Centauri Dreams

Imagining and Planning Interstellar Exploration

Autumn Among the Galaxy Clusters

The idea of moving stars as a way of concentrating mass for use by an advanced civilization – the topic of recent posts here – forces the question of whether such an effort wouldn’t be observable even by our far less advanced astronomy. In his paper on life’s response to dark energy and the need to offset the accelerating expansion of the cosmos, Dan Hooper analyzed the possibilities, pointing out that cultures billions of years older than our own may already be engaged in such activities. Can we see them?

I like Centauri Dreams reader Andrew Palfreyman’s comment that what astronomers know as the ‘Great Attractor’ is conceivably a technosignature, “albeit on a scale somewhat more grand than that cited.” An interesting thought! And sure, as some have pointed out, nudging these concepts around on a mental chess board is wildly speculative, but in the spirit of good science fiction, I say why not? We have a universe far older than our own planet with possibilities we might as well imagine.

If we turn our attention in the general direction of the constellation Centaurus and then look not at the paltry 4.3 light year distance of Alpha Centauri but 150–250 million light years from Earth, we encounter a region of mass concentration that folds within the Laniakea Supercluster. The latter is galactic structure at an extraordinary level, as it takes in some 100,000 galaxies including the Virgo Supercluster, and that means it takes in the Local Group and the Milky Way as well.

What’s happening is that this hard to observe region (it’s blocked by our own galaxy’s gas and dust) is evidently drawing many galaxies including the Milky Way towards itself. The speed of this motion is about 600 kilometers per second. Bear in mind that the Shapley Supercluster lies beyond the Great Attractor and is also implicated in the motion of galaxies and galaxy clusters in this direction. So the science fictional scenario has a civilization clustering matter at the largest scale to avoid the effects of the accelerating expansion that will eventually cut off anything that is not gravitationally bound. Cluster enough stars and you maintain your energy sources.

Image: Located on the border of Triangulum Australe (The Southern Triangle) and Norma (The Carpenter’s Square), this field covers part of the Norma Cluster (Abell 3627) as well as a dense area of our own galaxy, the Milky Way. The Norma Cluster is the closest massive galaxy cluster to the Milky Way, and lies about 220 million light-years away. The enormous mass concentrated here, and the consequent gravitational attraction, mean that this region of space is known to astronomers as the Great Attractor, and it dominates our region of the Universe. The largest galaxy visible in this image is ESO 137-002, a spiral galaxy seen edge on. In this image from Hubble, we see large regions of dust across the galaxy’s bulge. What we do not see here is the tail of glowing X-rays that has been observed extending out of the galaxy — but which is invisible to an optical telescope like Hubble. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA.

Recall the parameters of Dan Hooper’s paper, which posits the collection of stars in the range of 0.2 to 1 solar mass as the most attractive targets. The constraint is needed because high-mass stars will have lifetimes too short to make the journey (Hooper posits 0.1 c as the highest velocity available) to the collection zone. The idea is that the civilization will enclose lower-mass stars in something like Dyson Spheres, using these to collect the energy needed for propulsion of the stars themselves. Not your standard Dyson Sphere, but astronomical objects using propulsion that may be detectable.

Hooper doesn’t wade too deep into these waters, but here’s his thought on technosignatures:

From our vantage point, such a civilization would appear as a extended region, tens of Mpc in radius, with few or no perceivable stars lighter than approximately ∼2M☉ (as such stars will be surrounded by Dyson Spheres). Furthermore, unlike traditional Dyson Spheres, those stars that are currently en route to the central civilization could be visible as a result of the propulsion that they are currently undergoing. The propellant could plausibly take a wide range of forms, and we do not speculate here about its spectral or other signatures. That being said, such acceleration would necessarily require large amounts of energy and likely produce significant fluxes of electromagnetic radiation.

This is a different take on searching for Dyson Spheres than has been employed in the past, for in the ‘star harvesting’ scenario of Hooper, the spectrum of starlight from a galaxy that has already been harvested would be dominated by massive stars, with the lower mass stars being already enclosed. On this score, it’s also interesting to consider the continuing work of Jason Wright at Penn State, where an analysis of Dyson Spheres as potential energy extractors and computational engines is changing our previous conception of these objects, resulting in smaller, hotter observational signatures.

In the near future we’ll dig into the Wright paper, but for today it’s useful indeed, because it points to why we speculate on such a grand scale. Let me quote from its conclusion:

Real technological development around a star will be subject to many constraints and practical considerations that we probably cannot guess. While we have outlined the ultimate physical limits of Dyson spheres, consistent with Dyson’s philosophy and subject only to weak assumptions that there is a cost to acquiring mass, if real Dyson spheres exist, they might be quite different than we have imagined here.

