Freeman Dyson, quantum physicist who imagined alien megastructures, has died at 96

Dyson imagined a universe in which alien civilizations harness the energy of the stars.

Physicist Freeman J. Dyson at The Church Center for the United Nations in New York on March 22, 2000.
Physicist Freeman J. Dyson at The Church Center for the United Nations in New York on March 22, 2000.
(Image credit: Jon Naso/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)

Legendary physicist and big thinker Freeman Dyson died today at age 96 in New Jersey after a fall earlier this week, according to reports from Maine Public Radio and The New York Times.

Dyson, born in England in 1923, moved to the United States in 1947 and spent most of his life as a professor or professor emeritus at the Princeton University Institute for Advanced Study. Dyson first became widely known for important work in the late 1940s on the interactions between light and matter, then went on to have a remarkably wide-ranging career. He published papers on the future of the universe, worked on ideas for a nuclear-explosion-powered spacecraft that was never built, developed new ideas in mathematics and philosophy, and imagined how humans of the far future — as well as alien civilizations — might live and operate in space.

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Rafi Letzter
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Rafi joined Live Science in 2017. He has a bachelor's degree in journalism from Northwestern University’s Medill School of journalism. You can find his past science reporting at Inverse, Business Insider and Popular Science, and his past photojournalism on the Flash90 wire service and in the pages of The Courier Post of southern New Jersey.