Dyson's Sphere

Doc oga

Elder Lister
A Dyson sphere is a theoretical mega-engineering project that encircles a star with platforms orbiting in tight formation. It is the ultimate solution for living space and energy production, providing its creators ample surface area for habitation and the ability to capture every bit of solar radiation emanating from their central star.

Why build a Dyson sphere?
Why would anyone construct such a bizarre monstrosity? According to British-American theoretical physicist Freeman Dyson, who first speculated about these putative structures in 1960, an intelligent alien species might consider the undertaking after settling on some moons and planets in their local stellar neighborhood. As their population increased, these extraterrestrials would start to consume ever-greater amounts of energy.
Assuming this alien society's populace and industry grew at a modest 1% per year, Dyson's calculations suggested that the aliens' area and energy needs would grow exponentially, becoming a trillion times larger in just 3,000 years. Should their solar system contain a Jupiter-size body, the species' engineers could try to figure out how to take the planet apart and spread its mass in a spherical shell.


By building structures at twice the Earth-sun distance, the material would be sufficient to construct a huge number of orbiting platforms 6 to 10 feet (2 to 3 meters) thick, allowing the aliens to live on their star-facing surface. "A shell of this thickness could be made comfortably habitable, and could contain all the machinery required for exploiting the solar radiation falling onto it from the inside," Dyson wrote.
But after absorbing and exploiting the solar energy, the structure would eventually have to reradiate the energy or else it would build up, causing the sphere to eventually melt, according to Dyson. This means that, to a distant observer, the light of a star wrapped in a Dyson sphere might appear dimmed or even entirely darkenedG — depending on how dense the Ggg platforms were — while glowing curiously bright in infrared wavelengths that aren't visible to the naked eye.
iVzDgRJPRAKkrmJnpu86mU-1200-80.webp
5qHjgqnSB7CUWUxHRBCLeB-1200-80.webp
 
Last edited:
This means that, to a distant observer, the light of a star wrapped in a Dyson sphere might appear dimmed or even entirely darkenedG — depending on how dense the Ggg platforms were — while glowing curiously bright in infrared wavelengths that aren't visible to the naked eye.
Is there any observable star that has such characteristics, coz well.........
 
By building structures at twice the Earth-sun distance, the material would be sufficient to construct a huge number of orbiting platforms 6 to 10 feet (2 to 3 meters) thick, allowing the aliens to live on their star-facing surface.
Where would the material for building this surface come from?
And what material would that be?
 
Where would the material for building this surface come from?
And what material would that be?
When man becomes an interplanetary Traveller capable of mining planets, asteroids and moons within our solar system then can He be able to mine the sun through a process called Star Lifting. The sun contains many metals and other heavy elements than the entire solar system that will be very useful in energy production.
 
Last edited:
You just skirted around the questions...but its good to hypothesize. Great things cone from such..
Thick solar panels capable of withstanding heat... basically materials maybe yet to be discovered or already discovered but with a complex expensive process of extraction.
 
Is there any observable star that has such characteristics, coz well.........
There was a star that was exhibiting some weird light flactuations and the it was proposed that a Dyson sphere may explain the anomaly. But it was a theory don't think anything came of it..
 
Back
Top