top | item 38555915

(no title)

belugacat | 2 years ago

Honestly, the real mystery is why so many people are confused about “why, despite universe seeming so vast, there are no signs of other alien civilizations” in 2023.

We have all the elements for answers if we focus on what we know, and forget the hand wavy sci-fi speculation.

1) Complex life is rare.

2) Reaching a space faring stage is even rarer. (we’re the most minimal definition of “space faring” you could come up with, and even then we got really lucky with so many things)

3) The universe is huge. It’s like, the hugest thing there is, man. And except for some little bits of interesting dust here and there, it’s mostly empty. As empty as it is huge.

So, does life - in any form - exist elsewhere in the universe? Almost certainly.

Are/were there life forms elsewhere in the universe that escaped their home planet gravity to go explore their moon or other planets in their solar system? Seems quite probable.

Is there any shot we are sufficiently close in space/time to encounter such another advanced life form? Almost certainly not.

discuss

order

peebeebee|2 years ago

Yeah. There's such a huge difference in interplanetary life vs interstellar or even intergalactic life.

Interplanetary: easy.

Interstellar: pushing the boundaries of what's possible imho.

Intergalactic: no way.

Our closest planet (Mars) is 3 lightminutes away.

Our closest star (Proxima Centauri) is 5 lightyears away.

Our closest galactic neighbour (LMC) is 150000 lightyears away.

giraffe_lady|2 years ago

Is there even any reason to think interplanetary is easy? We have a lot of stories saying so, and we intend to do it but we don't even have a loose plan of what that would look like.

Creating a closed self-sustaining ecosystem capable of supporting large animal life & cut off from the earth's resources is not something we've been able to do even at a proof-of-concept level.

We're very confident in ourselves but idk. It's not preposterous that life is a planetary expression and that it's simply not possible to expand an instance of it beyond the planet that birthed it. We assume we aren't subject to this constraint but we haven't demonstrated it at all.

timschmidt|2 years ago

Another way to look at it:

Interplanetary: chemical.

Interstellar: nuclear.

Intergalactic: antimatter / black hole.

NiloCK|2 years ago

2 and 3 seem plausibly correct to me (although 3 is a mixed bag - the hugeness increases the number of dice rolls on 1 and 2 - not only the difficulty of connecting after the fact), but what is the basis for 1?

As far as I know, we have observed complex (and extremely robust) life on every temperate, wet planet that we know about. Batting a thousand.

ryandvm|2 years ago

Life appeared on Earth almost as soon as it was possible, but it took almost 2.5 BILLION years for it to make the jump to multicellular (a.k.a. complex life). It then took another billion-plus years for life that had the slightest bit of intelligence.

The universe is probably teeming with life, but sadly, most of it is probably just goo.

itsanaccount|2 years ago

I'll give you a fourth one.

There _are_ signs consistently that something has an understanding of physics and inertia that violate our understanding of such things, which implies our assumptions about distance of things in the universe are wrong.

Those vehicles appearance but lack of most interaction, lack of destruction implies something worse, that we are probably still such a primative civilization we're treated like zoo animals.

These conversations about the last century of the search for alien life in the light of David Grusch's testimony to Congress and the various and numerous UAP videos are.. interesting to say the least.

monkeydreams|2 years ago

> which implies our assumptions about distance of things in the universe are wrong.

There are two easy interpretations. One of these is imagining a new entity; aliens. The other is to imagine that humans are, essentially, human and falliable and are chasing lense flares and radar glitches.

One of these interpretations is much more likely than the other.

I don't doubt the existence of aliens. I just doubt that UFOs are aliens.

emilecantin|2 years ago

> hand wavy sci-fi speculation

"The Dark Forest" by Liu Cixin is sci-fi, but I don't think it's too hand-wavy. It presents a pretty logical answer to the Fermi Paradox, based on a couple obvious axioms.

Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_forest_hypothesis

raverbashing|2 years ago

Not really

Dark forest is way down at the bottom of "plausible explanations"

It just sounds like it makes sense for 3 min then it really, really doesn't

Taking the (original) dark forest problem and applying it to civilizations in space sounds like a Strawman problem

mcpackieh|2 years ago

It's a reasonably logical answer but it's not the simplest answer. The Dark Forest hypothesis assumes that life is so common in the universe that encountering and being existentially threatened by other life is a serious threat. But what reason is there to believe that life is that common? For Liu Cixin's books this assumption makes sense because it makes the story possible, but in real life there's simply no evidence to justify such an assumption.

woooooo|2 years ago

Also, modern humanity's light cone is tiny. We've been listening for like 75 years?

danbruc|2 years ago

We still listened in on signals from the entire visible universe, but signals from further away are also from further back in time, so any aliens there would have had to develop earlier. But this also has an advantage, we could still hear from aliens that went extinct and only their signals are still propagating through the universe.

So the better way of thinking about this is a 75 year thick slice through spacetime containing the edge of the visible universe shortly after the big bang at one end and the solar system over the last 75 years at the other end. The volume between the past light cones of Earth now and 75 years ago.