And the key point:

Nonetheless, these conclusions can guide speculation into the nature of what sorts of Dyson spheres might exist, help interpret upper limits set by search programs, and potentially guide future searches.

But back to Hooper and the subject of Deep Time. For Hooper’s calculation is that all stars that are not gravitationally bound to the Local Group (which includes the Milky Way and Andromeda, among other things) will move beyond the cosmic horizon due to accelerating expansion on a timescale of 100 billion years. It will be autumn among the galaxy clusters, meaning that their energies will need to be harvested or rendered forever inaccessible. Our hypothetical advanced civilization will need to begin moving stars back toward their culture’s central hub. Hooper sees a civilization conducting such activities out to a range of several tens of Mpc, which boosts the total amount of energy available in the culture’s future by a factor of several thousand.

This is an application of Dyson Spheres far different from what Freeman Dyson worked with, and I agree with Jason Wright that technologies of this order are probably far beyond our current imaginings. But as Dyson himself said in a 1966 tribute to Hans Bethe: “My rule is, there is nothing so big nor so crazy that one out of a million technological societies may not feel itself driven to do, provided it is physically possible.”

The paper is Hooper, “Life versus dark energy: How an advanced civilization could resist the accelerating expansion of the universe,” Physics of the Dark Universe Volume 22 (December 2018), pp. 74-79. Abstract / Preprint. The Wright paper is “Application of the Thermodynamics of Radiation to Dyson Spheres as Work Extractors and Computational Engines, and their Observational Consequences,” The Astrophysical Journal Volume 956, No. 1 (5 October 2023), 34 (full text). I drew the Dyson quote from Wright’s paper, but its source is Dyson, Perspectives in modern physics: Essays in Honor of Hans A. Bethe on the Occasion of his 60th birthday, ed R. Marshak, J. Blaker and H. Bethe (New York: Interscience Publishers) July, 1966, p. 641.

A Look at Dark Energy & Long-Term Survival

If life can organize into sentient beings around stars other than our own, there are few assumptions we can make about the civilizations that would emerge. We’ve long ago given up on the idea that such creatures would look like us, just as we abandoned the concept of life on every conceivable astronomical object. William Herschel, among others, thought life might exist on the Sun, a notion that in different form may be coming back around, as witness the growing interest in panpsychism and stellar consciousness. But let’s talk about physical life forms rather than energy fields.

Since we have to assume something somewhere, let’s posit that any civilization would select as its top priority its own survival. That seems obvious enough. Survival demands energy, and that demand increases as the civilization grows through the Kardashev scale, gradually using more and more of the energy of its star and ultimately going beyond that to look for energy sources elsewhere. Dyson sphere thinking comes out of this realization, although we have yet to identify such structures if they do exist.

We need to (temporarily) forget Dyson and acknowledge that energy collection could take forms that are on the edge of our own fancy. Even science fiction at its best can’t imagine everything, and the vast hordes of astronomical data swelling our databases may contain things that we can’t identify as artificial constructs or activities. But we have a universe to play around in, and let’s take this cosmos to its logical conclusion. We know that it is not only expanding, but that the expansion is in fact accelerating.

The Hubble Constant, which relates the rate at which galaxies are receding from us as space expands to their distance from us, is not so constant after all. Or put another way, this value (currently considered in the range of 67.4 km/s/Mpc to 73 km/s/Mpc) actually varies over time. Those figures show the discrepancy between observations with the Planck satellite of the Cosmic Microwave Background and measurements using Cepheid variable stars. Thus the ‘Hubble tension,’ which is all about trying to resolve this difference. Whatever that result, current thinking is that as the universe ages, the expansion rate increases thanks to the interplay between gravity and dark energy.

Now since we’re already getting into mind-blowing territory here, let’s do what Dan Hooper did in 2018 and ask ourselves what a civilization with the vast skills of a Kardashev Type III civilization (one that can control the energies of an entire galaxy) might do to ensure its own future. We’re assuming a civilization that intends to maximize its energy use and must thus overcome the problem of spatial expansion. Because as Hooper points out in a paper in Physics of the Dark Universe, within 100 billion years, all matter not gravitationally bound to our own Local Group of galaxies will become what he calls ‘causally disconnected’ from the Milky Way.

Image: Dan Hooper, in an image provided by the University of Chicago.

Beyond This Horizon is the wonderful title of a Heinlein novel first serialized in Astounding in 1942 and later released in book form. Heinlein was interested in reincarnation, but in this case, the horizon we’re talking about is the ‘edge’ (forgive the metaphor) of the rapidly expanding universe, assuming that dark energy as we currently describe it is correctly understood. That last is the other key assumption that Hooper makes in his paper, the first being the need for civilizations to keep finding new sources of energy. And that’s it as far as assumptions go in this intriguing paper – two and no more.

