A Study Suggests We Found Potential Evidence of Dyson Spheres—and Alien Civilizations (2024)

Could unusual starlight patterns be the key to uncovering these mythical megastructures?

By Darren Orf
A Study Suggests We Found Potential Evidence of Dyson Spheres—and Alien Civilizations (1)
  • For more than half a century, scientists have wondered if searching for technosignatures like Dyson Spheres from super-advanced civilizations could help us discover intelligent life elsewhere in the universe.
  • Two new studies analyze data from star-gazing satellites to develop a framework for eliminating false positives or potential natural explanations in that search.
  • Each study found evidence that a handful of stars among the millions observed contain excess radiation that’s consistent with potential Dyson spheres and can’t be immediately explained away as a natural phenomenon.

The search for alien life comes in many flavors, from hunting for Earth-like planets, to looking for stars with Sun-like characteristics, to tuning into some kind of alien transmission. But for more than 60 years, one particular type of search for alien worlds has centered around the idea of a Dyson Sphere.

First proposed by physicist Freeman Dyson in 1960, the idea is that a sufficiently advanced civilization (at least Type II on the Kardashev scale) would be capable of harnessing the power of its host star by constructing a kind of cocoon that could tap into a large percentage of the star’s released energy.

Over the years, the concept of Dyson Sphere has evolved to include a variety of potential constructs, including rings, bubbles, and swarms (a constellation of satellites tapping a star’s energy). But their impact from our perspective is all the same—variability in a star’s luminosity coupled with excess infrared light due to waste heat.

Finding such a star among the millions observed by star-gazing projects, such as the Gaia satellite, Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explore (WASE), and the Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS), is even worse than looking for a needle in a haystack. But recently, two separate studies accepted the challenge, and came across more than a few compelling candidates.

The first study, led by Ph.D. student Matías Suazo at Uppsala University in Sweden, is actually the second paper relating to Project Hephaistos, which describes its mission as “searching for extraterrestrial intelligence using indirect signatures of astroengineering.” Looking at optical and infrared data from the aforementioned satellites, the team developed a comprehensive method for examining the data and identifying potential Dyson Spheres and their resulting technosignatures. The results were accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

“This structure would emit waste heat in the form of mid-infrared radiation that, in addition to the level of completion of the structure, would depend on its effective temperature,” Suazo and his colleagues wrote in the paper. “A specialized pipeline has been developed to identify potential Dyson Sphere candidates focusing on detecting sources that display anomalous infrared excesses that cannot be attributed to any known natural source of such radiation.”

This pipeline includes weeding out candidates with nebulae features (as they often produced false positives), analyzing signal-to-noise ratios, and examining hydrogen-alpha particles, as well as taking a close look ar many other well-known “flags” for false positives in the Gaia-WISE data. Starting with a mind-boggling five million objects, this workflow winnowed that number down to just seven particularly compelling candidates.

“All sources are clear mid-infrared emitters with no clear contaminators or signatures that indicate an obvious mid-infrared origin,” the paper reads. However, the authors were also careful to point out that some natural causes could eventually disqualify even these high-quality candidates. “The presence of warm debris disks surrounding our candidates remains a plausible explanation for the infrared excess of our sources.”

Simultaneously, a second study conducted by the International School for Advanced Studies in Italy found 53 star candidates with excess mid-infrared measurements, but in both cases, it’s possible that Extreme Debris Disks—which form after planetary collision—could also explain these results.

When investigating explanations for cosmic phenomena that are as highly theoretical as Dyson Spheres, it’s important to remember that all the less exciting-sounding explanations need to be ruled out before we can jump to aliens. David Hogg, co-author of the second study, told New Scientist that the most likely explanation is still a natural one. “It might be something that happens very rarely, like if two planets collide and produce an enormous amount of material.”

But to know for sure, scientists will need to take a closer look at all of these candidates—likely with the James Webb Space Telescope. No matter what the follow-up data tells us, it’s sure to be interesting.

A Study Suggests We Found Potential Evidence of Dyson Spheres—and Alien Civilizations (2)

Darren Orf

Contributing Editor

Darren lives in Portland, has a cat, and writes/edits about sci-fi and how our world works. You can find his previous stuff at Gizmodo and Paste if you look hard enough.

