posted
In case you've wondering why I'm so vague in my subject line (we've seen our share of spheres in the Star Trek world), read on and you'll understand.
Only recently, I happened across a spelling of the "Dyson" Sphere from the TNG episode "Relics". I would like to a take a vote as to if you think it actually is a Dyson Sphere or a Dyson's Sphere. The former is certainly a more popular version, yet one cannot discount the possibility that the latter spelling could also be used. Over the course of the history, many noted scientists have had their names attached to a certain piece of invention, discovery, etc. (a.k.a. Fermat's Theorum), signalling posession. Yet on the other hand, there is equal support for the other version (a.k.a. Bunsen Burner).
In the case of the "Sphere", the "s" on the object that follows the name directly may interfere with the posessive "s" that may or may not follow "Dyson". The sound is the same either way you say it.
The First One
A lovely little thinker, but a bugger when he's pissed
Member # 35
posted
I've only ever seen it called a "Dyson Sphere." It's like an "O'Neil Colony" space habitat - the other version suggests there's only one.
Registered: Mar 1999
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posted
Yes, I can't hear someone saying "the Dyson's Spheres" as much as "the Dyson Spheres."
------------------ Elim Garak: "Oh, it's just Garak. Plain, simple Garak. Now, good day to you, Doctor. I'm so glad to have made such an... interesting new friend today." (DS9: "Past Prologue")
[This message has been edited by Elim Garak (edited August 24, 1999).]