leto 8 The no room is an improvement upon a device the Ixians had previously created for Leto to record his thoughts into a written journal and hide them from prescient vision 8 In Heretics of Dune 1984 Miles Teg the Bene Gesserit Lucilla and the Duncan Idaho ghola hide in a no globe on Gammu created by the Harkonnens millennia before when the planet had been called Giedi Prime 11 It is a sizeable complex noted to be very ancient but the chambers are still intact and functioning 11 The exact era of its creation is not specified but it is written that Gammu was Giedi Prime a Harkonnen place They were rich Rich enough to accomplish the secret installation of a no room even of a large no globe Bribes third party purchases many transshipments The Famine Times were very disruptive and before that there were all those millennia of the Tyrant When the Harkonnens kept their heads down or lost them 11 No ships are in use at the time of Heretics of Dune like no chambers anything inside a no ship is hidden from prescient vision and other means of detection and the ship itself is invisible to sight or photography 11 However a no ship has much greater technological capability than a no chamber as it can perform the functions of a Guild Navigator 11 Specifically a no ship s navigation machine is capable of enough limited prescience to successfully navigate its way through foldspace 11 Teg steals a massive no ship from the fierce Honored Matres on Gammu in Heretics of Dune and its Great Hold alone is noted to be one kilometer in length large enough to transport an adult sandworm 11 In Chapterhouse Dune 1985 the Bene Gesserit initially confine Duncan and Murbella to this no ship on Chapterhouse for their own protection from prescient spying As Murbella becomes the leader of a New Sisterhood composed of both the Bene Gesserit and Honored Matres Duncan and Teg flee Chapterhouse with Sheeana and other passengers on the no ship 12 In Heretics of Dune and Chapterhouse Dune it is suggested that certain characters of Atreides ancestry have the ability to use their prescient powers to see no ships 11 12 This ability to nullify no field invisibility is unleashed in Miles Teg after he is interrogated with a device called a T Probe 12 Teg s subsequent ghola duplicate also retains that unique ability after his memories are re awakened 12 Sequels edit In Hunters of Dune 2006 and Sandworms of Dune 2007 the novels by Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson which complete Frank Herbert s original series the fleeing no ship is named the Ithaca by its passengers in homage to the long journey of the mythological Greek hero Odysseus to his home of Ithaca Accompanying Duncan Teg and Sheeana are some 150 refugees including the apparent last Tleilaxu Master Scytale some Bene Gesserit Sisters and a group of secret Jews They seek a new world onto which to introduce the captive sandworms on board as well as a new home for the Jews but are in constant pursuit by the Unknown Enemy who seek to ensnare the ship in an inescapable tachyon net With the help of genetic material possessed by Scytale the passengers of the Ithaca begin growing gholas of historical heroes such as Paul Atreides and Lady Jessica to assist them in the final battle they know is coming against the Unknown Enemy 13 14 Prelude to Dune edit In the Prelude to Dune prequel trilogy 1999 2001 by Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson the creation of the Harkonnen no globe is attributed to a man named Chobyn 9 He invents the technology and builds the no globe for Baron Vladimir Harkonnen immediately prior to the events of Dune 1965 9 However Chobyn is killed and the technology lost 9 until it is reinvented by the Ixians millennia later during the reign of Leto II 8 Ornithopter editAn ornithopter from Greek roots ornithos 35 bird and pteron wing 36 is an aircraft that flies by flapping its wings In the Dune universe ornithopters or thopters are one of the primary modes of transportation on Arrakis Herbert describes ornithopters as Aircraft capable of sustained wing beat flight in the manner of birds in his 1965 novel Dune 18 The craft achieve takeoff primarily though the beat of their wings with jet power assisting in propulsion and stabilization Leto fed power to the wings felt them cup and dip once twice They were airborne in ten meters wings feathered tightly and afterjets thrusting them upward in a steep hissing climb 5 The wings themselves consisting of delicate metal interleavings are adjustable in length through a retractor bar or manually 5 They are fully extended when the jetpods are used little or not at all The Duke kicked on the jet brakes The ship bucked as its tail pods whispered to silence Stub wings elongated cupped the air The craft became a full thopter as the Duke banked it holding the wings to a gentle beat 5 The wings are shortened when more jet thrust is used or the thopter uses the jet boost