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Friday, 04 November 2011 20:12

12 Reasons We Haven't Found Extraterrestrials Featured

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One of the biggest questions in modern science is whether or not we’re alone in the universe. The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) crosses scientific disciplines and gets at the heart of such philosophical questions as why we’re here and what it means to be human. A serious search for signals from other civilizations began in 1960 with Project Ozma. Researcher Frank Drake later devised the Drake equation to quantify how many technologically advanced civilizations might exist in our galaxy. As the search for extraterrestrial life continues, a nagging question remains: where is everyone? In 1950, physicist Enrico Fermi outlined this dilemma in what’s become known as the Fermi paradox. In essence, if life is theoretically so common in our galaxy, then why have we not found evidence? Here are the top themes on why we haven’t found E.T.

 

 

12. They're Here on Earth Undetected

Are aliens among us on Earth? Most scientists say that's unlikely.

This is the favorite solution of every UFO conspiracy theory: Aliens are among us, but they’ve either gone undetected or been covered up by government officials. Aside from the inability of governments to effectively harbor even menial secrets, no compelling evidence exists that this is in fact the case. A slightly more likely hypothesis would be that an extraterrestrial intelligence visited Earth at some time in past, although again, there’s no evidence to suggest that this has occurred.

 

 

11. They Fear our Technological Immaturity

Perhaps aliens are afraid of our primitive technology.

Perhaps young civilizations such as ours are deemed too dangerous for contact. We’re a top predator species, and we’ve utilized those skills to exploit our planet and its resources. Perhaps this makes any mature species reluctant to initiate us into the galactic community until we’ve proven that we can reach a level of sustainable growth. Of course, this assumes that they also know of our emergence.

 

 

10. Their Communications are too Alien to Understand

It's possible that any alien species is just too different to communicate with humans.

We have intelligent species such as dolphins and whales right here on Earth, and the fact that we have yet to open up much of a meaningful dialog with them could signal that communication with a truly alien life form is hopeless. We will, however, have the language of science in common. The laws of physics hold true throughout the observable universe and may provide us with a common language.

 

 

9. Intelligent Life is Rare in the Cosmos

Intelligent life may be rarer than we think.

In 2000, Peter Ward and Donald Brownlee published a book entitled The Rare Earth Hypothesis, which posited that while the emergence of simple life may be common, the development of intelligence was perhaps a singular event. On Earth, life was the result of a fortunate chain of events — the existence of our Moon, plate tectonics, and even the planet Jupiter are evoked for reasons that we’re here in this stable niche of a dangerous universe. Humanity itself nearly became extinct at the end of the last Ice Age, and tantalizing clues suggest that those few Homo sapiens that did survive that genetic bottleneck possessed the lucky adaptations necessary to make the civilization of the last few thousand years possible. But just how often this sort of drama plays out in the cosmos, it’s hard to say with a sample size of one.

 

 

8. We’re the First lntelligent Species to Emerge

It's possible humans are the first intelligent civilization to emerge in this corner of the galaxy.

Someone has to be first, at least in this corner of the cosmos. We know that the universe began 13.7 billion years ago, and that the Earth formed 4.5 billion years ago and that it took life about a billion years to get started. Our Sun is a 3rd generation star, which means that the proto-solar nebula that our solar system condensed out of was seeded with enough heavy elements to give life a start. That path from hydrogen atoms to radio telescopes was a long one, and perhaps we’re just the first to emerge, though such a special fate for us would seem unlikely.

 

 

7. They Aren’t Interested in Earth

It's possible alien life has noticed Earth, but doesn't care.

In the late 19th century, a proposal was made to signal a civilization believed to exist on Mars by setting large forest fires. This now-laughable proposal demonstrates that perhaps even our current technology may be obsolete when it comes to communicating with a civilization perhaps a million years ahead of our own. In addition, extraterrestrials may not be interested in us until we reach a certain level of development. Perhaps they communicate using high-frequency lasers or some method we haven’t discovered yet. Perhaps there’s an equivalent of a “two-drink minimum” for entering the galactic community, such as the ability to send gravity waves via resonating pulsars or some other exotic method.

 

 

6. They Don't Want to Interfere

It's possible an alien civilization is aware of Earth, but does not want to tamper with the planet..

This solution is familiar to many people thanks to Star Trek and the Prime Directive, where a sort of cosmic ethos exists barring space-faring civilizations from tampering with primitive ones. But like many of these solutions, this raises a question: how is it enforced?

 

 

5. Intelligent Species don’t Survive Technological Adolescence

Have other technologically advanced civilizations annihilated themselves?

This solution seemed all too applicable during the Cold War, when some feared the human race itself would die out soon after acquiring technology (nuclear bombs) capable of making us extinct. And we’re not out of the woods yet, as climate change, disease, and perhaps some unknown threat we’ve yet to address could still do us in. Perhaps intelligent civilizations spring up all the time, only to extinguish themselves after a century or so of unrestrained consumption.

