What Is Project Hail Mary's Xenonite? Rocky's Sci-Fi Construction Material Explained
by Jaron Pak · /FilmSpoilers ahead for the book and movie versions of "Project Hail Mary."
In "Project Hail Mary," both Rocky (James Ortiz) and Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) bring unique strengths from their home planets of Erid and Earth, respectively. One of Rocky's biggest assets is xenonite. The Eridian uses the nearly universal construction material throughout the story. It's the raw ingredient for his ship, his tunnels, and basically anything else Rocky and Grace need. But what is it? How does author Andy Weir explain xenonite in his the novel?
The first time we see xenonite in the story is in the massive form of Rocky's ship, the Blip-A. We get an up close view when Grace receives a cylinder made of xenonite that's shot over to the Hail Mary as a sort of first contact welcoming gift. He conducts some experiments to see what it's made of, and the baffling answer he gets is xenon.
Why is that weird? Because xenon isn't a made-up alien element. It's the real-life element 54 or "Xe" (for all of you out there who can get their hands on a periodic table of elements). The crazy part is, in real life, Xenon is a noble gas. That means it is an ultra-stable element that doesn't tend to react with anything else. Obviously, in "Project Hail Mary," xenon is more than a gas. It has been extrapolated into a fictionalized version of the element that is mixed into solid compounds. Those compounds are a mysterious mixture of xenon and other ingredients, which gives the Eridians access to a swath of different kinds of xenon-based materials.
How xenonite is described in the book Project Hail Mary
In the book "Project Hail Mary," when Grace realizes that the primary ingredient of Rocky's curious construction material is some solid variation of xenon, he calls it xenonite. To quote Grace's inner thoughts:
I don't have any xenonite (that's what I'm calling this weird alien compound, and no one can stop me).
It turns out the variations of xenonite compounds are very diverse and ridiculously strong. They can be shaped into both small things (think a cylindrical container) and massive ones (like Rocky's ship). They also vary in color and opacity, which the sightless Eridians couldn't care less about. Those factors become important when a lone Eridian bumps into a lone human Astrophage-filled star system of Tau Ceti.
When Grace meets Rocky, the latter uses a variety of xenonite compounds to build the wall in the middle of the tunnel linking their ships. The goal of these variations is to figure out which one works best for communication, and Grace is happy to find that one option is transparent like glass. In that part of the book, we get more of Grace's guesses about xenonite:
Maybe xenonite is like steel — lots of different recipes? [...] Best guess: different types of xenonite are optimal for different situations.
Xenonite is impressive, but it's a two-edged sword
Toward the end of the book, Grace clarifies that there is a limit to human knowledge of xenonite when he says:
Xenonite is a complicated chain of proteins and chemicals I have no hope of understanding.
This comes at a point when he's realized that Taumoeba, the microscopic solution to the Astrophage invasion, is surviving by literally hiding inside xenonite. This nearly brings the entire mission — which is so close to success at this point — to a disastrous end. If not for Grace's quick thinking, Erid — and possibly Earth as well — would never have gotten their Taumoebic antidotes.
Like so many other things in "Project Hail Mary," xenonite plays a critical role throughout the story, mainly helping, but also hurting the protagonists. While Rocky and Grace use it for a smorgasbord of critical moves to save their worlds, it ends up being a double-edged sword. In many ways, it's the Ying to Astrophage's Yang. Astrophage is a microbe that is threatening to wipe out entire species, yet it also an incredibly potent energy source that's used to launch the Hail Mary and Blip-A into striking distance of finding Taumoeba. Like any tool, no matter how powerful it might be, xenonite is ultimately only as effective as the hands that are wielding it. Thankfully, Grace and Rocky are more than up to the task.
"Project Hail Mary" is in theaters now.