Hooper (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, University of Chicago) points out that a Kardashev III civilization will understand that dark energy will increasingly dominate the total energy density of the cosmos, so that expansion goes exponential. Distant galaxies begin to cross this horizon, rendering them forever out of reach. Energy collection could involve collecting stars – the stellar harvest I mentioned in an earlier post, here seen at its most stupendous scale. The more stars that can be harvested – i.e., propelled toward the civilization’s center – the more stars will become gravitationally bound and thus rendered safe from being lost to the effects of this dark energy.

But we’re not talking about all stars. We need a subset of them. After all, stars aren’t static; they continue to evolve as we go after them. Listen to this, as Hooper considers two different rates of travel for the civilization to reach and ‘rescue’ stars:

…very high-mass stars will often evolve beyond the main sequence before reaching their destination of the central civilization, while very low-mass stars will oftentimes generate too little energy (and thus provide too little acceleration) to avoid falling beyond the horizon. For these reasons, stars with masses in the approximate range of M ∼ (0.2−1)M☉ will be the most attractive targets of such an effort.

So we’re in Dyson sphere country after all, but a revised version of same. The author is talking about transporting usable stars by enclosing them to capture their energies and then applying that energy to the stars as thrust. We have to harvest stars, as the above quote makes clear, that are luminous enough to provide enough thrust, and avoid stars that are ‘fast burners’ and will not reach the central civilization in time to be useful. Hooper continues (again, notice that he’s running his calculations on two different velocities for moving stars; he deploys three velocities elsewhere in the paper):

A civilization that begins to expand in the current epoch, traveling at a maximum speed of 10% (1%) of the speed of light, could harvest stars in this mass range out to a co-moving radius of approximately 50 Mpc (20 Mpc). Unlike more conventional Dyson Spheres, these structures would not necessarily emit in the infrared or sub-millimeter bands, but would instead use the collected energy to propel the captured stars, providing new and potentially distinctive signatures of an advanced civilization in this stage of expansion and stellar collection.

Hooper plugs in a speed of transport of no more than 10% c. It’s an arbitrary choice that may raise an eyebrow or two given that we’re talking about civilizations that have had billions of years of experience in matters of science, technology and propulsion. But let’s take this conservative value for velocity, and the lesser ones he discusses as useful parameters. The idea is that the Dyson spheres being used can transfer all of their collected energy into the kinetic energy of the captured star.

What we wind up with is this: If we assume a maximum speed of 10% c, the advanced civilization could collect stars that are currently as far away from it as 65 Mpc. The numbers are spectacular. Remember, a megaparsec (Mpc) is one million parsecs, or 3.26 million light-years. There are a lot of stars to play with in that volume. Here’s Hooper’s Figure 2 portraying the results for the three velocities he considers in the paper.

Image: Figure 2. A summary of the prospects for an advanced civilization to transport usable stars to a central location, assuming that such efforts begin in the present epoch. Stars in the red (upper left) regions will ultimately fall beyond the cosmic horizon, while those in the blue (right) regions will evolve beyond the main sequence before reaching their destination, and thus not provide useful energy. The grey dashed lines denote the length of time that is required to reach and transport the star. We show results for transport that is limited to speeds below 10%, 1% or 0.1% of the speed of light, and assume that the Dyson Spheres transfer approximately 100% of the collected energy to the kinetic energy of the star (η = 1). The blue region in each frame has been calculated for the optimistic case of stars that are starting their main sequence evolution at the time that they are encountered… Credit: Dan Hooper.

The author then proceeds to adjust for stellar age, which takes into account the fact that we aren’t getting to each star at the beginning of its main sequence evolution:

Integrating our results over the initial mass function of Ref. [34] and the cosmic star formation rate of Ref. [35], we estimate that an advanced civilization (with vmax = 0.1c and η = 1) could increase the total stellar luminosity bound to the Local Group at a point in time 30 billion years in the future by a factor of several thousand relative to that which would have otherwise been available. Over a period of roughly a trillion years, the total luminosity of these stars will drop substantially, but will continue to produce substantial quantities of useable energy due to the longevity of the lightest main sequence stars.

So we can’t shut off dark energy but a sufficiently advanced civilization can extend its lifetime considerably. In the next post, I want to dig into the kind of technosignatures we might find if we happened across this kind of star harvesting in our observational data. In doing this, we’ll certainly not be limited to observations within the Milky Way, but have the entire visible universe to consider. Clément Vidal has examined pulsar imagery that could flag the kind of ‘spider’ pulsar engine described in a recent article here. The technosignatures involved in Hooper’s scenario may be even more tricky to find.

The paper is Hooper, “Life versus dark energy: How an advanced civilization could resist the accelerating expansion of the universe,” Physics of the Dark Universe Volume 22 (December 2018), pp. 74-79. Abstract / Preprint. In addition to several books and numerous scientific papers, Hooper has co-produced an excellent podcast called Why This Universe? whose archives are available here.

