Second Irregularly Dimming Star Found (phys.org) 151
Long-time Slashdot reader RockDoctor writes: Remember the screaming and welcoming of our Dyson-Sphere-Dwelling 1500 LY distant Overlords that accompanied the news that star KIC 8462852 was irregularly dimming on both short and longer timescales? A second star with a similar light curve has been discovered and reported on ARXIV.
With the euphonious names "EPIC 204278916" and "2MASS J16020757-2257467", the star is a young M1 (red) star, traveling as part of a group of stars which haven't had time to disperse from their place of formation. The age is estimated at 5 — 11 million years. Analysis of 70+ days of data from the K2 mission epoch shows a rotation of 3.6 days, but a period of 25 days near the start of the observation epoch showed dips in intensity of up to 60% lasting for up to about a day each. Details are in the Arxiv paper linked to above, particularly figures 1 and 4.
If confirmed, this discovery changes the situation with interpreting the so-called "Tabby's Star". Firstly with a second object in the class, the odds of it representing a class of naturally occurring objects compared to a unique, unusual object is greatly increased. Secondly, the different celestial mechanical situations around the different stars allows a better estimate of plausible formation mechanisms. One potentially important point is that clumps of debris that could produce these dimmings seem to be quite large. "It is also important to note that the resulting size for the transiting and occulting clump would be quite large at with the clump being in the order of 1.5 times the radius of the Sun. Sadly, this appears to be a new class of "dirty young planetary system." no alien Overlords, no screaming in the streets. Just business-like astronomy.
With the euphonious names "EPIC 204278916" and "2MASS J16020757-2257467", the star is a young M1 (red) star, traveling as part of a group of stars which haven't had time to disperse from their place of formation. The age is estimated at 5 — 11 million years. Analysis of 70+ days of data from the K2 mission epoch shows a rotation of 3.6 days, but a period of 25 days near the start of the observation epoch showed dips in intensity of up to 60% lasting for up to about a day each. Details are in the Arxiv paper linked to above, particularly figures 1 and 4.
If confirmed, this discovery changes the situation with interpreting the so-called "Tabby's Star". Firstly with a second object in the class, the odds of it representing a class of naturally occurring objects compared to a unique, unusual object is greatly increased. Secondly, the different celestial mechanical situations around the different stars allows a better estimate of plausible formation mechanisms. One potentially important point is that clumps of debris that could produce these dimmings seem to be quite large. "It is also important to note that the resulting size for the transiting and occulting clump would be quite large at with the clump being in the order of 1.5 times the radius of the Sun. Sadly, this appears to be a new class of "dirty young planetary system." no alien Overlords, no screaming in the streets. Just business-like astronomy.
Re:Or... (Score:5, Interesting)
Or...now follow me on this...maybe there are *two* Kardashev-II civilizations out there?
Or it could be two settlements of the same civilization. They are only a few thousand LYs apart, which is a blink on cosmic timescales, so if they are both at about the same stage of development, it is unlikely to be coincidence. It is more likely that they have the same origin.
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None of it is plausible. You space nutters with your "antimatter fuel" nonsense. You can't travel near the speed of light. We know that from basic Physics. How are you going to travel "a few thousands light years"?
Well, it's an older, advanced race that moved to a younger star over a long period of time. And I think the irregularly dimming light can be simply explain by the same set of facts... Old people driving with their turn signals on all the time and hitting the brakes randomly for no apparent reason...
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They'd be here by now. What plausible reason would they have for ALL stopping, once they've got a technology that can make an interstellar move in a manageable period of time?
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Well, I don't believe it, but assuming FTL is a pipe dream, a Level 2 civilization would still be quite capable of accelerating a colony ship to a sizable fraction of the speed of light, even enough so that journeys across thousands of light years would take negligible time for the passengers, though that would likely still get extremely expensive even with the full power of a star behind it.
