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Dyson's Garden

Fuzzy Modem

Commander
Red Shirt
This is a concept environment I whipped up this weekend. Is anything like this even remotely possible?

dysons_garden_16x9_fd_by_fuzzymodem-d8kymzr.jpg


Bigger: http://img11.deviantart.net/d857/i/2015/067/c/c/dysons_garden_16x9_fd_by_fuzzymodem-d8kymzr.jpg
 
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Pretty -- with the pulsar, it reminds me strongly of the smoke ring from Larry Niven's The Integral Trees.

The story occurs around the fictional neutron star Levoy's Star (abbreviated "Voy"). The gas giant Goldblatt's World (abbreviated "Gold") orbits this star just outside its Roche limit and therefore its gravity is insufficient to keep its atmosphere, which is pulled loose into an independent orbit around Voy and forms a ring that is known as a gas torus. The gas torus is huge—one million kilometers thick—but most of it is too thin to be habitable. The central part of the Gas Torus, where the air is thicker, is known as the Smoke Ring. The Smoke Ring supports a wide variety of life.

No "ground" exists in the Smoke Ring; it consists entirely of sky. Furthermore, the Smoke Ring is in orbit and therefore in free fall: there is no "up" or "down". Most animals have trilateral symmetry that allows them to see in all directions. The majority of Smoke Ring animals have evolved to fly on at least an occasional basis—even the fish. The Smoke Ring contains numerous "ponds," globs of water of various sizes which float free like everything else. While there are aquatic and amphibious animals in the Smoke Ring that live the majority of their lives in such ponds, these animals may find their habitat unsuitable at any moment. Whether their home pond drifts too far out of the habitable center of the Smoke Ring and into the gas torus, becomes too large and breaks up due to tidal forces, or impacts a large object such as an integral tree, aquatic animals must be able to propel themselves through the air sometimes in order to find a new place to live.
 
I also thought of the Greenfly outbreak in Alastair Reynold's Revelation Space series.

...the Greenfly outbreak, in which human civilisation was destroyed by a rogue terraforming system of human origin that destroyed planets and converted them to millions of orbiting, vegetation-filled habitats. The Greenfly began to subsume most of human space, with all efforts to stop them failing.
 
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Dyson spheres, outside of relics were more swarms anyway.

Well, "Relics" and a lot of other science fiction. For instance, Gordon Eklund's Star Trek novel The Starless World featured a solid Dyson shell in 1978, 14 years before "Relics." There's also a solid one in Stephen Baxter's The Time Ships, which is a pretty hard-SF novel.
 
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