Close-up of an Extragalactic Star

While working on a piece about interstellar migration as a response to the accelerating expansion of the universe for next week, I want to pause a moment on a just announced observation. I’ve always had a fascination with the Magellanics, those satellite galaxies that are so useful to astronomers because their gravitational interactions with the Milky Way render both of them irregular in shape. That triggers waves of star formation and tells us something about how galaxies assemble themselves. The Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), about 200,000 light years away, shows little structure, while the Large Magellanic (LMC) is a bit more organized but lacks symmetry – no smooth disk apparent there.

Image: This beautiful image taken at ESO’s Paranal Observatory shows the four Auxiliary Telescopes of the Very Large Telescope (VLT) Array, set against an incredibly starry backdrop on Cerro Paranal in Chile. The Auxiliary Telescopes are each 1.8 metres in diameter and work with the four 8.2-metre diameter Unit Telescopes to make up the world’s most advanced optical observatory. The telescopes work together to form the VLT Interferometer (VLTI), a giant interferometer which allows astronomers to see details up to 25 times finer than would be possible with the individual Unit Telescopes. Hanging over the site are the prominent Small and Large Magellanic Clouds, visible only in the southern sky. These two irregular dwarf galaxies are in the Local Group and so are companion galaxies to our own galaxy, the Milky Way. The image was taken by John Colosimo, who submitted it to the Your ESO Pictures Flickr group. Credit: ESO/J. Colosimo.

Within the LMC, some 160,000 light years away, astronomers have just imaged a rapidly evolving star, a fascinating catch because the object is dying and we apparently see it just before a supernova event. The telltale sign is the massive ejection of stellar material. The work was done with the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI), which combines the light collected by four telescopes, using the GRAVITY interferometer, correcting for atmospheric turbulence and providing imaging at four-milliarcsecond resolution. The effect is to produce the spatial resolution of a telescope of up to 130 meters in diameter depending on direction in the sky.

Long-studied and known as the ‘behemoth star,’ WOH G64 has shown surprising changes over a relatively short period of time. Keiichi Ohnaka (Universidad Andrés Bello, Chile) describes a star that is blowing out gas and dust in the last stages of its progress toward becoming a supernova: “We discovered an egg-shaped cocoon closely surrounding the star. We are excited because this may be related to the drastic ejection of material from the dying star before a supernova explosion.” Co-author Jacco van Loon (Keele University, UK) adds: “This star is one of the most extreme of its kind, and any drastic change may bring it closer to an explosive end.”

Shedding their outer layers, a red supergiant may take thousands of years to lose material before a supernova actually occurs. According to the paper, red supergiants like WOH G64 experience mass loss rates as high as ∼10−4 M☉ yr−1 — that means the star at this stage is losing on the order of 0.0001 solar masses of material every year. Recent work on other supernovae tell us that the mass-loss rate increases significantly just before the supernova event. It’s also intriguing that some red supergiants at this point of development show mass loss that is not symmetric. As far as I can find, the explanation is that the star is likely interacting with a binary companion. And indeed the paper notes:

The compact emission imaged with GRAVITY and the near-infrared spectral change suggest the formation of hot new dust close to the star, which gives rise to the monotonically rising near-infrared continuum and the high obscuration of the central star. The elongation of the emission may be due to the presence of a bipolar outflow or effects of an unseen companion.

Image: Located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, at a staggering distance of over 160 000 light-years from us, WOH G64 is a dying star roughly 2000 times the size of the Sun. This image of the star (left) is the first close-up picture of a star outside our galaxy. This breakthrough was possible thanks to the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope Interferometer (ESO’s VLTI), located in Chile. The new image, taken with the VLTI’s GRAVITY instrument, shows that the star is enveloped in a large egg-shaped dust cocoon. The image on the right shows an artist’s impression reconstructing the geometry of the structures around the star, including the bright oval envelope and a fainter dusty torus. Confirming the presence and shape of this torus will require additional observations. Credit: ESO/K. Ohnaka et al., L. Calçada.

I suspect that Centauri Dreams readers will remember the Large Magellanic Cloud as the apparent next destination of the interstellar interloper Rama in Arthur C. Clarke’s Rendezvous with Rama (1973). My own favorite reference is Iain Banks’ The Player of Games (2009), where an incredibly complex gaming strategy must be tackled by the protagonist within a strange empire in the Small Magellanic Cloud. Whatever your preference, the Masgellanics continue to fascinate, and we should learn more from the VLTI as the upgraded GRAVITY+ comes online.

The paper is Ohnaka et al., “Imaging the innermost circumstellar environment of the red supergiant WOH G64 in the Large Magellanic Cloud,” Astronomy & Astrophysics 14 October 2024 (letter to the editor). Abstract.

