Astrophage is a fictional alien microbe from Andy Weir’s novel Project Hail Mary , and in the story it originally comes from the Tau Ceti star system.

Origin in the story

  • In the book’s lore, astrophage is native to the Tau Ceti system, where it evolved as part of a larger microbial biosphere around the planet nicknamed Adrian (Tau Ceti e).
  • From there, it spread through space, eventually reaching other nearby stars, including our Sun (Sol) and 40 Eridani, by traveling in spore form across interstellar distances.
  • Andy Weir has said he chose Tau Ceti deliberately because it is an old star, giving life there a big evolutionary “head start” to develop something as exotic as astrophage.

What astrophage is (quick recap)

  • Astrophage is described as a single‑celled, spacefaring microbe that feeds directly on a star’s surface heat and stores that energy with extreme efficiency.
  • It follows a life cycle: absorb energy at the star, travel to a nearby CO₂‑rich planet (like Venus for our Sun, Adrian for Tau Ceti), reproduce using the carbon dioxide, then return to the star.
  • Its feeding can dim a star enough to threaten life on surrounding planets, which is the central crisis in Project Hail Mary.

Fans and forum discussion angle

  • In forums and fan wikis, people summarize it as a “star eater” microbe whose deep origin is the Tau Ceti–Adrian ecosystem, with astrophage just one branch of a diverse microbial tree there.
  • Some discussions focus on the idea that if astrophage really existed and could be harnessed safely, it would offer almost limitless energy and radically change civilization.
  • Others debate whether its properties (like how efficiently it stores and releases energy) would violate the second law of thermodynamics in real physics, underlining that it’s ultimately a sci‑fi construct, not a real organism.

TL;DR: Within the Project Hail Mary universe, astrophage “comes from” the Tau Ceti system, where it evolved as part of a native microbial biosphere around the planet Adrian, then spread to nearby stars including our Sun.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.