Timeline for Hiding a star cluster
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
5 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Feb 20 at 10:33 | comment | added | Pica | Or you just pretend to be a interstellar dust cloud/nebula in the dark, by getting fuzzy at the edges, using again, similar pixels.. | |
Feb 20 at 10:23 | comment | added | Pica | There i would hide it by creating universal statistic artefacts. As in you take assemblers and gun them out into the void, were they hit larger asteroids- which they then dissolve into what is essentially a solar system sized solar sail. And once astronomers get used to dead space having dead pixels, your dyson sphere is just another dead pixel.. | |
Feb 20 at 9:49 | comment | added | Matthieu M. | Clever. Very clever. Both in using non-bright stars to build the hideaway, as bright stars disappearing would be noticeable, and in solving the "emissions give them away" problem. I do think one problem remains: the dark spot would be noticeable when passing "in front" of a star. Not sure how widespread potential observers are... | |
Feb 20 at 9:46 | history | edited | Matthieu M. | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Fix typos/grammaros.
|
Feb 19 at 14:56 | history | answered | Pica | CC BY-SA 4.0 |