So far no one has found evidence of intelligent aliens elsewhere in the
cosmos. But if they do exist, they might be hanging out on Dyson spheres
circling the husks of sunlike stars called white dwarfs scattered throughout
the Milky Way, a new paper argues.
And that's there we should be focusing our search for extraterrestrials,
study co-author Ben Zuckerman, an emeritus professor of physics and
astronomy at the University of California Los Angeles, told Live Science in
an email.
Based on what that search turns up, astronomers could estimate how many
advanced civilizations lurk in the galaxy, he said.
Long live the civilization
Any advanced civilization needs energy: for food, for transport, for
conflict, for comfort and for convenience. Currently, Earth's 7.8 billion
people use around 580 million million joules of energy every year,
equivalent to the energy output of almost 14,000 million tons of oil,
according to The World Counts (opens in new tab). Indeed, almost all human
energy comes from fossil fuels, as we lack the technological savvy to rely
on the largest generator of energy in the solar system: the sun.
If humans covered every square inch of Earth'ssurface with solar panels,
that would generate more than 1,017 joules of energy per second. That would
still be losing the majority of energy radiated by the sun, about 1,026
joules per second.
This is the motivation behind Dyson spheres, named for the famed physicist
Freeman Dyson, who developed the idea in 1960. If an advanced civilization
really wants to harness the awesome energetic output of their home star,
they have to build megastructures to capture it, blocking out at least some
of the star's light and converting that energy into other useful things.
Dyson's original proposal of a solid sphere (with 100% solar coverage)
doesn't work because of stability issues, as it would be impossible to keep
the star at the center and the entire sphere would disintegrate due to
extreme tidal and rotational stresses. Even so, it's easy to imagine an
advanced species building rings or swarms of giant solar panel-covered
structures to get the job done.
Failed start-ups
But no matter how advanced a species is, and how many Dyson sphere-like
objects they build, they will have to contend with the fact that every star
has a finite lifetime. If a civilization arose around a typical sunlike
star, then someday that star will turn into a red giant and leave behind a
cool white dwarf. That process will in turn roast its solar system's inner
planets and, as the white dwarf cools off, freeze the outer ones.
So staying put on the surface of a planet is not a viable long-term
option. That means any aliens could either pack up and leave, finding a new
system to call home, or build a series of habitats that harvest the
radiation from the remaining white dwarf.
The distinct teardrop shape of this bright star suggests that it is being
tugged by a powerful, invisible companion.
According to a new paper written by Zuckerman and accepted in May for
publication in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Society, it seems unlikely that an alien civilization would
choose to go through the trouble of traveling to a new star just to build a
Dyson sphere. Thus, they're only going to build these megastructures around
their home stars, which will eventually turn into white dwarfs.
This allows scientists to make a direct connection between stellar lifetimes
and the prevalence of Dyson spheres. So, Zuckerman reasoned, if astronomers
look for Dyson spheres around white dwarfs and come up empty, that can help
estimate how many advanced civilizations may exist in the galaxy. Here’s how
the logic works: Astronomers have only measured a small fraction of all the
white dwarfs in the galaxy. But if enough aliens decided to build Dyson
spheres around their white dwarf homes, then we should see at least one
Dyson sphere in our surveys. If we don’t see any at all, then that sets an
upper limit on the number of alien civilizations building Dyson
spheres around white dwarfs. Of course there could be aliens who decide not
to build Dyson spheres, or aliens that build spheres around other kinds of
stars, but Zuckerman argues that over the age of the Milky Way the most
likely outcome of advanced civilizations is to build a Dyson sphere around
their white dwarf, and so we should focus our searches in that direction.
Taking the long view
However, this search won't be easy.
"If any Dyson spheres do exist, they will likely be hard to find because
there are so many stars that must be searched," Zuckerman noted in an email
to Live Science, adding that, "The signal from the Dyson sphere will likely
be very faint compared to the star about which it orbits."
Just what is that signal?
The presence of a Dyson sphere (or ring or swarm) around a white dwarf will
have two effects. If it's large enough or close enough to the star, it will
block the light arriving to Earth just as transiting exoplanets do. But such
Dyson spheres might also add a signal from infrared radiation. The
megastructures will absorb radiation from the white dwarf and convert that
energy into other things. Since no conversion is 100% efficient, this
process will leave behind some waste heat that will escape as infrared
light.
Surprisingly, we have already found many white dwarfs with excess infrared
emission, but that is due to dust in those systems, not megastructures,
according to the research paper.
Existing surveys of white dwarfs have found no evidence of any Dyson
spheres. Given the total number of white dwarfs that we expect to inhabit
the Milky Way, Zuckerman estimates that no more than 3% of habitable planets
around sun-like stars give rise to a civilization that chooses to build a
Dyson sphere around the resulting white dwarf. However, there are so many
planets around sun-like stars that this calculation only provides an upper
limit of 9 million potential white dwarf sphere-building civilizations in
the Milky Way, the researchers concluded.
In the end, though, nobody knows how many advanced civilizations may live in
the Milky Way, if any at all, Zuckerman said.
"Some astronomers, including me, think that technological life may be a very
rare occurrence," Zuckerman said. "Indeed, we might even possess the most
advanced technology in our Milky Way galaxy. But no one knows, so it is
worth searching for evidence."
Originally published on
Live Science.
Tags:
Physics
How about if they turn off their sun and use the fuel? No need for megastructure, no Red giant roasting their habitable zone. Fuel lasts a whole lot longer than Star lifespan.
ReplyDeleteIf there ever were any "aliens" they will most likely have disappered due to various stellar events, at least in our galaxy. Until Apple TV no production company ever attempted a rendition of Issac Asimov's FOUNDATION story. I believe the reason is lack of aliens. Frank Herbert's DUNE has no aliens but Herbert makes up for that by writing in some very "alien" humans.
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