So, they build up their infrastructure, and then eventually send a colony ship to another rich candidate star when th
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Think more about what you mean by "civilisation-ending". You're talking about space-faring organisms. That means either FTL-impossibilities (impossible - it's in the name) or generation ships. Generation ships require radiation management. Outside the immediate blast zone of a supernova (a mere few dozen LY), the issue is radiation management. And supernovae hardly happen without warning - you need a star somewhat b
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Okay, yeah in terms of terminating a species that spans thousands of light years, it's not so much of a threat. But even at that level of technology, travel between even close stars would still be a non-trivial endeavor, it would be difficult if not impossible to physically evacuate the inhabitants of a fully domesticated star within the kill zone unless you started millenia ahead of time, and while radiation management would be possible, it would also be a very expensive and disruptive expected long-term
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Agreed. Launching a generation shi
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Not sure I agree with the stick analogy - maintaining communications is unlikely to be particularly burdensome, nor is making regular "incremental backups" of your research servers into the datastream. Compared to sending a colony ship between stars, setting up a gravitational telescope to examine your target would be pocket change, and make for a wonderful insanely-high-gain communication relay as a bonus. And I think a king size carrot would be easy to offer. Sure, you can't get any short-term immediate
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Generational ships. Also, no reason to think an alien's lifespan is similar to a human's
Also, relativity.
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Generational ships ...
That is biology based thinking. A civilization this advanced has likely made a full transition to machine based AI. There are no "generations", only periodic upgrades.
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So I guess it is impossible after all, because there's no way that ship lasted 1000+ years without being bricked by a forced update.
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Or, somewhat more seriously, destroyed by an impact with something...anything really, at large fractions of the speed of light, or destroyed by a terrorist attack from within (many generations gives time for indigenous doomsday cults to form), or cleared of all life due to an unrecoverable malfunction with any life support system. A generation ship is constantly rolling the dice for its own survival, and what I see as a major flaw in the concept is the belief that it will never roll snake eyes in however ma
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Good education and the capacity to take care of everyone's basic needs should make cults and terrorists a non-issue. We are talking about an advanced civilization, I think we can assume those things would exist on a starship.
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But this is all really silly... what naturally occurring phonomena could cause dimming? Could a star itself brighten and dim if something sufficiently large crashed into it?
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Such a statement is useless conjecture without observing the natural progression of such a race and then drawing a conclusion. You might as well say "A race that advanced has OBVIOUSLY replaced all their limbs with broccoli.".
Science is based on observations. Fiction is based on wild speculation. Combining the two makes for some interesting stories, but remember that science fiction is a type of fiction, and not a type of science.
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Yes, those stories are called hypothesis. Science is about observing and then speculating based on those observations, speculating on what else would be true if your speculation were correct, devising ways to test those something elses and observing the results. Rinse, repeat.
Science fiction tests nothing in the physical world although it often simulates such testing in a fictional w
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I, for one, would not welcome Patch Tuesday on my AI "shell".
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That is biology based thinking. A civilization this advanced has likely made a full transition to machine based AI. There are no "generations", only periodic upgrades.
Some of us enjoy our biological meat puppets.
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Machines that advanced, would be indistinguishable from biological bodies. Except maybe a bit "better".
Maybe, biology -is- what you get after machines?
Except, we've just missed a few upgrades and preventive maintanance... 8-)
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You can't travel near the speed of light.
You can get up to about 0.25c with a solar sail, using laser boosting. Your payload would not have to be big. Just enough to bootstrap a new civilization. DNA based beings could send plenty of genetic diversity encoded on a computer, and just splice a base sequence. Machine/AI based beings would not even need that.
How are you going to travel "a few thousands light years"?
Using vessels that can survive a ten thousand year journey. They would be self-repairing, and error correcting, to prevent systems from failing or wearing out. A civilization thousands or mi
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Use an induction catapult to fire a stream of metallic reaction mass at your chosen target. Then send a second induction catapult along that stream, carrying passengers, flying to the target. Most of the work is done in the originating system. Your pellets reaction mass are self guided with microcontrollers and little ion drives so they can stay aligned.
