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Ephemeron wrote:GOOMHR I think there are too many stars too!!!
Pfhorrest wrote:As someone who is not easily offended, I don't really mind anything in this conversation.
userxp wrote:Wait, so how will the disc manage to cover the entire Earth? Because otherwise, nobody will really notice anything, even the astronomers in charge of looking at the black screens will still be able to see them as soon as they go outside.
And will the disc cover only one star at a time, or will it progressively cover new stars without losing the already covered ones? Because if it does, it will just get closer and closer to the telescope until it is essentially a lid, and if it doesn't, then it's just one star less, so what's the point?
I believe with probability ~ 25% that I missed at least 20% of the joke.
Edit: Also, if you block all the stars, how will the rain get in? We'll dehydrate. This is a bad idea.
What... what?! Rain comes from the universe now?
Where else? Stars are the holes where the rain comes in, were you never taught this?
You don't think water just hovers in the air until it gets bored and comes down to visit do you?
userxp wrote:I believe with probability ~ 25% that I missed at least 20% of the joke.
Kit. wrote:Soralin wrote:Kit. wrote:A really advanced civilization tries to keep the entropy production in its controlled space at the barest minimum it can achieve. That includes killing those power-hungry less advanced civilizations-pests, if necessary.
Less advanced civilizations are hardly capable of being very power-hungry. Humans use about 15TW, our sun on the other hand uses about 384600000000000TW. If you really want to reduce entropy production you'd disassemble the sun, the energy savings would be astronomical.
How much energy would you need to "disassemble the sun"?
Where would you store it and/or how would you deliver it?
How much time of non-wasting solar energy would it buy you?
You cannot just freeze the nature, no matter how technologically advanced you are.
lifting solar material from the surface of the Sun to infinity requires 2.1 × 1011 J/kg. This energy could be supplied by the star itself, collected by a Dyson sphere; using only 10% of the Sun's total power output would allow 5.9 × 1021 kilograms of matter to be lifted per year (0.0000003% of the Sun's total mass).
The Moomin wrote:Is it called a Dyson sphere because you construct it in a vacuum?
Soralin wrote:If you really want to reduce entropy production you'd disassemble the sun, the energy savings would be astronomical.
djessop wrote:The t-shirt should read "There are 11 types of people in the world, those who understand binary, those who don't and those who insist the number above is pronounced as eleven no matter what base you're in".
bigjeff5 wrote:It reminded me of this Onion article.
Kit. wrote:Soralin wrote:Kit. wrote:A really advanced civilization tries to keep the entropy production in its controlled space at the barest minimum it can achieve. That includes killing those power-hungry less advanced civilizations-pests, if necessary.
Less advanced civilizations are hardly capable of being very power-hungry. Humans use about 15TW, our sun on the other hand uses about 384600000000000TW. If you really want to reduce entropy production you'd disassemble the sun, the energy savings would be astronomical.
How much energy would you need to "disassemble the sun"?
Where would you store it and/or how would you deliver it?
How much time of non-wasting solar energy would it buy you?
You cannot just freeze the nature, no matter how technologically advanced you are.
In the xkcd comic Occulting Telescope[27], the image tooltip predicted that a Type II Kardashev civilization will eventually build a Dyson Sphere to enclose their planetary system.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kardashev_scale#Type_II
Clayh wrote:Anyone see this yet? I was reading through to get more background, and it made me laugh more than the comic did...In the xkcd comic Occulting Telescope[27], the image tooltip predicted that a Type II Kardashev civilization will eventually build a Dyson Sphere to enclose their planetary system.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kardashev_scale#Type_II
Pfhorrest wrote:(I have a story in progress culminating in a clash of two forces both with godlike powers to reconstruct mass-energy at a whim. One side is omnicidal maniacs trying to convert the whole of the universe into its own sort of grey goo, the other are... not. They can both match force for force and stop eachother's actions, but only at the cost of huge amounts of energy - which they can both grab from anywhere, suck up any star, but then their battle would consume the universe eventually, quickly reducing it to maximal entropy. The omnicidal maniacs are OK with that, the good guys obviously less so. The battle is finally won when the good guys convince some enigmatic even-more-poweful entities, who have thus far remained neutral about absolutely everything, to intervene, which they do by sucking the waste heat out of the galaxy where this conflict is happening, and returning a steady supply of usable energy to the good guys, as they have apparently solved this entropy problem a long time ago).
Kit. wrote:Soralin wrote:Kit. wrote:A really advanced civilization tries to keep the entropy production in its controlled space at the barest minimum it can achieve. That includes killing those power-hungry less advanced civilizations-pests, if necessary.
Less advanced civilizations are hardly capable of being very power-hungry. Humans use about 15TW, our sun on the other hand uses about 384600000000000TW. If you really want to reduce entropy production you'd disassemble the sun, the energy savings would be astronomical.
How much energy would you need to "disassemble the sun"?
Where would you store it and/or how would you deliver it?
How much time of non-wasting solar energy would it buy you?
You cannot just freeze the nature, no matter how technologically advanced you are.
Pfhorrest wrote:As someone who is not easily offended, I don't really mind anything in this conversation.
Fire Brns wrote:Solution, in addition to dissassembling stars for fuel: Use collected energy to repeatedly send the planet back in time inside the dyson sphere to support civilization Hypothetically 100-1000 times longer.
Mardeg wrote:I just pictured a galactic Dyson vacuum being used to collect the energy.
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