Doyle provided no indication of the contents of
Dynamics other than its title. Speculation about its contents published by later authors includes: • "
The Ultimate Crime", short story by
Isaac Asimov, in
More Tales of the Black Widowers, and republished in
Sherlock Holmes through Time and Space. • "The Dynamics of an Asteroid", short story by
Robert Bloch,
The Baker Street Journal, 1953, and also found in
The Game is Afoot. • "The Adventure of the Russian Grave", a short story by
William Barton and
Michael Capobianco, collected in
Sherlock Holmes in Orbit. • In the novel
Spider-Man: The Revenge of the Sinister Six, by
Adam-Troy Castro, a veiled reference is made to Moriarty and his
Dynamics. Here the work is said to still be the authority on orbital bombardment. • Physicist
Alejandro Jenkins in 2013 suggested
chaos theory, an esoteric branch of mathematics whose association with asteroid dynamics was not appreciated by real-world mathematicians until the work of
Henri Poincaré in 1890. •
Simon P. Norton and
Alain Goriely have each suggested that the book might have been Moriarty's submission to the 1887 celestial mechanics contest of King
Oscar II of Sweden (which was won by
Henri Poincaré.)
Related references in media • A different Sherlock Holmes story,
The Final Problem, mentions another mathematical paper by Moriarty - "
a treatise on the binomial theorem". It was written when Moriarty was only 21 years of age. • In "
His Last Vow", the final episode of series 3 of the BBC television series
Sherlock, Sherlock's mother, M.L. Holmes, is shown to have written a lengthy textbook with the title
The Dynamics of Combustion, a reference to this book. • In "Henny Penny the Sky Is Falling", the 100th episode of the CBS television series
Elementary, the plot evolves around a fictional paper with the title
Miscalculating Near-Earth Asteroids and the Threat to Human Existence. • The pastiche novel ''
Professor Moriarty: The Hound of the D'Urbervilles'' by
film critic and
horror novelist
Kim Newman includes a chapter parodying both "
The Adventure of the Red-Headed League" and
H. G. Wells's novel
The War of the Worlds, in which an arrogant former student of Moriarty's named Nevil Airey-Stent publicly rubbishes
The Dynamics of an Asteroid to prove that it is indeed susceptible to criticism, prompting an enraged Moriarty to orchestrate an elaborate plan to drive Stent insane by convincing him that he has been contacted by visitors from the planet
Mars. • In the 2017 mobile game
Fate/Grand Order, Moriarty's Noble Phantasm is called
The Dynamics of an Asteroid. During the Shinjuku Pseudo-Singularity, his goal is to destroy the Earth following the theory developed in this book using the asteroid
101955 Bennu as the "bullet," and the abilities of the Phantom Spirit of
der Freischütz to guarantee it will destroy the Earth. ==References==