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A Study Suggests We Found Potential Evidence of Dyson Spheres—and Alien Civilizations (2024)

FAQs

Did we find a Dyson sphere? ›

There is no conclusive evidence that the seven stars have Dyson spheres around them, Suazo cautioned. “It's difficult for us to find an explanation for these sources, because we don't have enough data to prove what is the real cause of the infrared glow,” he said.

What hypothetically would you find in a Dyson sphere? ›

A Dyson sphere is a hypothetical megastructure that encompasses a star and captures a large percentage of its solar power output.

What is Dyson's sphere theory? ›

The sphere would be composed of a shell of solar panels around the star, making it so that all of its energy radiated would hit one of these panels, where its energy could be collected and used. Thus a Dyson sphere would create not only immense living space, but also gather extraordinary amounts of energy.

What type of civilization can build a Dyson sphere? ›

First proposed by physicist Freeman Dyson in 1960, the idea is that a sufficiently advanced civilization (at least Type II on the Kardashev scale) would be capable of harnessing the power of its host star by constructing a kind of cocoon that could tap into a large percentage of the star's released energy.

What would a Dyson sphere do to Earth? ›

You could build a solid sphere around the sun to catch every last ray. In doing so, you'd have 550 million times more surface area than our whole planet, all catching rays to send back to Mother Earth in the form of raw power.

What is the suspected Dyson sphere? ›

A Dyson sphere is a hypothetical construct: a swarm of energy collectors capturing all of a star's radiant energy to provide huge amounts of power for its builders. As these energy collectors – basically huge arrays of solar panels – absorb sunlight, they must emit waste heat as infrared radiation to avoid overheating.

Would we see a Dyson sphere? ›

The total mass of asteroids in the asteroid belt is 3% of the mass of the moon. Kuiper belt is 2% of the earth's mass. In reality you probably wouldn't see a dyson sphere but a dyson swarm instead. With that you just need millions of thin sheets of material to reflect energy.

How far away would a Dyson sphere be? ›

The simplest form of Dyson sphere might begin as a ring of solar power collectors, at a distance from a star of, say, 100 million miles. This configuration is sometimes called a Dyson ring.

What would a Dyson sphere look like? ›

More likely, a Dyson sphere would consist of a collection of orbiting solar panels that only partially cover the star. In any case, there would be clear observational signatures for astronomers here on Earth. Dyson spheres would inevitably give off heat and energy that would make them extremely difficult to conceal.

Why haven t we made a Dyson sphere? ›

The construction of a Dyson Sphere would be an enormous undertaking that would require a vast amount of resources and advanced technology, and would supposedly enable human flourishing on a massive scale. At present, the construction of such a structure is well beyond our technological capabilities.

How many people could live on a Dyson sphere? ›

Acording to Futuretimeline a type 2 Kardashev society could be achieved around the year 3100 when science is advanced enough to allow the creation of a Dyson Sphere and due to its size it could house many trillions of people perhaps quadrillions of people.

Is Kardashev scale real? ›

The scale is hypothetical, and refers to energy consumption on a cosmic scale. Various extensions of the scale have since been proposed, including a wider range of power levels (Types 0, IV, and V) and the use of metrics other than pure power (e.g., computational growth or food consumption).

Can humanity build a Dyson sphere? ›

Lastly, we literally don't know how to build a Dyson sphere, so trying to go for anything more complex will simply lead to us introducing many more assumptions to handle all the small details.

Is there a type 4 civilization? ›

A Type IV civilization, or K4 civilization harnesses the power of its own supercluster of galaxies, and eventually its universe of origin, and become effectively immortal. A civilization this advanced could tap into the mysterious dark matter and manipulate the basic fabric of spacetime.

Why haven t we made a Dyson Sphere? ›

The construction of a Dyson Sphere would be an enormous undertaking that would require a vast amount of resources and advanced technology, and would supposedly enable human flourishing on a massive scale. At present, the construction of such a structure is well beyond our technological capabilities.

What if we had a Dyson sphere? ›

If it could be stabilized, a Dyson Sphere built at 93 million miles from the sun, the same distance as Earth, would contain about 600 million times the surface area of our planet in its interior. However, comparatively little of the surface would be habitable on account of a lack of gravity.

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