Suppose you want to migrate to another star, taking your entire civilization with you. Not an easy task given our technology today, but let’s remember that in the 13 billion year-plus history of the Milky Way, countless stars and their planets have emerged that are far older than our 4.6-billion year old Sun. If we imagine an intelligence that survives for a billion years or more, we can hardly put constraints on what it might accomplish. The idea of moving a star with its planetary system intact is out there on the edge of what science fiction can accomplish, if not yet science. There have even been SETI searches for such projects, though as with SETI at large, no hits.
Why would you want to move a star? Consider that if you are a long-lived species with a simple interest in exploring the universe, setting up a journey in which you can take your culture with you – all of it – could have serious appeal. For one thing, you are also taking your primary energy source with you, and can now settle into a traveler’s frame of mind, confident of reaching exotic destinations sooner or later. Slow boat to the heart of the Laniakea Supercluster, and imagine the sights to be had along the way.
Imagine a culture in which extraordinarily long lifetimes – perhaps ‘immortality’ for a machine civilization – is the norm. The accelerated expansion of the universe will continue rendering some destinations unreachable. Dan Hooper, in a paper called “Life Versus Dark Energy: How An Advanced Civilization Could Resist the Accelerating Expansion of the Universe,” considered this in 2018; we’ll be looking at his ideas in the near future. Perhaps migrating to a globular cluster or into the tightly packed center of a galaxy would suggest itself as a goal worth achieving. But let’s not dig too far into motivations. What could humans possibly understand about the motivations of a billion-year old culture? Let’s just look for observables. So how about this: