Stellar engines and Dyson bubbles can be stable
Colin R McInnes

TL;DR
This paper investigates the stability of ultra-large space structures like stellar engines and Dyson bubbles, finding that non-uniform mass distributions can achieve passive stability, which has implications for detecting extraterrestrial technosignatures.
Contribution
It demonstrates that uniform disc reflectors are unstable, but non-uniform rings and dense clouds can be passively stable, advancing understanding of large-scale space structure dynamics.
Findings
Uniform disc reflectors are always unstable.
Non-uniform ring-shaped reflectors can be passively stable.
Dyson bubbles can be self-stabilizing if arranged as dense clouds.
Abstract
A range of speculative space ventures envisage the use of ultra-large structures for the collection and reflection of light. Given the length-scale of such structures they cannot be considered as point masses for the calculation of gravitational and radiation pressure forces. Using a simplified model it will be demonstrated that ultra-large reflectors in static equilibrium levitating above a central star (so-called stellar engines) are always unstable if the reflector comprises a uniform disc. However, if the reflector has a non-uniform mass distribution, specifically a ring supporting a reflect or, a stellar engine can in principle be passively stable. Moreover, while it can be shown that static swarms of reflectors levitating above a central star (so-called Dyson bubbles) are unstable, in principle they can become passively self-stabilizing if arranged about the star as a dense cloud.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Science and Extraterrestrial Life · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
