440Hertz wrote: » There’s also the fact that our perception of time is based on our biology and limited lifespans.
Smiles35 wrote: » I did think one time, would the size of a planet might affect lifespan. I was thinking so. Bigger planet, more resources. The creatures just keep going.
breezy1985 wrote: » Another problem is if aliens ever do pick up our signals China's 5G will kill them before they even get here for first contact : )
440Hertz wrote: » The most likely way we’ll see signs of life is probably by analysis of the atmosphere of exoplanets using highly powerful space telescopes or detecting some artificial signal that isn’t intended for us at all, or noise being generated by technology that isn’t a signal at all. We might first see the byproducts and impact of life, not direct communication with us. There’s also the fact that our perception of time is based on our biology and limited lifespans. Who knows what’s out there. I mean for example, if you’ve something like an artificial life form or some kind of hybrid that has no notions of being limited by time and just maintains and repairs itself, what’s a billion years? Could be a blink of an eye to them. I mean even our human systems aren’t limited by lifespan. Projects can span generations and knowledge passes on and is increasingly stored artificially. We’ve basically achieved some degree of timelessness even in that. Take that too it’s extenders and we probably become more cyborg like than we might imagine, if we start augmenting biology. We’re already doing it, just not by plugging ourselves in, yet. You could also have the opposite, an organism evolving at the speed of bacteria, and moving at much higher speed than we do. Our 80 to 100 years of life is an eternity to a bacteria. It’s a hundred times longer than the life of many insects and even plenty of small mammals. You sort of have to throw all your assumptions about what life is out the window when it comes contemplating this stuff.A probe could also be absolutely tiny. How would we recognize something the size of say a mobile phone that was capable of traversing space and looking at us? For all we know there could be loads of tech in near orbit and we wouldn’t even detect it. What it were as small as a grain of sand? That’s not impossible or even unlikely. Intelligent life could be the size of a bee. So maybe we might be expecting the Starship enterprise to pull up, and instead we get something the size of a football. We make a lot of assumptions based on ourselves as we’ve only got ourselves and Earth biology as a point of reference.
440Hertz wrote: » Planet Gemma ?
cnocbui wrote: » Anyone worried about unfriendly aliens paying us a visit should read the chapter on interstellar travel in the book: Thy physics of Star Trek. It's an absolute party pooper if you harbour any notions of intelligent species zipping across space and actually physically meeting. The gist is that the energy required for interstellar travel is so vast, that it most likely can't be done. But what about wormholes? It looks at those too and what it would take to create them. The energy required makes that needed for interstellar travel by conventional means look like a rounding error. We are alone and likely to remain so for as long as we exist.
Potential-Monke wrote: » You can relax, most sci-fi alien films based in and around now were completely off the ball with how advanced we would be at this stage. We won't encounter aliens for another few hundred years at least imo. And if they land tomorrow, I welcome our new alien overlords.
cj maxx wrote: » [/https://www.technologyreview.com/2018/06/22/142160/this-is-how-many-people-wed-have-to-send-to-proxima-centauri-to-make-sure-someone-actually/ I don’t know why it not coming up as a link
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » Don’t put that in the ‘UFO’ thread, you’ll be scoffed at. Honestly, scoffed at.
SVI40 wrote: » All alien life form will look like humans. We learned a long time ago, that God created us in his image, and since he created the universe and everything, all aliens would look like us. QED.
Peregrinus wrote: » If the term "dipstick" must be used, we should perhaps reserve it for those who so comprehensively misunderstand the SETI project. The focus of the project is the reverse of what you suggest; not to radiate signals outwards into space but to monitor and analyse signals from space, to search for patterns that suggests design, structure, communication, etc rather than simply naturally occurring electromagnetic and other radiation. The aim is not to be detected by our own broadcasts, but rather to detect others through their broadcasts. As for the dangers attendant upon being detected by our own broadcasts, that ship has pretty comprehensively sailed. Ship-to-shore and ship-to-ship radio telegraphy was developed in the 1890s century, and the first signals sent by this method are still travelling outwards through space, having now (obviously) reached a distance of about 125 light years from Earth. They were weak signals with limited structure and would be extremely difficult to detect, but the volume and structuring of signals being broadcast into space increased hugely with the advent of general radio broadcasting in the 1920s, and then television in the 1950s. For decades now we have been pumping prodigious quantities of structured electromagnetic signals travelling at the speed of light in - literally - all directions from Earth. These broadcasts are not made with the object of being detected, but they are eminently detectable all the same. What is called "Active SETI" is the broadcasting of signals with the specific hope of their being detected and successfully analysed. It does happen, but it's a tiny, tiny part of the overal SETI project. The aim is to broadcast signals which are designed to be capable of being analysed from first principles in the hope we can thereby communicate information to other cultures, without knowing what we have in common with them. For the reason just given this doesn't materially increase the chances of our presence being detected, and indeed the most likely cultures to receive and analyse these signals are cultures which have already detected our presence from general broadcasting, and are therefore paying attention to this particular corner of space.
Smiles35 wrote: » You need plants for life don't you? Everything needs oxygen. So atmospheric plants as well? Reading about Venus, light does not reach the surface.
Mad_maxx wrote: » more like a few thousand years , would take thousands of years to reach the nearest star ,we,ve made very little progress re_ exploring the universe
ThunderCat wrote: » Nevermind radio signals and the likes that degrade rapidly, it's our atmosphere that would give us away. The light from our atmosphere can be split using a spectrograph or spectroscope to show the chemical makeup of the atmosphere. We have that technology now, nevermind an advanced alien civilization. What our atmosphere tells the cosmos is that we have naturally occurring greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and water vapor but we also have synthetic man made compounds such as CFC's and hydrofluorocarbons. That tells anyone looking all they need to know. There is nothing we can do about it and because that information is contained in the light reflecting off Earth, it can be seen from all directions from many many light years away, maybe much further depending on the level of alien technology involved. And that is how we in turn will end up finding signs of intelligent life in the Cosmos. The James Webb Space Telescope, due to launch in the next few years, is designed to do exactly that and will be analyzing the atmospheres of exoplanets in our galaxy.
JasonStatham wrote: » We need to get away from Electromagnetism in the search for extraterrestrials. We have to think outside of the box - cos if an advanced civilization doesn't use electromagnetism for communication, how on earth would they pick us up. We should think how they would communicate - and start from there.