Geekzone: technology news, blogs, forums
Guest
Welcome Guest.
You haven't logged in yet. If you don't have an account you can register now.


View this topic in a long page with up to 500 replies per page Create new topic
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
Fred99
13684 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 10018


  #1408394 17-Oct-2015 20:41
Send private message

I suspect that all the mental energy being wasted trying to suggest reasonable hypotheses to support a personal wish that we'd discover "proof" of a bizarre alien construction would be better spent thinking about more mundane reasons why the variation in luminance may have have been observed.
It's hardly as if this is "unprecedented".  The discovery of the first pulsar "LGM1" was (until explained) rather more compelling than this (for a while anyway), as a natural phenomenon which was producing pulsating signals at regular 1.3 second intervals seemed truly "out of this world".




Batman
Mad Scientist
30014 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 6217

Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

  #1408402 17-Oct-2015 21:07
Send private message

Rikkitic: Apologies for duplicating this topic. I searched first but missed this thread. 

My point was, if this does actually turn out to be alien, The builders of those structures, who were clearly far ahead of us 1500 years ago, have had 1500 years to get even farther ahead of us, not to mention 1500 years to come here. Should we be worried?



1500 light years is not 1500 years; the former a measure of distance, the latter a measure of time

edit: apologies i see what you mean ... no they can't get here in 1500 years. unless they travel at the speed of light ....

Batman
Mad Scientist
30014 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 6217

Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

  #1408404 17-Oct-2015 21:13
Send private message

Fred99: I suspect that all the mental energy being wasted trying to suggest reasonable hypotheses to support a personal wish that we'd discover "proof" of a bizarre alien construction would be better spent thinking about more mundane reasons why the variation in luminance may have have been observed.
It's hardly as if this is "unprecedented".  The discovery of the first pulsar "LGM1" was (until explained) rather more compelling than this (for a while anyway), as a natural phenomenon which was producing pulsating signals at regular 1.3 second intervals seemed truly "out of this world".



I was going to suggest a natural phenomenon and I see it has already been suggested



Batman
Mad Scientist
30014 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 6217

Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

  #1408405 17-Oct-2015 21:14
Send private message

Oldmanakbar: Well if they built a Dyson sphere 1500 years ago and hadn't somehow invented warp drive I wouldn't be too worried.

Any civilisation that spent 1500 years travelling towards us in a slowboat (assuming they survived) would have gone totally lord of the flies by now.
A few wall-mart specials could probably handle them.

Unless of course that is us 1500 years ago, and we came here. And in fact we are all aliens.

We should all totally write a book and turn it into a movie.


Meh, been there, done that ... next ...

Batman
Mad Scientist
30014 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 6217

Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

  #1408406 17-Oct-2015 21:16
Send private message

Linuxluver: Looks like a star out there ("KIC 8462852") is surrounded by something that makes its light levels fluctuate chaotically. It might be a huge field of comets, sucked in by a passing star - or it might be alien megastructures blocking the light from the star.....like a kind of Ringworld.

I see the star in question also has a companion dwarf star. Perhaps that has something to do with it, too. 

But it's causing quite a stir. It's 454 parsecs / 1480.7 light years away. 




an orbiting mini black hole sounds more plausible

Rikkitic
Awrrr
19071 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 16315

Lifetime subscriber

  #1408410 17-Oct-2015 21:46
Send private message

joker97:
Rikkitic: Apologies for duplicating this topic. I searched first but missed this thread. 

My point was, if this does actually turn out to be alien, The builders of those structures, who were clearly far ahead of us 1500 years ago, have had 1500 years to get even farther ahead of us, not to mention 1500 years to come here. Should we be worried?



1500 light years is not 1500 years; the former a measure of distance, the latter a measure of time

edit: apologies i see what you mean ... no they can't get here in 1500 years. unless they travel at the speed of light ....


I figure anyone who can run rings around their star can probably figure out how to travel at lightspeed. Or maybe they can go faster but took some breaks along the way. Or maybe they can't, and will arrive here the day after tomorrow instead of yesterday. The precise time frame isn't that important. The question, if one accepts the assumption that there is a 'they', is what will they do when they get here.





Plesse igmore amd axxept applogies in adbance fir anu typos

 


 


 
 
 
 

Shop now for Dell laptops and other devices (affiliate link).
Batman
Mad Scientist
30014 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 6217

Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

  #1408416 17-Oct-2015 21:55
Send private message

Rikkitic:
joker97:
Rikkitic: Apologies for duplicating this topic. I searched first but missed this thread. 

My point was, if this does actually turn out to be alien, The builders of those structures, who were clearly far ahead of us 1500 years ago, have had 1500 years to get even farther ahead of us, not to mention 1500 years to come here. Should we be worried?



1500 light years is not 1500 years; the former a measure of distance, the latter a measure of time

edit: apologies i see what you mean ... no they can't get here in 1500 years. unless they travel at the speed of light ....


I figure anyone who can run rings around their star can probably figure out how to travel at lightspeed. Or maybe they can go faster but took some breaks along the way. Or maybe they can't, and will arrive here the day after tomorrow instead of yesterday. The precise time frame isn't that important. The question, if one accepts the assumption that there is a 'they', is what will they do when they get here.



I think someone's given the answer already.

But no, why come all the way here, there are infinite other destinations to visit, including nearer solar systems.

gzt

gzt
18685 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 7826

Lifetime subscriber

  #1408417 17-Oct-2015 21:56
Send private message

jpoc:
gzt: Building dyson structures and still using radio? Unlikely.