Star Harvest: Civilizations in Search of Energy

Living a long time forces decisions that could otherwise be ignored. This is true of individuals as well as societies, but let’s think in terms of the individual human being. Getting older creates survival scenarios as simple as ensuring safety and nutrition for the elderly. But let’s extend lifetimes to centuries and beyond. In this thought experiment, we create a society of people so long-lived that their personal planning takes in events like a possible asteroid strike in 200 years. A person who could live for a billion years has to think in terms of surviving a dying Sun engulfing his or her planet.

If we assume a kind of immortality, the individual and the society merge in terms of their key concerns. It’s hard to imagine biological beings living for lifetimes like these, but as we’ve often considered in these pages, non-biological machine intelligence, constantly upgrading and improving itself, should be able to pull it off. Because we know of no extraterrestrial civilizations, we can only speculate, but the speculation is a good way to override our anthropomorphic prejudices. And it’s safe to say that any being or society will try to preserve itself in the event of local catastrophe.

Thus the needed insurance of interstellar migration, which philosopher Clément Vidal (Center Leo Apostel, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium) thinks might involve journeys vast enough to reach places where stars are as plentiful as in the globular clusters surrounding the Milky Way’s hub. Or galactic center, where resources abound and the need for frequent migrations is thus eased. If a culture like this spreads life through its own variant of panspermia, so much the better. I leave the motivations of a machine culture spreading biological life to science fiction authors, but believe me, there’s a cool plot in there somewhere. Someone should run with it.

Vidal’s idea of a stellar engine seizes on an unusual astronomical object, the so-called spider pulsar. We looked briefly at these last time, but let’s dig deeper. We imagine a civilization (Vidal calls them ‘stellivores’) that uses a low-mass star in its home system as a source of fuel, gradually consuming the star’s energies by accretion. So far so good, as we know that accretion is a well established phenomenon. It occurs, for example, in the formation of a Type 1a supernova, where a white dwarf reaches the Chandrasekhar limit (1.4 solar masses or so), drawing in material from a companion red giant through the process. Soon we have runaway nuclear fusion and a bright new object for astronomers to study.

A spider pulsar, a one millisecond pulsar with a very low-mass companion star, can interact not just through accretion but in some cases through evaporation. In reading Vidal’s new paper, I’ve been puzzled by this process, which actually can alternate with accretion in some instances. Things get complicated and quite interesting. Vidal explained in an email that evaporation becomes the primary process when a neutron star has a strong wind that actually quenches accretion and causes the move toward evaporation. Adds Vidal:

The astrophysical reason this would happen is after a long accretion journey, the companion star would get lighter and lighter, the orbit would shrink, up to the point where it is exposed to the strong pulsar wind and radiation. Then the dynamics would switch from accretion to evaporation. A subclass of (redback) spider pulsars, transitional millisecond pulsars, have their accretion that starts and stops abruptly. This is a fascinating phenomenology that has been studied intensively.

And indeed it has, as witness, for example, Baglio et al., “Matter ejections behind the highs and lows of the transitional millisecond pulsar PSR J1023+0038” (citation below), where I read:

Transitional millisecond pulsars are an emerging class of sources that link low-mass X-ray binaries to millisecond radio pulsars in binary systems. These pulsars alternate between a radio pulsar state and an active low-luminosity X-ray disc state. During the active state, these sources exhibit two distinct emission modes (high and low) that alternate unpredictably, abruptly, and incessantly. X-ray to optical pulsations are observed only during the high mode. The root cause of this puzzling behaviour remains elusive.

But back to spider pulsar terminology. You probably noticed the reference to ‘redback’ pulsars. Astronomers divide spider pulsars into black widows, where the companion star is in the range of 0.01 to 0.1 stellar masses, and redbacks, where the companion star mass is between 0.1 and 0.7 stellar masses. Again, the phenomenon Vidal homes in on is evaporation, and it is at the core of the concept of using such a system as an engine. Suppose we look at a transition millisecond pulsar – one of those switching between emission modes – and consider it within the possibility that it is an engine.

Asymmetric heating could be our technosignature as a millisecond pulsar adjusts the heat of its companion star by moving between accretion and evaporation modes to perform, for example, steering maneuvers outside the orbital plane. Asymmetric heating in varying accretion and evaporation phases can compensate for increases in orbital separation. In Vidal’s view, the goal of the binary stellar engine might be to capture a new star whose energies can now be used to supplant the depleted companion and supply the needs of the engine’s creators. Thus the civilization travels to a new star. We imagine a billion-year culture in constant journey mode in search of energy, with the entire galaxy in range.

