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- From: ralph.buttigieg@f635.n713.z3.fido.zeta.org.au (Ralph Buttigieg)
- Newsgroups: sci.astro
- Subject: ANSWER: Recognizing a Dyson sphere if you saw one
- Message-ID: <afbb0feb@Kralizec.fido.zeta.org.au>
- Date: 6 Nov 92 16:19:02 GMT
- Organization: Fidonet. Gate admin is fido@socs.uts.edu.au
- Lines: 26
-
- Original to: Frederick.A.Ringwald@dartmouth.edu
- Frederick.A.Ringwald@dartmouth.edu wrote:
-
- F> masses. Of this, only about 10 Earth masses would be useful as
- F> structural material (helium and argon would not), although I add that
- F> one might obtain more by making plastic with HCON from the gas giants.
- F> Still, even if one could use all 500 Earth masses to make a Dyson
- F> sphere of radius 10^13 cm, about at the orbit of Venus, it would be at
- F> most 5-10 m thick, about the equivalent of a shell of 1 m radius and
- F> the thickness of a single atom. To avoid buckling in the Sun's
- F> gravitational field, equivalent to a uniform external pressure, it
- F> would have to be made of material about 10^10 times stiffer than any
- F> known material. Big advances in materials science happen when you
- F> improve things by a factor of 2; a factor of 10 is fantastic. A factor
- F> of 10^10 doesn't look promising...
-
- Hold on, you seem to assume that the solar system that the aliens
- inhabit consists of a Sol type star and a planetary system similar to
- ours. What about if there was a orbiting red dwarf like Proxima
- Centuri? That should provide plenty of matter.
-
- ta
- Ralph
-
- --- Maximus 2.01wb
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