Megastructure

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In science fiction and speculative (or exploratory) engineering, a megastructure is an enormous self-supporting artificial construct. The definition is often informal and varies from source to source, but generally requires at least one dimension to be in the hundreds of kilometers. Other criteria such as rigidity or contiguousness are sometimes also applied, so large clusters of associated smaller structures may or may not qualify. The products of megascale engineering or astroengineering are megastructures.

Megastructures are also an architectural concept popularized in the 1960s where a city could be encased in a single building, or a relatively small number of buildings interconnected together.

Megastructures often play a part in the plot or setting of science fiction movies and books.

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[edit] Existing megastructures

The Great Wall of China is an example of a megastructure.  This picture was taken near Beijing in winter.
The Great Wall of China is an example of a megastructure. This picture was taken near Beijing in winter.

There are structures on Earth that may be considered megastructures, such as

  • The Rice Terraces of the Philippine Cordilleras, a 10,360 square kilometer (4,000 square mile) sprawling agricultural landscape carved in the mountains by free tribesmen of Ifugao some 6,000 to 2,000 years ago.
  • The Great Wall of China is a human-built megastructure, a few meters wide and 6,352 km in length.

Networks of roads or railways, and collections of buildings (cities and associated suburbs), are usually not considered megastructures, despite frequently qualifying based on size. However, an ecumenopolis might qualify.

[edit] Proposed megastructures

[edit] Theoretical megastructures

[edit] Stellar scale

A cut-away diagram of an idealized Dyson shell—a variant on Dyson's original concept—1 AU in radius.
A cut-away diagram of an idealized Dyson shell—a variant on Dyson's original concept—1 AU in radius.

[edit] Planetary scale

[edit] Orbital structures

[edit] Trans-orbital structures

One concept for the space elevator has it tethered to a mobile seagoing platform.
One concept for the space elevator has it tethered to a mobile seagoing platform.

[edit] Fictional megastructures

[edit] Stellar scale

  • The Dyson shell (including its variation, the Ringworld) has appeared in many works of fiction, including the Star Trek universe.
  • Larry Niven's series of novels about his Ringworld centered around, and originated the concept of the Ringworld, or Niven ring.
  • In the manga Blame! the Megastructure is a vast and chaotic complex of metal, concrete, stone, etc, that covers the whole Earth and assimilates even the Moon. There is even a clue by the end of this manga that suggests the assimilation of Jupiter. The Megastructure continues to expand by itself, being built by robots called builders. The whole history of the manga takes place deep inside of the structure, where there is no sea or sky, and the characters find themselves climbing up thousand of kilometers of labyrinths searching for Net Terminal Genes. It has been suggested by Tsutomu Nihei himself that the Megastructure is actually a growing dyson sphere of gargantuan proportions.(Speculated to be roughly the size of Jupiter's planetary orbit.)
  • In White Light by William Barton and Michael Capobianco, a Topopolis is presented as taking over the entire universe.
  • In the Heechee books by Frederik Pohl the race of pure energy beings called The Foe have constructed the Kugelblitz, a black hole made of energy and not matter.

[edit] Planetary scale

Death Star.
Death Star.

[edit] Megascale structures

Structures that might not be classified as "Megastructures" because they do not meet the requirements, but are indeed "Mega" sized structures/constructions.

[edit] Stellar scale

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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