alternative mode of takeoff and tip to assist in braking 5 In the 1984 film adaptation ornithopters are depicted with small folding non flapping wings According to the film s designers propulsion is provided via an antigravity device called an etherbender which is shown but never mentioned in the film itself In the 2000 Sci Fi Channel miniseries Frank Herbert s Dune the craft have wings that appear to incorporate tiltrotor technology In the 2021 film adaptation ornithopters are depicted with four or eight foldable flapping wings on either side resembling those of a dragonfly 37 a design that director Denis Villeneuve had conceived when he read the novel at a young age 38 Villeneuve s VFX team used actual helicopters as placeholders which they later replaced with computer generated ornithopters Two 12 ton practical ornithopters were built and taken to Budapest and the Jordanian desert for filming VFX production supervisor Paul Lambert explained These machines had a fully hydraulic ramp to open and close and were lifted by cranes for take off and landing CG wings were added in post 39 Stillsuit edit nbsp Fremen Chani Zendaya and Stilgar Javier Bardem wearing stillsuits in Dune 2021 A stillsuit is a fictional body suit in Frank Herbert s Dune universe worn by the indigenous Fremen of the desert planet Arrakis to maintain their body moisture in the harsh environment 40 Description edit As described in the 1965 novel Dune a stillsuit is a body enclosing garment of Fremen design which performs the functions of heat dissipation and filtering bodily wastes to reclaim moisture 18 Perspiration urine and the saliva expelled during respiration are captured by the stillsuit and filtered and reclaimed water is made available for drinking through a tube at the neck Walking and breathing provide the pumping action to move water through the filtration process and provide the necessary heat exchange Without a stillsuit the average person on Arrakis could lose more than 10 liters of water daily through their pores but the stillsuit reduces that loss to 5 milliliters 40 Imperial Planetologist Liet Kynes describes the stillsuit in Dune It s basically a micro sandwich a high efficiency filter and heat exchange system The skin contact layer s porous Perspiration passes through it having cooled the body near normal evaporation process The next two layers include heat exchange filaments and salt precipitators Salt s reclaimed Motions of the body especially breathing and some osmotic action provide the pumping force Reclaimed water circulates to catchpockets from which you draw it through this tube in the clip at your neck Urine and feces are processed in the thigh pads In the open desert you wear this filter across your face this tube in the nostrils with these plugs to ensure a tight fit Breathe in through the mouth filter out through the nose tube With a Fremen suit in good working order you won t lose more than a thimbleful of moisture a day 5 Due to its scarcity on Arrakis water and its preservation are sacred to the Fremen 40 Analysis edit In his essay Stillsuit in The Science of Dune 2007 John C Smith analyzes Herbert s stillsuit and its feasibility in the real world as described Smith suggests that Stillsuits designed using strict literal interpretations from the Dune books probably would not work and most likely would cook the wearer like a Crock Pot However engineering solutions can be envisioned for all the suit s shortcomings 41 T Probe editA T Probe is a fictional device in Frank Herbert s Dune universe used to capture the thoughts of a person living or dead for analysis 42 T Probes appear or are referred to in Herbert s Heretics of Dune 1984 and Chapterhouse Dune 1985 11 12 as well as the sequels Hunters of Dune 2006 and Sandworms of Dune 2007 by Brian Herbert and Kevin J Anderson 43 44 As described in Heretics of Dune the probe is a non Ixian interrogation device brought by the Honored Matres from the Scattering It is attached to the body through a series of medusa contacts placed around the skull and on major nerve centers An operator can increase or decrease the power supplied to the probe to maximize its efficacy while at the same time not overloading the nervous system of the subject While being subjected to the probe Miles Teg s Mentat thinking deduces that not only can it command his body as though he had no thinking part in his own behavior but also The whole spectrum of his senses could be copied into this T probe and identified The machine could trace those out as though it made a duplicate of him 42 The probe builds a digital framework of the person which can be subjected to stimuli and will respond as the person would The T Probe also causes massive virtually unendurable pain in a living subject Shere only prevents the T Probe from recovering memories directly as it does for the Ixian Probe and does not impede any of the other features Memories can still be guessed