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It's silly to believe that a Dyson sphere would be the direction an advanced civilization would take – just build your own fusion reactors as needed. And as somebody has pointed out in the comments, there aren't enough planets in our solar system to convert into material to encapsulate our sun, and I suspect that to be true in other planetary systems around their stars.
Additionally, the Kardashev scale has come to be that we are able to produce as much energy as you receive on your planet, or the energy made by the sun, galaxy, universe or multiverse. I think we would want more portable sources of energy than the sun.
I'VE GOT A QUESTION! I'VE GOT A QUESTION!!! It's been bugging me for ages; — if pigs eat food and poo poo, if they eat poo do they poo food?
I'm looking forward to getting an answer to this question. It's as old as the ages and affects everyone.
Kepler was a waste of $600 million of taxpayer dollars. Actual costs was probably way more if you factor in the cost to NASA itself in engineers, time, pensions, etc…
8:55 Totally wrong. Do you really expect to detect radio waves from such distances when we can barely hear voyager?
Dyson spheres are a figment of Human imagination, and misguided.
Am i the only one that feels only horror at the thought of a civilisation, however advanced, being so parasitic that it would "gobble up" whole stars? I think it is surely possible to be advanced and still maintain some morals about how they use resources, and that they conserve the nature of the galaxies
I dunno about whole regions of Dyson'd stars. I'd want to send robots to Alpha Centauri to bring back all possible resources, but living there would make no sense when I could live here instead.
Privatization of anything > Government doing anything
My parents say I'm the biggest disappointment on Earth…
QUESTION: Why don't we just use very nearby stars to our sun as gravitational lenses now? (They are already 500+ AU away)
I’ve always had an issue with the concept behind the Fermi Paradox, or at least with how people frame it using Kardashev’s scale. I don’t believe a Type I civilization is even realistically achievable—let alone Type II—unless the definitions are kept deliberately vague.
If we take it literally—using all of a planet’s energy (geothermal, wind, solar, lightning, tidal, etc.)—then the idea falls apart before we even get started. It’s not just impractical or infeasible; I’d argue it’s physically impossible. What does it even mean to "use 100% of a planet's geothermal energy"? Would we extract heat from the core until the mantle stops convecting? That’d destabilize the planet.
And solar? There are no materials capable of capturing and converting 100% of the solar energy that hits a surface—let alone the entire planet. The theoretical maximum efficiency for energy conversion tops out around 93% under perfect thermodynamic conditions, which aren't even achievable.
As for a Type II civilization, the concept is even more out there. A Dyson swarm can't capture all of a star's energy. As long as photons can escape between collectors, you're not at 100%. And thermal radiation is a huge part of a star’s output. A true Type II would need to trap everything—no light, no heat, no emissions. It would appear as a perfect blackbody—possibly indistinguishable from a black hole in some wavelengths. But even if you could build a solid shell (which is already engineering insanity), no known material can absorb and convert 100% of that energy.
This is where the whole idea starts to feel nonsensical. In real-world physics—especially quantum mechanics and thermodynamics—100% energy conversion simply doesn't exist. There's always loss. If that weren’t the case, we’d have perpetual motion machines and zero-point energy devices, both of which violate fundamental physical laws.
And I haven’t even touched on more esoteric sources like planetary motion, quantum tunneling energy, or entropy gradients. Would a Type II need to harvest those too?
You’d have to stretch the meaning of “ALL” into something basically meaningless to make any of this work.
Just saying. 😂
Kepler sooo smart so dumb
As for the other civs, the light of what they are doing, might not have yet reached us. Galaxies that are millions to billions of Light years away, might be being enclosed today, and we would not know as the light from them won't get here for a very long time…
Thanks for another great show. You mentioned people asking questions about the basic nature of reality. What a great thought, and so true. Astronomy is our window into reality.
🎈🎈🍼🍼
thank you !!
every explanation makes for a valuable shape of my understanding of space and beyond.
How realistic is the assumption that we could see dyson spheres in infrared? A civilization should pick the low hanging fruit first before going for the higher up stuff. Building a megastructure like a dyson sphere is really hard. Wouldn't it be easier to first optimize your existing machinery to get more energy out of them, to the point that IR waste heat isn't a thing?
I feel like it's worth saying that just because we don't see galaxy clusters disappearing behind Dyson spheres does not mean that powerful alien empires aren't out there. It just means that they don't make huge numbers of Dyson spheres. That particular energy collection strategy may just not be viable or necessary or desirable for some reason we can only speculate on.
What would be technologically "easier": a Ringworld around a G or K star, or a Dyson Sphere around a red dwarf?
An asteroid hit the moon during the recent lunar eclipse.
Thanks for the answers
There will always be grifters in the privatization sector, that now believe they are above the law that can escape oversight and ethics. Like using funds issued from winning a contract on things other than its intended purpose.
Awesome that you can focus on the stuff you are curious about.
If i understand correctly an observatory at 550AUs from the sun would take 13000yrs to do 1 orbit, and that would be just to observe 1 narrow band of the sky around the sun
I really hope that the new website subscription model works for you. The only thing it doesn't give you is new viewers. I hope you figure it out, and that thousands of worthwhile citizen reporters follow suit.
If it was possible to divert asteroids that have metal content to hit the moon they would be a heap easier to mine there (assuming they don’t completely fragment or get buried miles deep). Thinking out loud.
Space is vast!
Maybe the aliens cant travel far enough to get to Earth.
Seveneves shoutout! It's my next Stephenson novel! Right now I'm in the middle of Dodge in Hell.
Too much assumptions about the Kardashev scale and civilizations to be honest. A few of those being about energy use, type of energy being used or even the need for it The Dyson spheres (actually swarm) encompassing an entire star, never mind a galaxy, I mean do people not realize how small the humanoids form build to us are, or rather do they not realize how big planets and stars are relative to their own size and engineering logic? To cover an entire planet Earth with solar panel detectable at huge distances is one thing but a star? Geez! Let's bring it down a couple of notches fellow dreamers, expand our horizons but also not be restricted into assuming if there are others out there, they doing it the same way we'd do it, if at all ( even for humans here on earth, not everyone is sold on technology) we must crawl and walk before trying to run!
Maybe the great voids in the universe aren't actually voids, but are massive groups of Dyson Spheres that aren't just capturing visible light but the entire electro-magnetic spectrum… In my mind, if we ever get to the point where we can manipulate the cosmos on a scale that become obvious to other observers, we would probably spend time and energy making our changes less obvious to anyone who may be looking…
I don't understand the need to harvest stars. Any kind of matter already contains a ludicrous amount of energy, right? If an advanced civilization was able to harvest energy from any grain of dust with maximum efficiency, would they really need to harvest their star? It sounds like less energy that the condensed energy that is matter.
There is no such thing as intergalactic travel.
I'd love to see a proposal for an economy of scale NASA mission (conjunction with Space X) for creating Mutiple missions like JWST. There is such a demand for time of these projects so if the thousands of users paid for their time you could likely build multiple telescopes (or instance). What did JWST actually cost to build (vice R&D and cost to put it in space. I imagine a future when Governments pay for the R&D, contract the build out to private companies and the "Subscriptions" pay for the construction and launch.
Showing an alien working magic over a pineapple in the supermarket as an example of our capabilities was hilarious. Also, nice job on the micro black hole riff during the livestream.
Bit of an oddball, but please indulge me if you would:
(powers of perception at play here)
If our universe was contianed within a dyson sphere for the sole use and purpose as a battery, would we ever know it? Could there be anything done if we did, before it was too late? (As in we just happen to be that unlucky matter living within some alien's power node for example. And maybe we are a self-sustaining universe used for sustained power output.) There's plenty of evidence to suggest we are not, but what if we were?
Thank you, Mr. Cain.
“Basic research” is almost exclusively for military purposes such as your examples (internet, nasa) it’s not just “research for learning”
Fraser, your commitment and discipline are amazing. Ive got your back on Patreon. Keep up the great work.