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Sure but it isn't like we haven't developed at least infant forms of these other technologies, our space program just sucks so we don't have opportunities to test and develop them. We have so few resources we can't afford to Edison it and discover all the ways not to build an FTL drive and go the next step and revisit all these techniques periodically to make sure we didn't rule them out prematurely because of some underlying tech that wasn't quite there yet
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Resources, we have plenty of. Ability to get on with others, we have a real problem with.
If the US spent only as much as China on defence, they could have a complete Apollo AND shuttle AND space station program EVERY YEAR.
http://www.thespacereview.com/... [thespacereview.com]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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None of it is plausible. You space nutters with your "antimatter fuel" nonsense. You can't travel near the speed of light. We know that from basic Physics. How are you going to travel "a few thousands light years"?
Bah. Fully qualified experts used to insist going faster than 35 MPH would be fatal. Not crashing, mind you: just going faster than that. It would turn the body to jelly and shatter all your bones. You'd die instantly. When that turned out to not be true, the bar was moved to 100 MPH. That wasn't true either. Then they said we would never fly. We did. Then they said we'd never survive breaking the sound barrier. We did. Then they insisted 1000 MPH was lethal. It isn't. They said helicopters
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I am glad that you think experts have nothing to say on the subject of the impossibility of travel between stars. Because I am not an expert and I am utterly convinced by the physics and the psychology of humanity that we will never travel between stars. You are about to elect a president who is so stupid he wants to build a wall against the Mexicans and make them pay for it. What makes you think that any civilization that ugly and stupid is going to avoid war and sinking back into the stone age after the f
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Holographic storage.
Fusion power.
Flying cars.
Real soon now.....
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No "fully qualified expert" said we would die if we went faster than 35 mph. The people who said that had no evidence or observation to support the idea and there was in fact evidence to the contrary (cheetahs, lions, many types of birds) that they were ignoring.
Don't conflate saying something is too hard (likely to be proven wrong eventually) with saying something is impossible based on known physics (less likely to be proven wrong).
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Hmm, at 0.01c, it would take 430 or so years to reach AlphaCent. It would take 20M years or so to get to the other side of the Milky Way.
It's probably safe to say that a Type II civilisation would be capable of at least 0.01c, and that it would last 20M years or more.
This completely ignoring that if you have the entire energy output of a star to play with, speeds closer to 0.25c+ would be more realistic than 0.01c....
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It's a big universe out there, and the further we look, the older it is. Takes a lot of hubris to announce that something only exists in a given person's imagination, based solely upon one's knowledge, limited though it may be.
Bit like a slug under a rock being unable to fathom a jet airliner...
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The same way that our ancestors populated the Earth at an average speed of around 3km/year : slowly, with the technologies we have when we start, plus any that we develop along the way.
In that previous diaspora, the travellers developed things like "clothing", then "fabric" and sewing. I'm pretty sure that pottery was also developed on that journey, probably multiple times. But they started with fire and stone tools.
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If there exists a civilization that has managed to survive and advance for say, a billion years, or maybe even 1/100th of that, they would surely have at least some technolog
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If there exists a civilization that has managed to survive and advance for say, a billion years, or maybe even 1/100th of that, they would surely have at least some technologies that would be difficult for us to comprehend. We all walk around with miniature high-powered computers in our pockets, while just a generation ago few people knew what the internet was and less powerful computers occupied a lot of desk space and stayed tethered to walls. Merely two hundred years ago there was no widespread use of el
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Maybe, maybe not. I'd contend we could build megastructures around a star already we just wouldn't do so.
