Asimov wrote a third thiotimoline article on 14 November 1959 called "Thiotimoline and the Space Age". Instead of a fake scientific paper, this third article took the form of an address by Asimov to the 12th annual meeting of the American Chronochemical Society, a nonexistent scientific society. In his address, Asimov "describes" his first experiments with thiotimoline in July 1947, and timing the compound's dissolution with the original endochronometer, "the same instrument now at the
Smithsonian". Asimov laments the skepticism with which chronochemistry has been greeted in America, noting with sorrow that his address has only attracted fifteen attendees. He then contrasts the thriving state of chronochemistry in the
Soviet Union, with the research town of
Khrushchevsk, nicknamed "Tiotimolingrad", established in the
Urals. According to Asimov, two Scottish researchers have developed a "telechronic battery", which uses a series of 77,000 interconnected endochronometers to allow a final sample of thiotimoline to dissolve up to a day before water is added to an initial sample. Asimov says there is "strong, if indirect, evidence that the Soviet Union possesses even more sophisticated devices and is turning them out in commercial quantities". He believes that the Soviets are using telechronic batteries to determine ahead of time whether
satellite launches will be successful. Finally, Asimov describes attempts to create a "
Heisenberg failure", to get a sample of thiotimoline to dissolve without later adding water to it. In every case where the thiotimoline dissolved, some accident occurred that caused some water to be added to it at the proper time. Several attempts to create a Heisenberg failure in the mid-1950s coincided with hurricanes
Carol,
Edna, and
Diane striking New England in such a manner as to suggest that nature would find a way to add water whatever man decided, if man were to be resolute in not adding water. Asimov speculated that
Noah's
flood might have been brought about by thiotimoline experiments among the ancient
Sumerians. He then concludes with some speculation about thiotimoline's potential applications as a
weapon of mass destruction by deliberately using it to artificially induce hurricanes. "Thiotimoline and the Space Age" appeared in the October 1960 issue of
Astounding, which was then in the final stages of changing its name to
Analog. The article was reprinted in full in
Opus 100 (1969) and
The Asimov Chronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov (1989). =="Thiotimoline to the Stars"==