Dyson sphere

A Dyson sphere is a megastructure that completely encompasses a star and captures a large percentage of its power output. It's used by a spacefaring civilization to meet its energy requirements once those requirements exceed what can be generated from the home planet's resources alone. Only a tiny fraction of a star's energy emissions reach the surface of any orbiting planet. Building structures encircling a star would enable a civilization to harvest far more energy. By definition it is regarded as a Class B stellar engine.

The collected energy can be beamed to remote locations for use in life support, industry, computational processing, or transport; these beams can also be used for defense or communication. Energy can also be stored using antimatter.

The concept was popularized by Freeman Dyson who speculated that such structures would be the logical consequence of the escalating energy needs of a technological civilization and would be a necessity for its long-term survival. He proposed that searching for such structures could lead to the detection of advanced, intelligent extraterrestrial life.

Following the publication of Dyson's proposal, it was pointed out that a solid circumstellar sphere would be subject to intolerably high stresses. Dyson replied that what he actually envisaged was a loose collection of over 100,000 objects traveling on independent orbits in a shell about 1 million kilometers thick. This Dyson Swarm arrangement is a Type I Dyson sphere and a solid shell is Type II.

A Dyson shell can support vast amounts of processing power, especially if arranged in concentric shells as a Matrioshka Brain.

The ultimate Dyson sphere is one that traps dark energy inside and reverses the expansion of the universe, or the Big Rip. By manipulating extra dimensions, a Type IV civilization would create a gigantic sphere where dark energy can reverse polarity so that the cosmic expansion is reversed. Outside the sphere, the universe might continue expanding exponentially, but inside the sphere, galaxies and stars evolve normally.

Examples: