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The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres

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Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
My colleague Stuart presents some of our joint research to the Oxford physics department: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQTfuI-9jIo&feature=plcp&context=C3f6a5ec... Some EP potential for some of these concepts. In particular, I think we can show that Bracewell probes can be scattered enormously far and wide using surprisingly small amount of matter. And planetary disassembly can be surprisingly fast with the right equipment.
Extropian
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
I know it was a teasing comment, but I really like the idea that we are the colonizing force of an ETI (although I guess that still totally fails to answer the Fermi paradox). Although frankly, everything I've been seeing lately only stresses the paradox more. There's more exoplanets than we expected, and the cost of 'colonization' is lower than we expected. The only other variables we're still waiting on is the probability of Earth-like planets, probability of life, and the probability of life sufficiently intelligent to reach space travel.
Extrasolar Angel Extrasolar Angel's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
Couple of points: -I am not convinced that von Neumann probes are as easy as presented. The assumption "it is done in nature we will do it ourselves". That point was laid aside pretty fast. And if the probe is based on nature, why not assume problems in replication(due to radiation damaging probes, or other effects)? Errors in the code and how to ensure continued existence after errors upon errors? I could go on, but I think there are problems that are cast aside too simply. Heh if you want to have fun imagine a interstellar ecology of probes by colonizers and colonist-hunters by civilizations with opposing views regarding utilization of the universe. Btw: the lecture had values of 99% an 50% of light speed, from what I remember from various discussions on the subject, survivable speed is about 25%-30%, after that potential collisions with particles become too strong to withstand by known and theoretical materials. -We have resources to do lot of things-engineer rivers, build Orion ships, colonize Antarctica, have a Moon Base.We don't do it. With increasing development of our civilization the concepts of colonization and territorial expansion seem to go down in favour of centralization of population and lower population growth with focus on nature conservation. So perhaps ideas of stellar engineering, Dyson spheres, are reminder of different time and different attitudes? -Nature conservation could be a good and sensible answer for Great Silence. We try more and more to conserve nature rather than colonize it. Perhaps civilizations advanced enough colonize in very sustainable way and don't want to disturb other civilizations(if they encounter them), since their own unique development would seem more valuable to observing civilization(and let's face it any technological entity advanced even 1000 years ahead of us, would probably destroy our development). If lowered population growth and conservation of energy go hand in hand than you can have slow expanding civilizations that probably won't cover the whole galaxy in their territorial influence. I notice that some students mentioned this probability at the end :) -As to the Paradox and lack of signals towards us-we could but we aren't sending signs of our presence all around space(directed radio signals, laser beams). Why assume others would? But perhaps it is simpler for advanced civilizations like ours to reach a level where will be able to actually detect life bearing planets and sings of civilization before being producing enough energy to constantly send out signals into space.
[I]Raise your hands to the sky and break the chains. With transhumanism we can smash the matriarchy together.[/i]
Extrasolar Angel Extrasolar Angel's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
nezumi.hebereke wrote:
Although frankly, everything I've been seeing lately only stresses the paradox more. There's more exoplanets than we expected, and the cost of 'colonization' is lower than we expected. The only other variables we're still waiting on is the probability of Earth-like planets, probability of life, and the probability of life sufficiently intelligent to reach space travel.
I wouldn't say so. The variables you mention will be hard to achieve(well Earth like planets are now easier but we won't probably know for certain if they are habitable or with biospheres for another 20-30 years when new telescopes will be available). Detecting intelligence will be even harder(although there is exciting possibility of actually seeing technological development using the same equipment used to detect Earth like planet). Last but not least both the distance in time and space could be enormous and we are here only for a very short time.
[I]Raise your hands to the sky and break the chains. With transhumanism we can smash the matriarchy together.[/i]
Quincey Forder Quincey Forder's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
one word: Reapers! All kidding aside, I always loved the Reaper concept from Bioware's Mass Effect; it does a good job at exploring a cause of Fermi and ETI massive and hostile civilisation
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Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
Extrasolar Angel wrote:
The assumption "it is done in nature we will do it ourselves". That point was laid aside pretty fast. And if the probe is based on nature, why not assume problems in replication(due to radiation damaging probes, or other effects)? Errors in the code and how to ensure continued existence after errors upon errors?
Well, a lot of this will be expanded on in the full paper. Basically, there are fairly plausible arguments for why self-replicating machines are doable with near-term technology (see Merkle and Freitas book on the topic), and we have practical demonstrations of arbitrarily high fidelity copying in our own technology (sequences of checksums/hashes, for example).
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Btw: the lecture had values of 99% an 50% of light speed, from what I remember from various discussions on the subject, survivable speed is about 25%-30%, after that potential collisions with particles become too strong to withstand by known and theoretical materials.
Any particular papers you think make this point well? I have a few, but I am not convinced. Looking at interstellar dust densities and size distributions doesn't suggest a high likelihood of impact, especially if you deploy a Whipple shield ahead. But the real trick in our paper is the redundancy R: you can send a *lot* of probes to each galaxy without overtaxing the Dyson resources. Most analysis of relativistic collisions seem to assume that you have just one spaceship and dearly want to keep it from getting destroyed, not that you spam the spacelanes with your ships.
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-We have resources to do lot of things-engineer rivers, build Orion ships, colonize Antarctica, have a Moon Base.We don't do it. With increasing development of our civilization the concepts of colonization and territorial expansion seem to go down in favour of centralization of population and lower population growth with focus on nature conservation. So perhaps ideas of stellar engineering, Dyson spheres, are reminder of different time and different attitudes?
Maybe. But would you argue that *all* alien civilizations at *all* times and for *all* subgroups would want to stay put? (or send out nature conservation probes) Our argument makes the strong convergence assumption even tougher to swallow too. Basically, our argument boils down to 1) SETI people have been thinking too small, 2) physics seem to allow spamming the universe with relatively small resources, 3) this means the great silence is at least a million times more deafening than previously thought. 4) the real explanation for that will hence be (in some sense) a million times more extreme than previously thought. *Personally*, since I think life is not too hard and intelligence not too unusual, that civilizations do not converge strongly yet are not rapidly killed off by self-made xrisks (since they are so different), and that our paper is realistic... I end up thinking that the aliens might already be here via Bracewell probes. Most likely in the form of a few extremely hard to spot structures out in the Kuiper belt that are enforcing their claim to the solar system. Whether that means running a full interdict, just preventing attempts at spamming the universe, or some form of welcome to whatever game-theoretic alliance that makes sense once humans make proper contact, I don't know.
Extropian
King Shere King Shere's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
Has there been enough time for a universe colonisation civilization to have claimed everything? How many years does it take for the universe to be "fenced". Then again the meteors that have wiped out earlier life (Ordovician, Devonian, Permian, Triassic & Cretaceous) could be the aliens pre-empting us. Using earth as an example its not possible politically. our civilisation hasnt "matured" enough to accept the project "Dyson sun" . Sort of like Romans and their non utilized steam engines. Another idea that sparked was that our galaxy system itself could be a von Neumann probe with a designated target.
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
King Shere wrote:
Has there been enough time for a universe colonisation civilization to have claimed everything? How many years does it take for the universe to be "fenced".
The time it takes from launch to reaching most galaxies that can be reached is on the order of billions of years. The last galaxies will be pursued a lot longer, up to hundreds of billions of years, but they are a small set (see slide at 27:50). The earlier you start the bigger the fenced off part. (I don't have the exact numbers, but I can find out when the fenced off part reaches 50% or 90% soonish) Basically, early alien civilizations have a very good chance of reaching us (see the slide at 32:11)
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Using earth as an example its not possible politically. our civilisation hasnt "matured" enough to accept the project "Dyson sun" . Sort of like Romans and their non utilized steam engines.
But Romans could have built them physically, it was just that their cultural prerequisites were not there. Similarly we could start building a Dyson today just as we could stop having wars - not at all likely as a *real* occurrence in this realisation of history, but as a physical possibility it is possible. The point is that a civilization like ours *could* do it, and that it has a non-negotiable probability - this is enough for our argument.
Extropian
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
Arenamontanus wrote:
Well, a lot of this will be expanded on in the full paper. Basically, there are fairly plausible arguments for why self-replicating machines are doable with near-term technology (see Merkle and Freitas book on the topic), and we have practical demonstrations of arbitrarily high fidelity copying in our own technology (sequences of checksums/hashes, for example).
Exactly. The same nanotechnology that can assemble a structure with molecular perfection could also analyze a structure for imperfections. Simple verification code placed in blueprints would help ensure perfect production fidelity, especially if you're dealing with open-air nanoswarm construction such as with habitats. There, the chances of flaws cropping up due to dust, exposure and other effects makes error-correction mandatory.
Arenamontanus wrote:
Maybe. But would you argue that *all* alien civilizations at *all* times and for *all* subgroups would want to stay put? (or send out nature conservation probes) Our argument makes the strong convergence assumption even tougher to swallow too. Basically, our argument boils down to 1) SETI people have been thinking too small, 2) physics seem to allow spamming the universe with relatively small resources, 3) this means the great silence is at least a million times more deafening than previously thought. 4) the real explanation for that will hence be (in some sense) a million times more extreme than previously thought. *Personally*, since I think life is not too hard and intelligence not too unusual, that civilizations do not converge strongly yet are not rapidly killed off by self-made xrisks (since they are so different), and that our paper is realistic... I end up thinking that the aliens might already be here via Bracewell probes. Most likely in the form of a few extremely hard to spot structures out in the Kuiper belt that are enforcing their claim to the solar system. Whether that means running a full interdict, just preventing attempts at spamming the universe, or some form of welcome to whatever game-theoretic alliance that makes sense once humans make proper contact, I don't know.
I've always worked under the assumption that while intelligence and life may be common, technology (or at least our specific technological path) may not be. We as a species followed a fairly unique process of evolution. We were tool using social animals when we were primitive, and we became smarter from there. All of our tech was an extension of that. What if other intelligent life does not evolve in this manner? What if a solitary non-tooled predator evolves to sapience? What if a herd animal did? Is that creature automatically destined to produce technology? Is it automatically destined to reach for the stars? Or could intelligence, like life as a whole, be so divergent that the multitude of possibilities for an intelligent species could run the gamut, and the rarity here isn't our intelligence, or our life, but our specific combination and the path we have followed up to this point? Perhaps we should be less worried that there's no other intelligent life out there, and more worried that the intelligent life out there isn't going to be the rubber-headed aliens we want them to be. Okay, maybe that was harsh, but to some degree it's true. Our society has a premade assumption that life brings civilization, civilization brings technology, and technology makes space communication that could be detected. I don't think this is necessarily the case. Perhaps they skipped the invention of basic civilization and went to tech. Maybe they never produced tech but have a flourishing civilization. Whatever the case, we cannot say for sure if intelligence and advanced technology are inexorably tied, since we are the only example of both that we have to observe. If we look out into the stars expecting to see an analog, we might as well be staring out into space looking for mirrors.
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Extrasolar Angel Extrasolar Angel's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
Arenamontanus wrote:
Any particular papers you think make this point well? spaceship and dearly want to keep it from getting destroyed, not that you spam the spacelanes with your ships.
At this moment, no, I would have to find them. I mostly remember this from discussions on the subject. Question-if it would be so easy to spam the universe with probes, wouldn't it give advantage to the first civilization doing it? If said civilization would want to prohibit destructive exploration of space through aggressive von Neumann probes this would stop such attempts of contact.
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Maybe. But would you argue that *all* alien civilizations at *all* times and for *all* subgroups would want to stay put? (or send out nature conservation probes)
Hmmm, that would of course depend on how many alien civilizations existed before us that were able to achieve such level of technological advancement. And of course the first civilization to do so would gain advantage over others, allowing it to block such actions.
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Basically, our argument boils down to 1) SETI people have been thinking too small, 2) physics seem to allow spamming the universe with relatively small resources, 3) this means the great silence is at least a million times more deafening than previously thought. 4) the real explanation for that will hence be (in some sense) a million times more extreme than previously thought.
I agree that SETI thinks too small(but also too big, I will explain why shortly). If I understand correctly the whole idea of SETI is that we are constantly beamed by alien civilizations, as we ourselves don't do it I see no reason why others should. Plus the two civilizations need to to exist at the same time which makes this idea unlikely. I would actually prefer SETI to search for optical signs of other civilizations(mega-structures, Dyson Spheres, Earth-like worlds with city lights etc), as they would not require a direct contact to happen(and could remain in some cases long after civilization is gone).
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*Personally*, since I think life is not too hard and intelligence not too unusual
These two are very bold assumptions ;) Fortunately we live in times that may allow us to know the answer to at least the first issue within a couple of decades.
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I end up thinking that the aliens might already be here via Bracewell probes. Most likely in the form of a few extremely hard to spot structures out in the Kuiper belt that are enforcing their claim to the solar system. Whether that means running a full interdict, just preventing attempts at spamming the universe, or some form of welcome to whatever game-theoretic alliance that makes sense once humans make proper contact, I don't know.
Heh, if the first part would be true, then making von Neumann machines would be a very big risk-if there is something watching for that kind of activity you can trigger the alarm by attempting to spam the universe ;)
[I]Raise your hands to the sky and break the chains. With transhumanism we can smash the matriarchy together.[/i]
Extrasolar Angel Extrasolar Angel's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
Decivre wrote:
If we look out into the stars expecting to see an analog, we might as well be staring out into space looking for mirrors.
Stanisław Lem had a couple of good books on the subject. "His Master's Voice" for example. I also recommend "Blindsight" by Peter Watts.
[I]Raise your hands to the sky and break the chains. With transhumanism we can smash the matriarchy together.[/i]
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
Extrasolar Angel wrote:
Stanisław Lem had a couple of good books on the subject. "His Master's Voice" for example. I also recommend "Blindsight" by Peter Watts.