Can you imagine the human race of today pursuing a project on a term of millenia building a megastructure composed of billions or trillions of small components flocking and interacting in unison to form of a megastructure? Lots of redundancy. I don't see any huge insurmountable te
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Um, no. It couldn't be. "A few thousand lightyears apart" is um, too far. How would someone travel a few thousand light years? It isn't possible, because, you know, Physics. This is what is wrong with Space Nutters: instead of accepting the fact that these are naturally occurring systems, the rush is to assume it is fantastic alien civilizations. Let me break to down for you: there is no intelligent life out there. We are likely the only intelligent civilization that currently exists. There likely have been many before us, and there will be many more after we are gone.
One day you might pull your head out of your ass and realize that there just might be an organism in the known universe with wisdom and intelligence that far outshines yours. Until then, keep assuming that man-made concepts such as "physics" is the reason a far more advanced civilization wouldn't be able to travel quickly through space.
As you try and convince others here of your theory, I should also point out the obvious irony. 100 years ago you wouldn't have been able to convince a single human on this
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Re:Or... (Score:4, Insightful)
What evidence do you have that you can travel faster than the speed of light?
Interstellar travel does not require FTL velocities.
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Interstellar travel does not demand high speed, just long life and patience.
More important: is it blue-shifted?
--
The Internet. Where science goes to die.
Hypothesis (Score:2)
What evidence do you have that you can travel faster than the speed of light? If you have evidence of it, then produce it. Einstein said it isn't possible. Do you know better? Welcome to reality. Reality isn't Star Trek.
Absolutely none, and it is not possible according to current models.
However, maybe those models are incomplete. For example, maybe the universe is a simulation and someone exists outside of it capable of mucking about with it. Or perhaps we will discover how to create a buffer overflow.
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No, Einstein said it is possible, and described its effects. What he said was impossible was to accelerate to the speed of light in a conventional Newtonian way.
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Mainly because Star Trek needed to cripple its future to keep its main characters and their challenges recognizable to the audience. Thus things like cyborgs, sapient supercomputers and genetic engineering were reserved for enemies. On the other hand, we have little reason to self-limit ourselves to what natural selection came up with, so why would a thousand-year journey be any more of a problem for our descendants than morning commute is for us?
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If you mean *we* aren't traveling to other stars any time soon, you're probably right.
It's more likely that *we* aren't *ever* traveling to other stars. With too many members of our species being as stupid and short-sighted as him, we are certainly doomed as a species. Hopefully the ETs are a lot smarter than us reality-TV-watching imbeciles.
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Konstantin Tsiolkovsky 100 years ago (Score:2)
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Jules Verne was a space nutter.
Imagine, sending people to the moon by shooting them out of a cannon? The acceleration would kill them.
Solid scientific principles of the day? That's nutter talk. No, it's impossible, Newton said so.
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Actually, no. While the true underlying rules that govern the universe are not man made, our concept of Physics most certainly is - it's our best mathematical model so far of what those real rules might be, but there's nothing sacred or "True" about it - the models have been torn down and rebuilt many times already, and it's pure hubris to assume that we wont do so again in the future. And when we do so, there's no telling what new ways of manipulating the universe may become possible for us.
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Um, no. It couldn't be. "A few thousand lightyears apart" is um, too far. How would someone travel a few thousand light years?
Probably slowly, by human standards. Project Orion in the 1950s studied a hypothetical fission propulsion systems that could reach ~0.01c. So a few thousand kly = a few hundred thousand years. That's certainly a long time, but consider that it's 65 million years since the dinosaurs and billions of years since life began. If our civilization gets to be several million years old and we can't figure out anything better we might say it's better than not spreading at all. And we still have some ideas for fusion
Re:Or... (Score:4, Interesting)
Light manages it. We can't do it so fast, but that's an engineering issue, not a physics ban.
You didn't actually read even the fucking summary, which I spent 3/4 of an hour writing. You fucking unspeakable cad. Piss off back down your troll hole.
Certainly not in your momma's cellar, if you can't even read the fucking summary, let alone the paper linked to from it.
