And real estate is incredibly cheap by British standards.
And the interstellar economy begins.Hives -- so I expect there will be plenty of honey still available for tea.
Exactly.Perhaps only machine, reptile, or insect intelligences would build on such a grandiose scale. All us touchy-feely, emotional mammals would get too bogged down in congressional hearings to even get started.
I doubt if it will be a Dyson Anything, but I don't think it will be mundane.I'm itching to see new data on this phenomenon. It'd be cool if it were something as extraordinary as a megastructure but I suspect it's going to be turn out to have a mundane explanation.
I doubt if it will be a Dyson Anything, but I don't think it will be mundane.I'm itching to see new data on this phenomenon. It'd be cool if it were something as extraordinary as a megastructure but I suspect it's going to be turn out to have a mundane explanation.
It's disappointing that nothing's been detected, but not really surprising. Even if they are a they, the odds of them directing a signal at us are almost non-existent. We'd have more luck detecting leakage of their own internal communications, and a civilization that advanced probably wouldn't leak much.
[Tom Baker] Oh, look! Rocks! [/Tom Baker]
You see a lot of explding planets in Star Trek. We were told this impossible.
Not so fast
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21929242.000-tick-tick-boom-the-earth-spits-out-a-moon
http://cosmoquest.org/forum/showthread.php?145115-Mistake-in-the-National-Geographic
I can't help but wonder if this was an end-of life hot jupiter that blew its guts out.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/121121-planet-death-shroud-nasa-space-science/
Some nice designs in terms of megastructures
http://nextbigfuture.com/2012/05/adam-crowl-design-for-dyson-bubble-of.html
http://nextbigfuture.com/2014/10/brute-force-terraforming-of-mars-moons.html
[Tom Baker] Oh, look! Rocks! [/Tom Baker]
But it is such a nice quarry.
The Pakleds tried to make a Death Star--but it was made of rocks and became the moon.
That episode (Samaritan Snare) about the Pakleds would be considered incredibly not politically correct now.
But solar systems would become increasingly unstable (and irradiated) as you get deeper into the disk, so the the actual candidates are a fraction of that. How much of a fraction is debatable. And those stars are all different ages. I have a feeling that the number of technological civilizations is low and the number with interstellar capability far lower. If that really is a Dyson Something only 1400 light years away, it probably says something about the practicality of interstellar travel.It's disappointing that nothing's been detected, but not really surprising. Even if they are a they, the odds of them directing a signal at us are almost non-existent. We'd have more luck detecting leakage of their own internal communications, and a civilization that advanced probably wouldn't leak much.
SETI also intend to look for coherent optical radiation I understand, which again would require a powerful source, perhaps serving to propel lightsails as well as for communication. However, I think the best approach is to continue monitoring the star for further dimming episodes. Modulating stellar output by occultation is probably the easiest way to advertise your existence, should you want to do such a thing. Of course, whether that's what the dimming represents is moot.
ETA: Just playing with some numbers for a laugh. The volume of the galactic disk is about pi * (10^5)^2 * 2*10^3 cubic light years (diameter = 10^5 ly and thickness = 2000 ly) so the volume occupied by 2*10^11 stars (90% of which are main sequence) is about 1.5*10^13 cubic light years (cly). That gives an average of roughly one main sequence star per 100 cly or an average spacing of about 4.5 ly. If there were 1 megastructure per 80,000 stars, the nearest one might be (80,000 * 100)^(1/3)/2 or 100 ly away. Perhaps we need a Kepler Space Telescope 2 to examine all the stars within 200 ly or so of Sol rather than just 145,000 stars in a 0.25% patch of the sky in the approximate direction of Cygnus-Lyra.
But solar systems would become increasingly unstable (and irradiated) as you get deeper into the disk, so the the actual candidates are a fraction of that. How much of a fraction is debatable. And those stars are all different ages. I have a feeling that the number of technological civilizations is low and the number with interstellar capability far lower. If that really is a Dyson Something only 1400 light years away, it probably says something about the practicality of interstellar travel.
ETA: Just playing with some numbers for a laugh. [...] If there were 1 megastructure per 80,000 stars, the nearest one might be (80,000 * 100)^(1/3)/2 or 100 ly away.
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