at from the model the probe constructs The T Probe is what causes Miles Teg s brain to change its structure giving him the blinding speed and amazing abilities seen at the end of Heretics of Dune This mental alteration continues in Teg even after being reborn as a Tleilaxu ghola in Chapterhouse Dune 12 Weirding Module editA Weirding Module is a fictional sonic weapon introduced in and specific to Dune the 1984 David Lynch film adaptation of Frank Herbert s 1965 novel of the same name In the film the device is a sonic beam weapon that translates specific sounds into attacks of varying potency used by House Atreides and later by the Fremen armies In the novel Paul Atreides and his mother Lady Jessica teach the Fremen the Bene Gesserit martial arts called the weirding way by the Fremen an indirect reference to this detail is made in the scene where Jessica physically overpowers Fremen leader Stilgar at their first encounter Lynch is said to have adapted the weirding way into the Weirding Module because he did not like the idea of kung fu on sand dunes 45 The change literalizes Paul s line My own name is a killing word In the novel the Fremen shout his Fremen name Muad Dib as a battle cry in the film the Fremen are surprised to find that saying Muad Dib is a powerful trigger for the Weirding Module The Weirding Module appears in the computer games Dune 1992 and Emperor Battle for Dune 2001 and the concept is adapted into sonic tanks for the games Dune II 1992 and Dune 2000 1998 There is no reference to this technology in the original novels Other technologies editIn Dune Messiah the ghola Hayt is provided by the Tleilaxu with metallic artificial eyes which they boast improved on the original Survivors of atomic stone burner blasts are typically blinded but the superstitious Fremen in Paul Atreides armies tend to believe that Tleilaxu eyes enslave their users and that a union between metal eyes and human flesh must be sinful 7 The Bene Tleilax also produce biological products other than gholas and Face Dancers Chairdogs are living and partially sentient creatures used for seating which possess the ability to shape themselves to fit their occupant Some characters dislike sitting on an animal and prefer normal chairs A slig is a hybrid livestock animal a cross between a large slug and a Terran pig first mentioned in Heretics of Dune and considered a culinary delicacy Despite being the producers of sligs the Tleilaxu themselves do not consume the animals having designed them to facilitate what they see as the degrading decadence and spiritual bankruptcy of all cultures but their own Herbert s series of Dune novels have numerous other technologically advanced devices In Dune 1965 water is scarce on the desert planet Arrakis the native Fremen use a type of air well called a windtrap to condense moisture from the air and collect it in vast catch basins 18 They also collect moisture from the dead using a device called a deathstill 5 The Fremen accomplish long distance coded communication using a distrans a steganographic device that produces a temporary neural imprint on the nervous system of bats or birds The message imprint is carried within the animal s normal cry and can later be separated out using another distrans 18 A palm lock is a lock or seal keyed to a specific human hand a solido is a projected three dimensional image and a poison snooper is a device which can detect poisons by analyzing radiation in the olfactory spectrum 18 In Dune the Baron Vladimir Harkonnen employs a cone of silence a sound deadening field used for privacy though it does not visually obscure lip movement 5 In Heretics of Dune 1984 Herbert mentions an Ixian damper a similar portable device described as a black disc which is buoyed midair by suspensors It hides words from anyone without the proper coded translator and projects distortions that hide the precise movements of lips and the sounds of voices 11 A filmbook is a shigawire imprint used for training and education which carries a mnemonic pulse that imprints information and corresponding images in the reader s mind 18 Herbert mentions other unnamed technologies in the Dune series In Dune the Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother Mohiam tests young Paul Atreides using a box that inflicts pain through nerve induction It is described as a green metal cube about fifteen centimeters on a side with one open side revealing a blackness so dark that no light penetrates it Paul is forced to place his hand into the box and not remove it until Mohiam allows him He experiences first coldness tingling then itching followed by the faintest burning which soon intensifies to the point that he could feel skin curling black on that agonized hand the flesh crisping and dropping away until only charred bones remained The pain stops and when he is permitted to remove his hand it is unmarked and unharmed 5 This device is later referred to