Thinking About: Life in the Galaxy
If you have been reading this Blog for any length of time
you’ll know that I periodically post articles about Extraterrestrial life. You
will no doubt have realised that I am of the opinion that the probability of
such life existing is high (if not actually certain) and that it is only a
matter of time before we stumble over it or it stumbles upon us. After all, our
Galaxy is certainly old enough for life to have emerged in it – we even have a
confirmed example of it: Earth. Our Galaxy (one of many, many Galaxies)
contains billions of stars around which probably orbit billions of planets. Any
one (or any one other) could be the home of life so the odds against such a
thing occurring elsewhere are literally astronomical. So the question remains:
Where is everyone (else)? It’s a very good question and is usually referred to
as the Fermi Paradox. If the Galaxy is really old enough, diverse enough and
capable of producing life in multiple locations why haven’t we found it yet? Let
me consider some of the facts and some speculations to try to answer that.
The first thing we need to consider is the size of the
Galaxy. It’s big, really big. The distances between the stars are vast. Light
from even our nearest star takes a little over 4 years to get here and light,
as you may know, moves at a fairly decent speed. To send a probe there using
present technology would take thousands of years. If the speed of light is
indeed the universal speed limit – putting all of the various SF propulsion
systems to one side – it’s hardly surprising that no one has come calling. But
what about sending signals? After all radio waves move at the speed of light,
right? So why haven’t we received any signals either? There was a comment from
the head of NASA in one of those asteroid movies when he tried to explain why
no one had seen it coming until it was almost upon us. He said that they only
scanned a small percentage of the sky and it was a big-ass sky. We’ve only been
listening for signals for about 50 years (though we’ve been leaking signals for
somewhat longer) and it’s certainly a big-ass sky. Presumably the discovery of
planets around a host of ‘nearby’ stars can narrow the search a bit but there’s
still an enormous amount of ground to cover. It’s possible that a signal is one
its way right now from a star 100 or 200 light years away which will get to us
in 50 or 100 years. It may simply be a case that we haven’t listened long
enough or we’re searching in the wrong places rather than the sky being empty
of life.
We know for a fact that life exists on one world: Earth. We
also know that our star isn’t particularly unique. We suspect that the same
forces that produced our solar system are likely to operate universally which
means that planetary systems just like ours exist orbiting stars just like ours
– and that some of those planets will be in the so-called ‘Goldilocks zone’
where conditions allow liquid water on the surface and are suitable for the
emergence and evolution of life. I have long contended that where conditions
are conducive to the emergence of life that it will indeed emerge. After that
has occurred evolution will kick in and things will start getting interesting.
But it should be remembered that for the vast majority of life on Earth it was
the domain of single or simple multi-cellular animals. It’s quite possible that
even if life is prolific in the Galaxy that it’s at this simple level. Of
course intelligent life has only existed on Earth for about a million years or
so (depending on your definition of intelligent). It’s only in the last 100
years or so that we’ve begun broadcasting signals into space. It’s possible
that we are the first species to do so in this part of the Galaxy so there’s no
on to listen to (or to listen to us) yet. Likewise intelligent life could have
flourished within 100 light years of us but may have died out 500 years ago
either due to a natural or home-made catastrophe. Intelligence that can build
radio transmitters and receivers capable of interstellar communication may
also, inevitably maybe, create atomic bombs and bio-weapons and be stupid
enough to use them. We certainly are. Maybe what intelligent life emerges in
the Galaxy quickly snuffs itself out before anyone else is around to hear them?
Or maybe they are snuffed out by wandering fleets of machines bent on the
destruction of all organic life? It’s just as possible that one (or more) of
the emergent civilisations destroyed itself by creating intelligent machines
that see all organic life as a threat and have spent the last 100 million years
hunting down radio signals are whipping out their producers. With a Galaxy this
big, this diverse and this old such an idea might not just belong between the
covers of science-fiction novels or in summer blockbusters at the multiplex.
Of course it’s quite possible that the Galaxy is indeed as
empty as it appears to be. We might be the first intelligent (and I use this
word advisedly) species to have evolved or simply the only one to be around at
this time – others having become extinct or not evolved far enough yet. But I
think the odds are against this. If intelligent life is a fairly late product
of evolution, which seems likely given its obvious advantages, it’s likely that
intelligent life will have evolved many times in this Galaxy. Maybe those that
do exist are far above is in evolutionary terms and simply don’t regard us as
worthy of communicating with. Would you spend too much time trying to speak to
ants? I think not. Maybe any nearby alien life is simply too different from us
and can’t see the point in dropping by to say hello. Maybe they’ve tried and
failed – thereby proving that we’re not worth communicating with?
We could certainly speculate all day about why ET isn’t
calling us. Presently we just have too little data to work with. My gut feeling
is that it isn’t because intelligent life simply does not exist anywhere else
but here (with the usual caveat). My best guess on the subject is that the vast
distances involved make communication very difficult. Together with the fact
that we really haven’t been listening for that long and until very recently
really didn’t know exactly where to look it’s hardly surprising that we haven’t
heard any alien chatter. We may be receiving messages within days of me posting
this or we might have to wait hundreds of years. I really have no idea. After
all…. it’s a big-ass sky.
4 comments:
Someone said that if there is no one else out there, it'd be an awful waste of space.
I have mixed feelings about no one getting in touch. It could be a bunch of reasons :
Prime Directive
No FTL travel
Hopefully it's more Prime Directive than no FTL.
Without FTL it's going to take a long time to get anywhere. It's still do-able though, just a pain in the ass.
Not to sidestep the expertise of the scientific community, but while I'm totally with you about the near-certainty that life exists elsewhere, I'm intrigued about the possibility that it has taken a form totally unexpected and unforeseen. I realize that there are zillions of brilliant SF writers who have tackled the idea of alien civilizations, but most of these seem to fall pretty close to our tree--fleshy with endo-or exoskeletons, binocular vision, limbs with bits for manipulating things. I wonder at what might blindside us, what we might never have seen coming?
wunelle said: I wonder at what might blindside us, what we might never have seen coming?
Indeed. Most of SF and I think the science community are probably thinking of life as we see it all around us - with Star Trek style variations in form due to different evolutionary paths. As our knowledge of possible life forms is therefore limited it's entirely possible that we might come across a life form that we would even see *as* alive.
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