| ▲ | tlb 4 hours ago |
| The inner planets contain enough mass to create a shell of 1 AU radius with mass of 42 kg/m^2. That sounds like a plausible thickness and density for a sandwich of photovoltaics - GPUs - heat sinks. You don't build a rigid shell of course, you build a swarm of free-floating satellites in a range of orbits. See https://www.aleph.se/Nada/dysonFAQ.html#ENOUGH for numbers. |
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| ▲ | FridgeSeal 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] |
| I am dying to know where you’ll get the energy and manufacturing scale in order to achieve this with current, or current+50-years technology. Do tell. |
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| ▲ | tlb 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | The energy to build the system comes from the partial assembled system, plus some initial bootstrap energy. It grows exponentially. We seem to have enough today to build small factories in orbit. The manufacturing scale comes from designing factory factories. They aren't that far in the future. Most factory machinery is made in factories which could be entirely automated, so you just need some robots to install machines into factories. | | |
| ▲ | jcgrillo an hour ago | parent [-] | | I was told ca. 2003 or so that because features on computer chips were getting smaller at some rate, and processor speed was getting faster at some other rate, that given exponential this or that I'd have tiny artificial haemo-goblins[1] bombing around my circulatory system that would make me swim like a fish under the sea for hours on end. But it turned out to be utter bullshit. Just like this. [1] https://www.writingsbyraykurzweil.com/respirocytes |
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| ▲ | fluoridation 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] |
| Great. Now run the numbers to find the energy required to disassemble the planets and accelerating the pieces to their desired locations. For reference, it takes over 10 times of propellant and oxidant mass to put something in LEO. |
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| ▲ | tlb 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | The burned propellant and oxygen mass (as H2O and CO2) almost all ends up back in the atmosphere when you launch to LEO, so you can keep running electrolysis (powered by solar) to convert it back to fuel. | | |
| ▲ | fluoridation 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | Sure, but if we're talking about solar engineering, that mass is going to be dispersed in orbit around the sun. You're not going to be reaccumulating that any time soon. |
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