You have a better suggestion?

Really?

Something with a lower latency? After all, radio waves only travel at the speed of light.

Something that can be used for communication between different bodies orbiting in a star system? Bit hard to do that with fibre optics.

Something that can communicate with space ships travelling around in a solar system?

Something that can broadcast information to mobile consumers of information? Even when those consumers are out of line of sight?

Don't duck out by saying something like "they would have better ways that we cannot comprehend" because what we have seen would suggest otherwise.

We have seen a Dyson scale construction around one star - and quite importantly, not around any other stars in their vicinity. If they had FTL capabilities they would probably be erecting that stuff in other stars in their neighborhood.

If they had access to unlimited amounts of energy, they would have no need for Dyson scale construction projects. No breakthroughs in extracting energy from the zero point field then.

It seems unlikely that they will be using sub-ether wavebands or zero latency tachyon pulses for their general communications so yes, I still expect them to be using radio waves to pass information around.


There are a couple of candidate technologies but only in early stages on Earth, so we have no reliable detection methods. These are borderline on the constraints you have set for an answer (and do not include tachyons) so I will go no further on those. The constraints are a kind of catch 22.

But I think in essense you may be correct. There are many other uses of radio besides communication and it is very reasonable to look for those.




oxnsox
1923 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 138


  #1408440 17-Oct-2015 22:33
Send private message

Rikkitic:
I figure anyone who can run rings around their star can probably figure out how to travel at lightspeed. Or maybe they can go faster but took some breaks along the way. Or maybe they can't, and will arrive here the day after tomorrow instead of yesterday. The precise time frame isn't that important. The question, if one accepts the assumption that there is a 'they', is what will they do when they get here.



Doubt they'll bother.... looking out their windows 1500 (light) years ago we weren't emitting great wads of RF life signs. So they probably said 'nothing to see there... what's over the other fence'. And promptly set about making a Shark-Navigator Romboid.

Batman
Mad Scientist
30014 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 6217

Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

  #1408445 17-Oct-2015 23:06
Send private message

oxnsox:
Rikkitic:
I figure anyone who can run rings around their star can probably figure out how to travel at lightspeed. Or maybe they can go faster but took some breaks along the way. Or maybe they can't, and will arrive here the day after tomorrow instead of yesterday. The precise time frame isn't that important. The question, if one accepts the assumption that there is a 'they', is what will they do when they get here.



Doubt they'll bother.... looking out their windows 1500 (light) years ago we weren't emitting great wads of RF life signs. So they probably said 'nothing to see there... what's over the other fence'. And promptly set about making a Shark-Navigator Romboid.


So in parallel universes people have intricate relationships with their vacuum cleaners huh

TheWinterDragon
44 posts

Geek


  #1408463 18-Oct-2015 00:05
Send private message

you guys are so weird, off topic posts usually degrade into dick and fart jokes at this point.
But you just geek it up, it's so great. Love it!

Wait so who wrote Ringworld, wasn't Clive Barker was it?




Mike B.

 

http://www.mikebwriter.co.nz

 

Writer (articles, novels, short fiction, poetry),

 

Writer/Director (tv, animation),

 

Scriptwriter (films, plays, comic books),

 

Cartoonist, Game Writer,

 

Producer/Designer (electronics, software, toys, creatures.)

 

 

 

LAPTOP: Lenovo Thinkpad - i7 2ghz dual core processor, 4gb ram, 320gb hd, 64bit windows 10 pro

 

MOBILE: Windows Phone - Lumia

 

STUDIO PC: AMD Athlon - dual core 3.3ghz, 4gb ram, 500gb hd, 64 bit windows 7

 

WANT: Nintendo DS, Dragonbox Pyra, Toshiba Tecra Office Laptop, Android Tablet

 

16bit monsTer theory
http://www.facebook.com/16bitmt

 

 

 

 


 
 
 
 

Shop now on Samsung phones, tablets, TVs and more (affiliate link).
jonherries
1434 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 316

Trusted
Subscriber

  #1408488 18-Oct-2015 06:48
Send private message

TheWinterDragon: you guys are so weird, off topic posts usually degrade into dick and fart jokes at this point.
But you just geek it up, it's so great. Love it!

Wait so who wrote Ringworld, wasn't Clive Barker was it?


Larry Niven?

Jon

MikeB4
MikeB4
18775 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 12766

ID Verified
Trusted
Subscriber

  #1408492 18-Oct-2015 07:38
Send private message

What ever it was it's history now




Here is a crazy notion, lets give peace a chance.


Batman
Mad Scientist
30014 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 6217

Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

  #1408493 18-Oct-2015 07:45
Send private message

TheWinterDragon: you guys are so weird, off topic posts usually degrade into dick and fart jokes at this point.
But you just geek it up, it's so great. Love it!

Wait so who wrote Ringworld, wasn't Clive Barker was it?


Parallel universes are real!

mdf

mdf
3566 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 1519

Trusted

  #1408494 18-Oct-2015 07:45
Send private message

Yep, Larry Niven.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Niven

1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
View this topic in a long page with up to 500 replies per page Create new topic








Geekzone Live »

Try automatic live updates from Geekzone directly in your browser, without refreshing the page, with Geekzone Live now.



Are you subscribed to our RSS feed? You can download the latest headlines and summaries from our stories directly to your computer or smartphone by using a feed reader.