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Matrioshka brain

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Huge computer powered by a star's energy

Amatrioshka brain[1][2] is a hypotheticalmegastructure of immense computational capacity powered by aDyson sphere. It was proposed in 1997 byRobert J. Bradbury (1956–2011).[3] It is an example of a class-Bstellar engine, employing the entire energy output of a star to drivecomputer systems.[4] This concept derives its name from the nesting Russianmatryoshka dolls.[5]The concept was deployed by Bradbury in the anthologyYear Million: Science at the Far Edge of Knowledge.[6][7]

Concept

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Matryoshka dolls set in a row

The concept of a matrioshka brain comes from the idea of using Dyson spheres to power an enormous, star-sized computer. The term "matrioshka brain" originates frommatryoshka dolls, which are wooden Russian nesting dolls. Matrioshka brains are composed of several Dyson spheres nested inside one another, the same way that matryoshka dolls are composed of multiple nested doll components.

A matrioshka brain would consist of several Dyson spheres (swarms) nested inside each other

The innermost Dyson sphere of the matrioshka brain would draw energy directly from the star it surrounds and give off large amounts ofwaste heat while computing at a high temperature. The next surrounding Dyson sphere would absorb this waste heat and use it for its computational purposes, all while giving off waste heat of its own. This heat would be absorbed by the next sphere, and so on, with each sphere radiating at a lower temperature than the one before it. For this reason, Matrioshka brains with more nested Dyson spheres would tend to be more efficient, as they would waste less heat energy. The inner shells could run at nearly the same temperature as the star itself, while the outer ones would be close to the temperature of interstellar space. The engineering requirements and resources needed for this would be enormous.

Jupiter Brain

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The term "matrioshka brain" was invented by Robert Bradbury as an alternative to theJupiter brain[8]—a concept similar to the matrioshka brain, but on a smaller planetary scale and optimized for minimal signalpropagation delay. A matrioshka brain design is concentrated on sheer capacity and the maximum amount of energy extracted from its source star, while a Jupiter brain is optimized for computational speed.[9] Jupiter brains are related to the idea of the hypothetical materialcomputronium, which could be enmassed to sizes of entire planets and even stars.[10]

Possible uses

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Some possible uses of such an immense computational resource have been proposed.

  • An idea suggested byCharles Stross, in his novelAccelerando (2005), would be to use it to run perfect simulations oruploads of human minds intovirtual reality spaces supported by the matrioshka brain. Stross even went as far as to suggest that a sufficiently powerful species utilizing enough raw processing power could launch attacks upon, and manipulate, the structure of the universe itself.[11]
  • InGodplayers (2005),Damien Broderick surmises that a matrioshka brain would allow simulating entire alternate universes.[12]
  • Thefuturist andtranshumanist authorAnders Sandberg wrote an essay speculating on implications of computing on the massive scale of machines such as the matrioshka brain, published by theInstitute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies.[8]
  • Matrioshka brains and othermegastructures are a common theme in thefictionalOrion's Arm universe, where they are used bysuperintelligences as processing nodes connected by artificialwormholes.
  • TheDennis E. Taylor novelsHeaven's River (2021) andNot Till We Are Lost (2024) mention building a Matrioshka brain for use with replicant and artificial intelligence. The large processing power available is also used forsecurity hacking and to run complex simulations in very short time.
  • In theEvan Currie novel,A Seed That Was Sown, the beginning of a new series subsequent to hisOdyssey One series, makes use of a Matrioshka Brain as a central threat. Currie routinely uses tech at the edge of human knowledge for story components.
  • Inthe Expanse novel series, a crystalline sphere the size of Jupiter was found in awhite dwarf system, dubbed the Adro Diamond. It was built by the ancient Ring Builder civilization as a massive computer and data storage archive. Estimated to be five billion years old, the Adro Diamond orbits a white dwarf star called Adro (with its name derived from the star it orbits), and possesses a machine-perfect smooth surface and is composed of densely packed carbon, making it almost transparent. Seemingly abandoned, the species that built the structure has long been extinct.
  • In the TV seriesPantheon, the protagonist Maddie Kim, anuploaded intelligence, spends 16,000 years constructing a matrioshka brain. Using the DNA and epigenetic memory of every human who ever lived, she simulates billions of parallel universes over 101,000 years.

See also

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References

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  1. ^Bradbury, Robert J. (July 21, 1999)."Matrioshka Brains"(PDF).www.gwern.net.
  2. ^Ratner, Paul (October 28, 2018)."Matrioshka Brain: How advanced civilizations could reshape reality".Big Think.
  3. ^Dvorsky, George (March 6, 2011)."Remembering Robert Bradbury".sentient developments. RetrievedAugust 10, 2025.
  4. ^Bradbury, Robert J."Matrioshka Brain Home Page". Archived fromthe original on February 23, 2009. RetrievedAugust 28, 2009.
  5. ^"Matrioshka Brains – Some Intermediate Stages in the Evolution of Life"(PDF). Department of Astronomy, University of Virginia. RetrievedAugust 28, 2009.
  6. ^Levy, Brett (August 26, 2008)."Book Review: 'Year Million: Science at the Far Edge of Knowledge', edited by Damien Broderick".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedAugust 28, 2009.
  7. ^Horgan, John (June 13, 2008)."The Shape of Things to Come (review of Year Million)".The Wall Street Journal. RetrievedAugust 28, 2009.
  8. ^abSandberg, Anders (1999)."The Physics of Information Processing Superobjects: Daily Life Among the Jupiter Brains".Journal of Evolution and Technology.5 (1).
  9. ^"Jupiter & Matrioshka Brains: History & References". Robert Bradbury. Archived fromthe original on September 7, 2010. RetrievedAugust 28, 2009.
  10. ^Vatinno, Giuseppe (2010)."Per una parusia tecnologica : la singolarità prossima ventura : Ich bin ein singularitarian (Ray Kurzweil)".Per Una Parusia Tecnologica:1000–1004.doi:10.1400/156178.
  11. ^Stross, Charles (2006).Accelerando.Ace Books.ISBN 0-441-01415-1.
  12. ^Broderick, Damien (2005).Godplayers. Thunder's Mouth.ISBN 1-56025-670-2.

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