I was thinking about making the same argument Timo made actually, especially in light of the "Destiny" books which feature a race creating a shell around their system to effectively render it virtually invisible.
Destiny depicted the shell as completely stopping all light from coming out of New Erigol's system. The crew of the U.S.S. Titan was attracted by noticing that the light that was previously emitting from the system abruptly stopped.I was thinking about making the same argument Timo made actually, especially in light of the "Destiny" books which feature a race creating a shell around their system to effectively render it virtually invisible.
Actually, it wouldn't be invisible at all, from afar it would look like a giant disk of infrared light, plus it would block the light of any star that would pass behind it. I'll say, to 24th century censors it would be as visible as a any other star system and rendered more conspicuous by its uniqueness. I don't buy that they would have missed it for so long, not for one second.
I don't see how occultation studies would reveal the sphere: there's not that much motion in the skies, and odds would be against an observable occultation occurring.
As for infrared glow, the difference between "giant" and "dwarf" would be nonexistent: the thing would at best look like yer regular dark brown dwarf.
Naturally, if stealth were the aim, the latter problem would be dealt with. That's one thing the excellent "Atomic Rockets" site gets dead wrong: heat emissions don't defeat stealth in space. One can always temporarily pack the heat and dump it at a suitable distance in a manner untraceable to the point of origin. Or, with just a little bit of trickery that would certainly be available to somebody who can construct a solid Dyson sphere, one can wrap up the heat in a neat package for millions of years, perhaps even turning it into a weapon, all without breaking the laws of thermodynamics. (Trek-level technology nevertheless does break those with ease, mind you. Perhaps it helps to have all those parallel universes, subspaces and phased realms available for dumping of stuff?)
Or one may pump it all in a specific direction and bet that the enemy isn't watching from that exact direction; a good bet if the heat beam is narrow enough.
Timo Saloniemi
Just as an aside: clearly, the purpose of this sphere is not to trap the total energy output of the star. The habitats ought to be on the outside (where there might be natural gravity for them, too) if that were the goal...the whole purpose of the sphere
That's Space Stealth 101: you keep the outer shell at three Kelvin. If you are going to have waste heat anyway, there's no reason to hold back: you can add a cooling system, no matter how inefficient as long as it is totally effective, and then deal with all the waste heat at one go. Say, by packing it in containers you fire back to the star! Even if your tech doesn't allow you to outright cheat the laws of thermodynamics, you can always fight an infinitely long delaying battle.Besides, I don't see how they can prevent the material from the sphere itself to radiate in relation to its temperature.
Just as an aside: clearly, the purpose of this sphere is not to trap the total energy output of the star. The habitats ought to be on the outside (where there might be natural gravity for them, too) if that were the goal...the whole purpose of the sphere
A solid Dyson is a fortress, not an engine. Yet for all we know, there was a traditional Dyson inside the solid one, capturing a certain percentage of the star's output to keep the fortress running (and creating day/night cycles if needed).
That's Space Stealth 101: you keep the outer shell at three Kelvin. If you are going to have waste heat anyway, there's no reason to hold back: you can add a cooling system, no matter how inefficient as long as it is totally effective, and then deal with all the waste heat at one go. Say, by packing it in containers you fire back to the star! Even if your tech doesn't allow you to outright cheat the laws of thermodynamics, you can always fight an infinitely long delaying battle.Besides, I don't see how they can prevent the material from the sphere itself to radiate in relation to its temperature.
Timo Saloniemi
Why should machinery stop operating merely because the operators died out or left a few aeons ago?Therefore whatever means the aliens MIGHT have used to prevent the sphere from irradiating infrared light are no longer in place.
Why should machinery stop operating merely because the operators died out or left a few aeons ago?Therefore whatever means the aliens MIGHT have used to prevent the sphere from irradiating infrared light are no longer in place.
Most Trek machinery is automated and self-maintaining, as one would expect from any culture more advanced than Victorian Britain (we're real slackers in that respect - blame it on capitalism). Some spacecraft have been operating more or less fine after hundreds of thousands of years. The Dyson sphere was abandoned an unknown time ago, but we already witness many of its systems working perfectly:
1) The tractor beams
2) The doors
3) The artificial gravity keeping the habitats attached to the inner surface
In addition, it is established that the sphere is invisible at a distance!
Stealth in space is just a matter of means and motivation, and a builder of a solid Dyson has already demonstrated both aplenty... Things like rationale are left as an exercise to the audience!
Timo Saloniemi
Yeah, the continuity error is with Generations, one could say that "Relics" already established Scotty as leaving on the Jenol*n before there ever was an Enterprise-B.
I don't regret the fact that Scotty is there in Generations, but it was a perfectly avoidable problem. Generations co-writer was the sole writer of "Relics", after all; he changed the character to Scotty knowing full well it ignored his own earlier script.
The aforementioned continuity error with Scotty between "Relics" and Generations (which I've seen explained away by way of Scotty being disoriented after re-materializing after being in the buffer for so long).
Yeah, the continuity error is with Generations, one could say that "Relics" already established Scotty as leaving on the Jenol*n before there ever was an Enterprise-B.
I don't regret the fact that Scotty is there in Generations, but it was a perfectly avoidable problem. Generations co-writer was the sole writer of "Relics", after all; he changed the character to Scotty knowing full well it ignored his own earlier script.
The aforementioned continuity error with Scotty between "Relics" and Generations (which I've seen explained away by way of Scotty being disoriented after re-materializing after being in the buffer for so long).
The other possibility is Scotty never believed Kirk really was dead. They never had a body. How many times had his colleagues been given up for dead before? For Kirk to come back... well he'd be briefly proven right.
That'd depend on whether the sphere is a fortress or a forum. If the latter, an "anti-bouncer" at each door would be a must!Doors are there to keep people out, not to let in anybody who asks.
That'd depend on whether the sphere is a fortress or a forum. If the latter, an "anti-bouncer" at each door would be a must!Doors are there to keep people out, not to let in anybody who asks.
OTOH, in the context of the fortress model, the door worked rather handily, too: it grabbed a nosy intruder, disabled her systems, and threw her into the sun!
Seriously, forks, that's the way a fortress ought to deal with enemies. Destroying them outside would leave evidence of destruction. An "inside job" would be much neater, and would allow for all sorts of options, including boarding and interrogation of the intruders. Provided the Dysonians were still about, that is.
Timo Saloniemi
Oh, the level of disabling the E-D would have been more than sufficient if the Dysonians were in there waiting for the intruders. More destruction, and the boarding party might have been unable to find out enough about the intruders or appropriate their vessel for further study and possible use...
As for the moment of capture, it's noteworthy that neither ship appeared to have sent any message before falling victim to the sphere. That Picard didn't inform Starfleet right off the bat is odd protocol, but consistent with how he and other skippers want to perform their own studies before reporting back; that the sphere did not see reason to act sooner would just be a consequence of that odd protocol...
That the Jenol*n managed to activate an apparently short-ranged distress beacon was still disastrous for the sphere's supposed fortress function, but that's again more related to the users of the sphere being gone than to its rudimentary automation going haywire.
Timo Saloniemi
Sure. But where's the fun in that?
Timo Saloniemi
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