When we find objects in our data that show transitional millisecond pulsars in configurations that are suggestive, how do we distinguish between technological activity and natural phenomena? As with all technosignatures, it’s not an easy call. As Vidal notes in his email: “Now the game is to make predictions starting with (1) natural, astrophysical hypotheses and models, and (2) artificial, intelligent, “spider stellar engine” hypotheses and models, and see which predictions turn out to be correct.”

Image: This is Figure 1 from the paper. Caption: Four steering configurations of the binary stellar engine. Figures (a-c) are top views, face on, while figure (d) is side on. In situation (a) the stellar engine is accelerating or cruising; in situation (b), assuming the system velocity is towards the top, the thrust creates a force towards the left; in situation (c), assuming the system velocity is towards the top, the thrust creates a decelerating force. Situation (d) changes the orbital plane by asymmetric heating of the companion, which creates a lifting force in relation to the orbital plane. Note that the pulsar size and orbital separation are not to scale.

The mechanics of acceleration, steering and deceleration are intricate and fully described in the paper, which also includes information on other types of stellar engines going back to the original Shkadov concept – that chart is fascinating. In addition the paper analyzes candidate stellar engines that can be investigated for possible signs of intelligent control. But notice what kind of civilization we may be talking about here. After all, the payload of a spider engine is the millisecond pulsar, the propellant the low-mass companion star. We are thus considering postbiological intelligence on the neutron star itself. I want to quote Vidal’s email on this subject:

…[W]hat really matters is not the hardware of life, but what it does, its software, its functions. Recently we’ve seen with large language models that some form of intelligence can run on computer hardware. Of course, we could change this hardware multiple times and still have the same ChatGPT answering our questions. Life on Earth started with biochemical reactions, now we use semiconductor technology to process data, and we might see optical or quantum hardware taking over in the near future. If a civilization is on a billion-year long track to optimize its hardware and makes the most of the computational capacity of matter in the universe, it would likely continue to improve its hardware using more and more compact, high energy solutions such as nuclear reactions or subnuclear reactions (i.e. neutron star stuff). This is the level I imagine those stellivores are at. So, no planet, no individual traveler. Rather an integrated organism organized around high energy (sub)-nuclear reactions. It might still have some sub-organizations like species, nations, etc. but these would be at extremely small scales and impossible for us to detect.

As with all Vidal’s work, this paper is intricate and deeply researched. About spider engine maneuvering I have had the time only to cover the basics, and encourage interested readers to go to the paper, and also to mine the background laid out in Vidal’s magisterial 2014 title The Beginning and the End: The Meaning of Life in a Cosmological Perspective (Springer). The search for technosignatures demands moving far beyond the assumptions ingrained in our perspective as a species in technological infancy. No one works this turf better and with more elegance than Clément Vidal.

The paper is Vidal, “The Spider Stellar Engine: a Fully Steerable Extraterrestrial Design?” Journal of the British Interplanetary Society Vol. 77 (2024), 156-166 (full text). The Baglio paper is “Matter ejections behind the highs and lows of the transitional millisecond pulsar PSR J1023+0038,” Astronomy & Astrophysics Vol. 677, A30 (September 2023). Abstract. See also Papitto et al., “Transitional Millisecond Pulsars,” in Millisecond Pulsars, edited by Sudip Bhattacharyya, Alessandro Papitto, and Dipankar Bhattacharya, 157–200. Astrophysics and Space Science Library. Cham: Springer International Publishing.

Clearing the Air

I’ve played around a bit with Bluesky in the past, but have now decided it’s time to make a move. Those of you who have been following the site on X will want to know about the change, as posted in my first new Bluesky ‘skeet’ in some time. The change in user experience is striking, a bit like walking in an alpine meadow after spending years in a subway car. Not that I have anything against subways…

Have decided to move to BlueSky for good, having left X for obvious reasons. Future posts from my Centauri Dreams site will be linked here. Current post considers Clément Vidal's striking concept for using millisecond pulsars to move entire stellar systems. www.centauri-dreams.org/2024/11/14/a…

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— Paul Gilster (@gilster.bsky.social) November 16, 2024 at 8:30 AM

Addendum: For those who have asked, this affects only those of you who are connected to me on X, which I no longer use. If you don’t use X, nothing has changed in how you see Centauri Dreams.

A Millisecond Pulsar Engine for Interstellar Travel

Suppose you want to migrate to another star, taking your entire civilization with you. Not an easy task given our technology today, but let’s remember that in the 13 billion year-plus history of the Milky Way, countless stars and their planets have emerged that are far older than our 4.6-billion year old Sun. If we imagine an intelligence that survives for a billion years or more, we can hardly put constraints on what it might accomplish. The idea of moving a star with its planetary system intact is out there on the edge of what science fiction can accomplish, if not yet science. There have even been SETI searches for such projects, though as with SETI at large, no hits.