as the agony box in Heretics of Dune and is noted to be used for interrogation as well 11 Carol Hart analyzes the concept of inflicting pain without injury in the essay The Black Hole of Pain in The Science of Dune 2007 46 In God Emperor of Dune 1981 Moneo Atreides uses a memocorder a tiny handheld device described as a dull black Ixian artifact whose existence crowded the proscriptions of the Butlerian Jihad 8 In the same novel the Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother Anteac writes a message to be sent to her Sisterhood On Anteac s lap lay a small square of inky black about ten millimeters on a side and no more than three millimeters thick She wrote upon this square with a glittering needle one word upon another all of them absorbed into the square The completed message would be impressed upon the nerve receptors of an acolyte messenger s eyes latent there until they could be replayed at the Chapter House 8 In Heretics of Dune Reverend Mother Lucilla recognizes a device called a hypnobong in use on the street witnessing a passerby lean into a concave basin and then lift his face with a shudder staggering slightly his eyes glazed She notes that the device is outlawed on all of the more civilized worlds 11 See also edit nbsp Novels portal Glossary of Dune franchise terminologyNotes edit Both mentions of the tanks are spelled axolotl in Dune Messiah but Herbert spells the term axlotl in all later novels in the series In Dune Messiah the Tleilaxu dwarf Bijaz hums to activate dormant programming in the Duncan Idaho ghola Hayt to induce him to kill Paul Atreides He began to hum a keening whining monotonous theme repeated over and over Hayt stiffened experiencing odd pains that played up and down his spine The sound made Hayt think of ancient rituals folk memories old words and customs half forgotten meanings in lost mutterings In Heretics of Dune Master Waff tries to control his Face Dancer duplicate of Hedley Tuek Humming sounds like the noises of angry insects came from his mouth a modulated thing that clearly was some kind of language In Chapterhouse Dune Scytale sees an opportunity to control influence the Duncan Idaho ghola and thus effect his escape from the Bene Gesserit when he thinks Somehow I must contrive it that Idaho and I meet intimately There s always the whistling language we impress on every ghola Though the replacement Teg is called a ghola Herbert notes that he is technically a clone because the cells used to create him had been taken from the original just prior to his death rather than from a corpse Charles L Harness uses a similar concept in his 1953 novel Flight into Yesterday In both 1984 and 2021 Dune films and the 2000 miniseries Frank Herbert s Dune the Baron floats or levitates rather than walk on the ground himself References edit a b Touponce William F 1988 Frank Herbert Boston Massachusetts Twayne Publishers imprint G K Hall amp Co pg 119 ISBN 0 8057 7514 5 Locus ran a poll of readers on April 15 1975 in which Dune was voted the all time best science fiction novel It has sold over ten million copies in numerous editions SCI FI Channel Auction to Benefit Reading Is Fundamental PNNonline org Internet Archive March 18 2003 Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved September 28 2007 Since its debut in 1965 Frank Herbert s Dune has sold over 12 million copies worldwide making it the best selling science fiction novel of all time Frank Herbert s Dune saga is one of the greatest 20th Century contributions to literature Lorenzo DiTommaso November 1992 History and Historical Effect in Frank Herbert s Dune Science Fiction Studies 58 Volume 19 Part 3 DePauw edu pp 311 325 Archived from the original on October 17 2012 Retrieved July 21 2009 Herbert Frank 1965 Terminology of the Imperium Jihad Butlerian Dune a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Herbert Frank 1965 Dune Herbert Frank 1965 Terminology of the Imperium Great Convention Dune a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Herbert Frank 1969 Dune Messiah a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Herbert Frank 1981 God Emperor of Dune a b c d e f Herbert Brian Kevin J Anderson 1999 2001 Prelude to Dune a b c d e f g Herbert Brian Kevin J Anderson 2002 2004 Legends of Dune a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Herbert Frank 1984 Heretics of Dune a b c d e f g h i j k l m Herbert Frank 1985 Chapterhouse Dune a b c Herbert Brian Kevin J Anderson 2006 Hunters of Dune a b c Herbert Brian Kevin J Anderson 2007 Sandworms of Dune Herbert Frank 1985 Heretics of Dune Gholas humans grown from a cadaver s cells in Tleilaxu axlotl tanks Herbert 1969 Dune Messiah our wise Sardaukar commander had Idaho s corpse preserved for the axolotl tanks Why not This corpse held the flesh and nerves of one of the finest swordsmen in history an adviser to the Atreides a military genius What a waste to lose all that training and ability