An interesting idea, but certainly they can't be looking for any "ideal" Dyson spheres - those seem quite impractical and probably not feasible. Something ring-like might be though .El Viejo wrote:Seeing mention of SETI... someone is now actively searching for Dyson Spheres.
Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
… and invisible, one might add. (What do you want to detect from Earth, if the Dyson Sphere "harvests" the complete energy output of a star, meaning that nothing detectable would reach Earth?)CommRLock78 wrote:An interesting idea, but certainly they can't be looking for any "ideal" Dyson spheres - those seem quite impractical and probably not feasible.El Viejo wrote:Seeing mention of SETI... someone is now actively searching for Dyson Spheres.
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
You can’t “harvest” energy, or use it up, only transform it. A Dyson sphere, compete or not, must necessarily radiate as much energy as it absorbs after it reaches some equilibrium temperature. (You could store it in batteries or kinetic storage, but you’d still need to radiate it after you use it for something useful.) One that makes good use of the energy will radiate it as infra-red or other low EM frequencies. So the signature of a Dyson sphere is an object that radiates as much energy as a star, but compressed into surprisingly low frequencies.Commander McLane wrote:(What do you want to detect from Earth, if the Dyson Sphere "harvests" the complete energy output of a star, meaning that nothing detectable would reach Earth?)
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
Here's an interesting thought.
If a race is building a Dyson sphere around a star we are observing, over a period of time it would fade and eventually disappear. Would we be able to work out what was happening, or just get baffled by this 'unknown astronomical phenomenon'.
If a race is building a Dyson sphere around a star we are observing, over a period of time it would fade and eventually disappear. Would we be able to work out what was happening, or just get baffled by this 'unknown astronomical phenomenon'.
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
Dyson spheres are big, and building them would be a long-term project. Not long-term like planting new trees in the town centre and watching them grow. Not long-term like placing the first stone for the chapel that will eventually be a cathedral. Not long-term like the Long Now Foundation’s ten thousand year clock. I mean serious business long term.Smivs wrote:Here's an interesting thought.
If a race is building a Dyson sphere around a star we are observing, over a period of time it would fade and eventually disappear. Would we be able to work out what was happening, or just get baffled by this 'unknown astronomical phenomenon'.
I rather doubt our civilization will exist long enough to be able to notice such a change.
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
Heh! Ever the optimist, eh?Ahruman wrote:I rather doubt our civilization will exist long enough to be able to notice such a change.
It does raise the serious point though that a civilisation would have to be incredibly devoted to this sort of task and sufficiently stable over a long time to see it through. Probably why we don't see them.
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
The great advantage of a Dyson sphere is that you don't need to keep buying bags ...
There's also the possibility of a matrioshka brain, as a variation on a Dyson sphere.
There's also the possibility of a matrioshka brain, as a variation on a Dyson sphere.
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
I think, at the actual level of technology that is ours, if all countries would unite and make their whole wealth common, we could build some kind of energy collectors at the 2 main Lagrangian points on the Earth orbit. It would be already a titanic task, money speaking...
But for now, we have enough possibilities to build such "green" collectors on Earth itself, and that already would cost a lot.
But our actual level of starvation, energy-wise, is not enough yet to justify such work...
But for now, we have enough possibilities to build such "green" collectors on Earth itself, and that already would cost a lot.
But our actual level of starvation, energy-wise, is not enough yet to justify such work...
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
The problem would be running the extension cord back to Earth ... We could beam it back as a maser or something but that might be dangerous ... presumably such a maser would have to touch down at the poles. Adding an extra component of solar energy would almost certainly cause havoc with the weather.Kasero wrote:I think, at the actual level of technology that is ours, if all countries would unite and make their whole wealth common, we could build some kind of energy collectors at the 2 main Lagrangian points on the Earth orbit.
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
All this talk of Dyson brings to mind a really corny sci-fi novel I read years ago, wherein there was an alien race called the Dyson (I think).
It was so poor that the 'author' had had to self-publish it.
It was so poor that the 'author' had had to self-publish it.
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
<Smivs tries to imagine changing the fuse if it blew!>Disembodied wrote:The problem would be running the extension cord back to Earth ...
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
LMAO Excellent point.Commander McLane wrote:… and invisible, one might add. (What do you want to detect from Earth, if the Dyson Sphere "harvests" the complete energy output of a star, meaning that nothing detectable would reach Earth?)
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Re: Being given two 'Hubbles' is a problem for NASA
I've just found this update on this story.
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