Why would you want to move a star? Consider that if you are a long-lived species with a simple interest in exploring the universe, setting up a journey in which you can take your culture with you – all of it – could have serious appeal. For one thing, you are also taking your primary energy source with you, and can now settle into a traveler’s frame of mind, confident of reaching exotic destinations sooner or later. Slow boat to the heart of the Laniakea Supercluster, and imagine the sights to be had along the way.

Imagine a culture in which extraordinarily long lifetimes – perhaps ‘immortality’ for a machine civilization – is the norm. The accelerated expansion of the universe will continue rendering some destinations unreachable. Dan Hooper, in a paper called “Life Versus Dark Energy: How An Advanced Civilization Could Resist the Accelerating Expansion of the Universe,” considered this in 2018; we’ll be looking at his ideas in the near future. Perhaps migrating to a globular cluster or into the tightly packed center of a galaxy would suggest itself as a goal worth achieving. But let’s not dig too far into motivations. What could humans possibly understand about the motivations of a billion-year old culture? Let’s just look for observables. So how about this:

Image: This is Figure 3 from the paper by Clément Vidal we’ll be discussing today. Caption: The original black widow pulsar PSR J1959+2048. Left: the BW pulsar (in blue) is plotted in the RA-DEC plane, and its proper motion vector is displayed until it reaches a close encounter with a target star, in orange, whose Gaia DR3 ID is displayed (see Vidal et al. 2023 [60] for the method used to find close encounters). Middle: a Chandra X-ray view of the BW pulsar, displaying a comet-like tail; the candidate target star is also visible in the bottom right (visualization with ESASky). Right: The composite image on the right shows the X-ray tail (in red/white) and a bow shock visible in the optical (green). Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/ASTRON/B. Stappers et al. [38]; Optical: AAO/J.Bland-Hawthorn & H.Jones; scale: 1.2 arcmin on a side.

We’ll get to the terminology involved in that caption in a moment. For now, is this conceivably a stellar engine in motion toward a nearby star? Probably not, but I introduce this image because I suspect that SETI searches for stellar engines are not well known, although they have been performed and we’ll be looking at these soon. And it also introduces the possibilities of an entirely different kind of stellar engine.

It’s no surprise that it should emerge through the work of Clément Vidal, given the philosopher’s long-standing interest in deep time and societies that go back to the early eons of the universe. Vidal (Center Leo Apostel, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium) is the author of the essential The Beginning and the End (2014) which along with his papers explores the terrain of matter and energy as a means of increasing order, and the possibility of locating ancient civilizations by finding what appear to be natural objects conceivably being manipulated by engineering on scales that we can only imagine.

Vidal’s latest plunges into what he calls the ‘Spider Stellar Engine,’ a steerable design using binary star pairs as parts of a propulsive system that uses one star as payload and the other as fuel. If this reminds you of Olaf Stapledon, you’re right, as it was he who wrote about artificial stars created to support interstellar voyaging in the 1930s. But I’m glad to see Vidal also pointing to Fritz Zwicky, who has all too often been overlooked in the history of exotic concepts even though it turns out that on matters like dark matter, he was far ahead of the game. Here’s Zwicky on stellar engines:

“Considering the Sun itself, many changes are imaginable. Most fascinating is perhaps the possibility of accelerating it to higher speeds, for instance 1,000 km/s directed toward α-Centauri in whose neighborhood our descendants then might arrive a thousand years hence. All of these projects could be realized through the action of nuclear fusion jets, using the matter constituting the Sun and the planets as nuclear propellants.”

Various science fiction authors have explored the concept, and Stanley Schmidt even came up with an assist from aliens offering to boost the Earth to another stellar system to save it in Sins of the Fathers (1977). But the most technically judicious treatment of moving an entire system like this is probably the one depicted in Greg Benford and Larry Niven’s Bowl of Heaven series, which in turn draws on the thinking of the Russian engineer and scientist Leonid Shkadov (1927–2003). As with Dyson spheres, here we are in the domain of engineering at a colossal scale.

Image: A Shkadov thruster at work. Credit: Greg School.

Let’s give Shkadov his due before exploring Vidal’s new concept. A Shkadov thruster works through a balancing act. A semi-spherical mirror is positioned in such a way that the pressure of solar photons balances the gravitational force of the star on the mirror. Achieve this and the radiation hitting the mirror reflects back toward the star, producing an imbalance that creates thrust. Here’s a diagram from a paper by Duncan Forgan (University of Edinburgh) that is the best I can find to illustrate the concept:

This is Figure 1 from Duncan Forgan’s paper “On the Possibility of Detecting Class A Stellar Engines Using Exoplanet Transit Curves (citation below).” The treatment of Shkadov thrusters is useful, and I insert the diagram here because the Vidal paper only offers a short explanation of the original concept. Forgan’s caption: Diagram of a Class A Stellar Engine, or Shkadov thruster. The star is viewed from the pole – the thruster is a spherical arc mirror (solid line), spanning a sector of total angular extent 2ψ. This produces an imbalance in the radiation pressure force produced by the star, resulting in a net thrust in the direction of the arrow. Credit: Duncan Forgan.

Clément Vidal brings into the stellar engine mix the idea of using binary millisecond pulsars. You may recall Vidal’s stellivore concept, which we’ve discussed over the years in Centauri Dreams. Here’s how he describes it in the current paper:

…the stellivore hypothesis, that reinterprets some observed accreting binary stars as advanced civilizations feeding on stars… The scenario would be the following. For most of its time, a stellivore civilization would eat its home star via accretion. However, energy is never eternal, and instead of eating its star until the end and dying, a stellivore civilization would use its low-mass companion star as fuel not to be accreted, but to be evaporated, in order to create thrust and travel towards a nearby star. The fundamental accretion dynamics of close binaries would be reversed into an evaporation dynamics.

In the new paper, Vidal homes in on so-called spider pulsars, which are binary systems made up of one millisecond pulsar and a low-mass companion star. This in itself has always struck me as an extraordinary situation. We’re positing a massive star in a binary system that becomes a supernova and leaves behind a neutron star. In many cases, the binary system (i.e., the companion star) survives this event, allowing the neutron star thereafter to draw material out of it through accretion. It’s this transfer of mass that ‘spins’ up the neutron star – this is simple transfer of angular momentum – so that the neutron star can rotate at millisecond rates.

I haven’t seen any figures on what percentage of binary systems can survive a supernova event, but it’s telling that a high proportion of millisecond pulsars are indeed found in binary systems. Millisecond pulsars (MSPs) are detectable when the beam of electromagnetic radiation they emit sweeps past our observing apparatus.

Image: This diagram shows the steps astronomers say are needed to create a pulsar with a superfast spin. 1. A massive supergiant star and a “normal” Sun-like star orbit each other. 2. The massive star explodes, leaving a pulsar that eventually slows down, turns off, and becomes a cooling neutron star. 3. The Sun-like star eventually expands, spilling material on to the neutron star. This “accretion” speeds up the neutron star’s spin. 4. Accretion ends, the neutron star is “recycled” into a millisecond pulsar. But in a densely packed globular cluster (2b)… The lowest mass stars are ejected, the remaining normal stars evolve, and the “recycling” scenario (3-4) takes place, creating many millisecond pulsars. Credit: B. Saxton, NRAO/AUI/NSF.

A spider pulsar as described by Vidal is made up of a one millisecond pulsar and a relatively small companion. And here we get the unusual evaporation effect that the above quote references. Rather than accreting matter from the companion star, a spider pulsar system evaporates the companion star. Hence the ‘spider’ metaphor, referring to female spiders that eat their male companion after mating. Get the right configuration and you have what Vidal calls a spider stellar engine. How it can be used to accelerate, decelerate and steer over interstellar distances takes up much of the paper. More on that next time.

In this kind of engine, the payload is a neutron star of about 1.8 solar masses. The propellant is the low-mass companion star somewhere between 0.01 and 0.7 solar masses. And where are the passengers; i.e., the civilization that is transporting itself around the galaxy? We have a lot to discuss here, and I also want to dig into the Hooper paper referenced above as well as the subject of hypervelocity stars, which are possible instances of stellar engineering technosignatures. We continue next time, with an email exchange I’ve been having with Vidal and the fine-tuning of stellar engines.

Clément Vidal’s new paper is “The Spider Stellar Engine: a Fully Steerable Extraterrestrial Design?” Journal of the British Interplanetary Society Vol. 77 (2024), 156-166 (preprint). Leonid Shkadov’s original paper on the Shkadov thruster is “Possibility of controlling solar system motion in the galaxy,” 38th Congress of IAF,” October 10-17, 1987, Brighton, UK, paper IAA-87-613. The Forgan paper is “On the Possibility of Detecting Class A Stellar Engines Using Exoplanet Transit Curves,” accepted at the Journal of the British Interplanetary Society (preprint).

Charter

In Centauri Dreams, Paul Gilster looks at peer-reviewed research on deep space exploration, with an eye toward interstellar possibilities. For many years this site coordinated its efforts with the Tau Zero Foundation. It now serves as an independent forum for deep space news and ideas. In the logo above, the leftmost star is Alpha Centauri, a triple system closer than any other star, and a primary target for early interstellar probes. To its right is Beta Centauri (not a part of the Alpha Centauri system), with Beta, Gamma, Delta and Epsilon Crucis, stars in the Southern Cross, visible at the far right (image courtesy of Marco Lorenzi).

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