when it might be revived as an instructor for the Sardaukar He was killed here on Arrakis a grievous head wound which required many months of regrowth Csori Csilla 2007 Memory and the Tleilaxu Makes the Man In Grazier Kevin R ed The Science of Dune An Unauthorized Exploration into the Real Science Behind Frank Herbert s Fictional Universe Psychology of Popular Culture Dallas TX BenBella Books pp 167 175 ISBN 978 1 933771 28 1 a b c d e f g h i Herbert Frank 1965 Terminology of the Imperium Dune Herbert Frank 1965 Appendix III Report on Bene Gesserit Motives and Purposes Dune Herbert Brian Kevin J Anderson 2001 Dune House Corrino Herbert Frank 1965 Terminology of the Imperium Holtzman Effect Dune Herbert Frank 1965 Terminology of the Imperium Shield Defensive Dune Shield Defensive the protective field produced by a Holtzman generator This field derives from Phase One of the suspensor nullification effect A shield will permit entry only to objects moving at slow speeds depending on setting this speed ranges from six to nine centimeters per second and can be shorted out only by a shire sized electric field Horton Rich Ace Double Reviews 18 The Paradox Men by Charles L Harness Dome Around America by Jack Williamson Archived from the original on June 7 2011 Retrieved January 8 2020 a b c Herbert Frank 1965 Terminology of the Imperium Lasgun Dune Herbert Frank 1965 Dune Ace pp 145 146 ISBN 0 441 17271 7 Jessica focused her mind on lasguns The white hot beams of disruptive light could cut through any known substance provided that substance was not shielded The fact that feedback from a shield would explode both lasgun and shield did not bother the Harkonnens A lasgun shield explosion was a dangerous variable could be more powerful than atomics could kill only the gunner and his shielded target a b Herbert Frank 1965 Dune Jessica Perhaps suspensors are another thing to avoid in the open desert Maybe they attract the worms the way a shield does Herbert Frank 1976 Children of Dune Grazier Kevin R 2007 Cosmic Origami In Grazier Kevin R ed The Science of Dune pp 177 206 ISBN 978 1 933771 28 1 Herbert Frank 1965 Terminology of the Imperium Suspensor Dune Seger Ges Grazier Kevin R 2007 Suspensor of Disbelief In Grazier Kevin R ed The Science of Dune pp 207 216 ISBN 978 1 933771 28 1 Herbert Frank 1965 Terminology of the Imperium Glowglobe Dune a b Herbert Frank 1984 Heretics of Dune Ace 1987 ed pp 93 Herbert Frank 1965 Dune Ace pp 145 146 ISBN 0 441 17271 7 Jessica focused her mind on lasguns wondering The white hot beams of disruptive light could cut through any known substance provided that substance was not shielded The fact that feedback from a shield would explode both lasgun and shield did not bother the Harkonnens Why A lasgun shield explosion was a dangerous variable could be more powerful than atomics could kill only the gunner and his shielded target Herbert Frank 1985 Heretics of Dune Berkley Books p 457 ISBN 0 425 07669 5 The no ship sat there creaking a glistening steely ball whose presence could be detected by the eyes and ears but not by any prescient or long range instrument Definition of ornitho Dictionary com Archived from the original on December 9 2021 Retrieved November 12 2021 Definition of pter Dictionary com Archived from the original on May 18 2022 Retrieved November 12 2021 Ahmed Sahil October 20 2021 Dune s Dragonfly Aircraft Were Actually Operable Screen Rant Archived from the original on October 21 2021 Retrieved November 1 2021 Cardy Simon October 28 2021 Dune How Denis Villeneuve Designed the Ornithopters IGN Archived from the original on October 28 2021 Retrieved November 1 2021 Desowitz Bill November 5 2021 Dune How Denis Villeneuve s VFX Team Created Desert Power for the Sandworms and Ornithopters IndieWire Archived from the original on November 5 2021 Retrieved November 12 2021 a b c McCoy Joshua Kristian June 15 2023 Dune The Stillsuit Explained Game Rant Archived from the original on September 13 2023 Retrieved March 6 2024 Smith John C 2007 Stillsuit In Grazier Kevin R ed The Science of Dune pp 127 141 ISBN 978 1 933771 28 1 a b Herbert Brian 2003 Dreamer of Dune The Biography of Frank Herbert Macmillan 2004 ed p 129 Herbert Brian Kevin J Anderson 2006 Hunters of Dune Macmillan 2007 ed p 59 Herbert Brian Kevin J Anderson 2007 Sandworms of Dune Macmillan p 296 Anderson Martin May 9 2008 Top Ten Screen Screams Den of Geek Archived from the original on January 23 2010 Retrieved August 28 2010 Hart Carol 2007 The Black Hole of Pain In Grazier Kevin R ed The Science of Dune pp 143 150 ISBN 978 1 933771 28 1 External links edit Science Fiction in the News Articles Frank Herbert TechNovelgy com Retrieved October 27 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of technology in the Dune universe amp oldid 1215941840 No chamber No ship, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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