Blindsight is effectively the exact reverse of the scenario I'm talking about. Whereas that novel deals with unintelligent life with advanced tech, my argument is that our methods of detecting an intelligent life won't work on those that aren't tool users. As an example, imagine if we existed on another planet, and cetaceans evolved the sapient species on Earth. What methods do we have that could detect their society, civilization and culture? They would likely always remain a nomadic species with only an oral tradition. None of the things we seek (electromagnetic signals, satellites, city skyline) would probably be perceivable on Earth. For all intents and purposes, our planet would look uninhabited in accordance with the methods that SETI is using to look for life. In that same vein, what if a technological species skipped past the radio waves phase? What if the radio was bypassed in the same way we didn't take up the difference engine? Or, what about organisms that are more sensitive to radio waves... surely they would avoid a technology that could harm themselves. How would we be able to detect the city lights of an intelligent race that evolved from nocturnal or underground primitive creatures, and has no need for artificial lighting? We could have already found intelligent life a thousand times over and never realized it! I'm in agreement with Arenamontanus that intelligence may very well be common. I argue that the things we seek in order to find other intelligences, such as radio transmissions and artificial lighting, may be the rarity. I used to make the analogy that the modern search for alien life is like a lonely man standing on a deserted island looking to the horizon and saying "I am alone". Now, I think it's more like a lonely man on a deserted island using a radio antenna to seek out stations and saying "I am alone". Either way, I think people have the wrong idea about how to find new life.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
Extrasolar Angel wrote:
Question-if it would be so easy to spam the universe with probes, wouldn't it give advantage to the first civilization doing it? If said civilization would want to prohibit destructive exploration of space through aggressive von Neumann probes this would stop such attempts of contact.
Yup. There is a titanic first-mover advantage. In fact, the exsurgent virus might be something like this in EP. The ETI has just made sure that rapid self-replicating smart intelligences get cut down to size, leaving the ETI to do whatever it wants.
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I agree that SETI thinks too small(but also too big, I will explain why shortly). If I understand correctly the whole idea of SETI is that we are constantly beamed by alien civilizations, as we ourselves don't do it I see no reason why others should. Plus the two civilizations need to to exist at the same time which makes this idea unlikely. I would actually prefer SETI to search for optical signs of other civilizations(mega-structures, Dyson Spheres, Earth-like worlds with city lights etc), as they would not require a direct contact to happen(and could remain in some cases long after civilization is gone).
Classic SETI was like that. Kardashev of course argued back in the 60s that we should look for large-scale civilizations through their side effects rather than deliberate communications attempts. These days there is a bunch of people arguing that we should look for megastructures and postbiological entities.
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I end up thinking that the aliens might already be here via Bracewell probes. Most likely in the form of a few extremely hard to spot structures out in the Kuiper belt that are enforcing their claim to the solar system. Whether that means running a full interdict, just preventing attempts at spamming the universe, or some form of welcome to whatever game-theoretic alliance that makes sense once humans make proper contact, I don't know.
Heh, if the first part would be true, then making von Neumann machines would be a very big risk-if there is something watching for that kind of activity you can trigger the alarm by attempting to spam the universe ;)
Exactly. So if this is true, any readily detectable von Neumann activity might lead to a very obvious stern warning, or a direct very complete attack. The morally nice thing would be to tell that certain things are off-limits, making the rules clear. However, this might be more complex and fault-prone (needs to communicate with aliens, reveals information) than just having a action-reaction system that enforces a rule with no warning. Figuring out the likeliehood of this possibility being true is very relevant, since we are not too far away from making von Neumann-like systems.
Extropian
King Shere King Shere's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
Rather than using a railgun/massdriver, There could be a "cheaper" way of propulsion for the Neumann Probes. I saw a popular science program (Sci Fi Science: Physics of the Impossible: season2 episode 2:Galactic Colonization ) . Where Dr. Michio Kaku enlists the help of spacecraft engineer Mason Peck to explain how Jupiter's magnetism could power the tiny craft into deep space. Underneath I think is better scientific details & citation of Dr. Mason Peck's idea.
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His paper, Lorentz-Actuated Orbits: Electrodynamic Propulsion without a Tether, made a compelling case for merging the small-scale physics of dust moving in a plasma and large-scale physics of planetary orbits to enable propellant-less spacecraft propelled by planetary magnetic fields http://www.spacecraftresearch.com/pr2006-10-20.html
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
Re: The Fermi paradox, von Neumann probes and Dyson spheres
King Shere wrote:
Rather than using a railgun/massdriver, There could be a "cheaper" way of propulsion for the Neumann Probes.
Maybe. But we know mass drivers work (since they have been built) while most other ideas are more speculative. Plus, not every solar system has a Jupiter. In fact, if I remember the paper right, the delta-v you get from tethers around Jupiter is tiny. In reality I expect that alien civilizations and advanced posthumans use whatever method works best, of course. So there will no doubt be some exotic methods.
Extropian