The idea was popularised by physicist Freeman Dyson in 1960. He argued that a sufficiently advanced civilization, hungry for energy, would eventually surround its star with collectors rather than settle for the sliver of sunlight that happens to strike its home planet. A solid rigid shell is mechanically impossible — it would have no net gravitational bond to the star and would drift — so the realistic forms are vast clouds of independent collectors (a swarm) that, at the limit, grow dense enough to enclose the star almost entirely.
At full enclosure the star is effectively infrastructure. Its light no longer escapes into space; it is intercepted, converted and beamed out to the worlds and habitats of the system. From the outside the star dims and reddens as waste heat — a signature astronomers actively search for as a technosignature of alien civilizations.
On the Kardashev scale this is the threshold of a Type II civilization (K ≈ 2.0). The model here shows the final rung of the stellar build-out: the swarm has thickened into a near-solid geodesic shell wrapping the Sun. Toggle to the ring view to see the alternative — a tilted system of wide orbital collector rings harvesting the same star.
A Dyson sphere is a hypothetical megastructure that surrounds a star with collectors to capture a large fraction of its energy output. It is the signature project of a Type II (stellar) civilization on the Kardashev scale.
A solid rigid shell is not physically stable, but a Dyson swarm — countless independent collectors orbiting the star — is allowed by known physics. The barriers are material and logistical: mining enough mass, dissipating waste heat, and coordinating construction over centuries.
Around 10²⁶ watts for a Sun-like star — roughly 3.8 × 10²⁶ W — which is about ten billion times the power a Type I planetary civilization commands.
No confirmed Dyson sphere has been found. Astronomers search for the telltale infrared excess — a star that looks dimmer in visible light but glows with waste heat — as a possible technosignature, but no candidate has held up.