To be precise, we have no evidence for intelligent life outside the Solar system (leaving aside quibbles over whether Voyager 2 has left the heliosphere, it's not even a small fraction of the way to the limit of known gravitationally-bound objects in the Solar System). Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence - or evidence of anything else, either.
This is the position which we have evidence for. However, given that the universe is large, and our locale doesn't seem to be particularly uncommon, it strains credulity.
Almost certainly true. And completely unsupported by any evidence except the very speculation which you decry.
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(2) Which part of "slowly" do you have a problem with understanding?
(3) How would you deal with languages evolving? Simply : with records of existing protocols and including a protocol for updating protocols. No, it wouldn't be easy. Who (apart from you and the Star Trek scriptwriters who seem to be your only source of information) believes that it will be eithe
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Yes, exactly. Now you are getting it. Even we are already at a point where not dying is a reasonably forseeable possibility. We have many paths, AI, singularity, effortings to engineer away aging. As we age timescale perception changes. A young person is in a rush to make every minute count and years feel like forever, to a middle aged person a year doesn't really seem like so long after all. Imagine time perception to a being a few million years old that is
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What planet do you live on? Here on Earth, the current generation of Americans is expected to live not as long as the previous generation, due to obesity. You are going to die. We are all going to die. And no: you are never never ever leaving the planet to live on another one. No one is. Grow up and learn to live on Earth.
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You receive what you think may be a message (there's a few decades of decision time there, for starters), then decide (1 generation, or two) to initiate communication. You dispatch your first message. Then you wait a decade, or a generation, or a civilisation-collapse cycle?
No, you re-send the message. With slightly different encoding. And then you repeat it again with a different preceding set of mathematical symbols to establish your language-designed-for communication
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He "just discovered" trolling? He has a 6-digit UID; he's been around here for a while. He's certainly not a kid in his mom's basement, unless he's one of those 40-year-old virgins who never moved out. The fact that he's still around and prolifically posting while so many other quality posters are long gone just shows this site is on its last legs.
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IMHO 'Q' didn't fit in the category of 'civilized, but he could be responsible for the phenomena we are seeing.
Dyson-Sphere-Dwelling (Score:3)
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OTOH, I'll file the question in case I ever see Dyson doing a Q&A session here.
of course, no alien overlords (Score:2)
If you are an advanced alien race that needs more living space, it's much more practical to construct a partial dyson sphere in your own back yard, than to colonize other star systems. Our galaxy is big enough that there should be multiple inhabited star systems out there, and possibly multiple partial dyson spheres. But the laws of physics make visits from flesh and blood aliens highly unlikely.
Re:of course, no alien overlords (Score:4, Funny)
No other civilization is going to use a Dyson sphere. Their products are so user unfriendly. I bought one of their fans and had to return it because it was so badly thought out. There's no way that company could design a sphere to enclose a sun properly.
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I suspect becoming a truly spacefaring species means the ability to alter your flesh and blood to forms more suitable to space and alien environments at will, for example through mind uploading. There are potential additional benefits as well, such as intelligence boost or true multitasking.
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I really doubt it. If you're an advanced race (hoomin, alien, or our current feline overlords) living within the laws of physics, then the need for living space can be much more easily accommodated by turning asteroids into large numbers of hollow, spin-stabilised structures. It's much simpler, incredibly more fault tolerant, and doesn't require the disassembly a
Good conclusion, but missed the best reason (Score:2)
"
If confirmed, this discovery changes the situation with interpreting the so-called "Tabby's Star"."
The most important reason why this deprecates Tabby's Star as an alien megastructure is that at 5-11 million years, this new star is far too young to have undergone planet formation, let alone a highly developed civilization. If we can identify a natural mechanism for its odd light changes, Occam says this is the most likely explanation for Tabby's Star also.
Meanwhile, we ourselves are making these observatio
Sept 14th GAIA data likely to change things again (Score:3)
We have known for quite some time that young stars can behave this way. The reason Tabby is odd is because it DOESN’T appear to be young. I doubt the same mechanism will explain both unless Tabby’s age is radically down graded. I suppose that could happen, but the reason I believe it won’t is the highly symmetric first dip and the another dip indicating a huge ring structure object, then came the wacky random fluctuations that without the other two anomalies would like a young planetary
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The most important reason why this deprecates Tabby's Star as an alien megastructure is that at 5-11 million years, this new star is far too young to have undergone planet formation, let alone a highly developed civilization.
The civilization that build the megastructure may have evolved elsewhere and then migrated to this star. The lack of planet formation is an advantage since the first step in building a dyson sphere is to ... disassemble the planets. It would be much easier to start with a cloud of comets and asteroids. That may have been one reason they chose this star for their project.
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A: A mature star system, where most of the raw materials for construction have already coalesced into planets, and may only have 2/3 of its stellar life left.
B: A
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Some other factors:
1) You haven't exactly built thousands of Dyson Spheres, so each one is still a big project and a big risk. Better to do it on some young star without any inhabited planets.
2) Maybe a small, young star represents a lower engineering challenge than a larger star, much like a space elevator is a huge engineering challenge to us on Earth because of the necessary material strength, whereas building one on the Moon would be far, far easier and well within our materials technology.
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In your "B" scenario, don't forget that you've got a LOT of volatiles still floating around, unless you've already built your gas giants. In which case, you're into scena
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Maybe they've already built asteroid-habitats and are bored of that, and want to build something much bigger and fancier. After all, if they've figured out how to eliminate aging and have virtually unlimited lifespans, maybe they have little better to do than come up with fantastic new construction projects. And with no significant death rate, maybe they're having fun breeding as many new baby aliens as they can so they need lots of space for them.
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When SF authors make this sort of suggestion, they normally have some sort of hand-wavey McGuffin [wikipedia.org] to explain why the civilisation in question stopped migrating. What's your McGuffin?
(The most cringe-worthy I saw recently was "We're the dinosaurs that left Earth to it's Cretaceous asteroid fate, and we haven't stopped migrating." No names, no pack drill on that one, but it dirtied the hands of both colla
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Did it? It seemed plausible to me. The Sun had a companion star, and they utilized it to build a Bowl of Heaven that could be used to travel the stars. The second book actually went into that they caused the Cretaceous disaster by returning with their "ship".
I am wondering where they were/are going with the destination system though, that sounds...weird.
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I don't think I'll buy the third book - if there is one. Might get it from the library, if I see it there.
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Agree on the "highly developed civilisation". Disagree on the planets.
Our current better models for the formation of the Solar system have it taking in the order of 20-100 Myr to have put the bulk of the planets together including forming the Moon, though locally we had a (probable) re-arrangement of gas giants at about 0.6-1.0 billion years after formation leading to the "Late
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Sigh. Yet again. Occam's Razor never, ever, ever says a thing about what is more likely.
Occam's Razor says it is likely you are wrong.
Not the same (Score:2)
oh oh (Score:2, Funny)
Rats, you guessed my password!
we'll find a lot of this (Score:2)
By the mere fact that we have noticed this twice now (and we've looked at very few stars) would suggest this is not terribly uncommon. Even if it's one in a million, there are thousands in just our own galaxy.
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It's up to ten now [iop.org]. I didn't follow the references.
Sorry, twelve, including this star and the original "Tabby's Star." Time to split the genus into species.
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Different things (Score:1)
Dyson sphere? (Score:1)
I wonder if there is not enough material in all 8 known planets plus asteroid belt to construct a Dyson sphere around our own star.
Not to mention the inconceivable amount of other resources needed to process and construct the thing; like workers and manufacturing facilities.
My money would be on a more naturally occurring phenomena. Perhaps a dark object(s) occluding view, or an as-yet unknown type of core reaction.
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The Thought Police will be using tickle-sticks along with the nerve gas and whips?