 

 

4. We Haven’t Been Looking that Long

We've only been searching for extraterrestrial life for about 50 years.

The original Project Ozma looked at two nearby star systems at a single frequency. Modern searches underway from the Allen Telescope Array can scan large swaths of the sky over millions of channels. But we have yet to scour every star in our galaxy over every conceivable frequency over the past 50 years, and we’ve only been transmitting high-power radar signals since the start of World War II. A civilization over 70 light years distant would scarcely know of our existence.

 

 

3. They're Not Interested in Interstellar Travel or Communication

There's no guarantee other intelligent civilizations care about finding other civilizations.

As noted, whales are intelligent, but they don’t build radio telescopes. Perhaps it’s our mix of dexterity, curiosity, and problem solving that sparks our interest in space exploration. This combination of traits may not arise often with intelligence. Or perhaps, once a civilization can build a virtual reality more pleasing than the real one, they lose interest in space exploration.

 

 

2. The Galaxy has Certain “Goldilocks Zones" of Habitability

Earth is located in a

As we explore our place in the solar system, we’ve come to realize that the Earth occupies a zone where the temperature is just right, and water can exist in a liquid state. But we’re also starting to realize that the galaxy may also have a similar “Goldilocks Zone,” one where the radiation is not too intense and the right mix of elements necessary for life exists. This privileged belt encompassing our galaxy may cut down the number of civilizations that are out there waiting to be found.

 

 

1. The Nearest Civilization in Space and Time is too Distant

Other intelligent life may be too far from Earth for communication.

The last factor of the Drake equation may be the real kicker, and many solutions play off of this basic dilemma of just how long intelligent civilizations last. If the answer is millions of years, we may have neighbors next door, but if it’s a century or two, there may currently be no one to talk to within 1,000 light years. Certainly, we’ve been able to confirm factors of the Drake equation such as the prevalence of exoplanets via recent discoveries, and finding even simple life forms elsewhere in our own solar system would have stunning implications. Either solution is profound. Perhaps in our lifetime we’ll be able to point to a star in the sky and say that life has arisen there as well.

 

 

If you liked this story, you might like:

10 Famous People Who Believe in UFOs

Top 12 Cosmic Ways the Earth Could End

 

Dave Dickinson

David Dickinson is a backyard astronomer, science educator and retired military veteran. He lives in Hudson, Fla., with his wife, Myscha, and their dog, Maggie. He blogs about astronomy, science and science fiction at www.astroguyz.com.

Website: www.astroguyz.com

7 comments

  • Comment Link Wednesday, 09 November 2011 18:46 posted by Michael Horn

    I'm still amazed at how well the 70-year-long contacts of Billy Meier have been suppressed, attacked and ridiculed to the point that relatively few people know about them and some that do have bought into the disinformation. That isn't only because of the efforts of the media, governments. religions, etc. to keep people in the dark but especially because of the so-called "UFO community" that indeed CAN'T make a profit off it, only off the nonsense, fantasies and speculations they peddle.
    Watch the film on Meier for free:

    www.theyfly.com

    ...decide for yourself.

  • Comment Link Tuesday, 08 November 2011 21:52 posted by HLW

    I wonder if you could encourage Mr. Dickinson to do another article expounding on Drake's Equation, illustrating how scientific knowledge has progressed in filling in the unknown
    factors?

  • Comment Link Monday, 07 November 2011 23:51 posted by Keter

    This is missing the single most compelling reason:

    Nobody has figured out how to make more of a profit off real ETs than they can from the endless speculation.

  • Comment Link Monday, 07 November 2011 16:21 posted by Adam Glickman

    Perhaps aliens know about us but we're more valuable ignorant. Rather than some ethical reason for non-intervention, it could be simple economics that keeps extraterrestrials from revealing themselves.

    Right now we are generating all kinds of neat, primitive (to a more advanced civilization) art. We are writing books about futures that someone who knows better wouldn't have been able to conceive. We can marvel at Brave New World, but it wouldn't be written today, in part, because it isn't realistic due to our understanding of biology. We create music, movies, computer games, etc. which would be radically different with knowledge of intelligent life beyond our little orb. It would be harder to cheer for the humans in Independence Day if there was a horrified alien dignitary in the seat next to you.

    If we discovered a lost tribe of humans in some isolated place there would be a strong desire to keep them separated from the rest of our civilization. Study their language and customs as long as possible before they became just like everyone else.

    Uniqueness is often valuable and primitive cultures like ours could easily be a commodity that is maintained as long as possible until our technology reaches a point were we tap into the cosmic internet to discover what aliens talk about amongst themselves. I'm a little frightened of what we might find but there will be some Talaxian prince who wants to send us currency in exchange for our spacial coordinates, a few full immersion videos of cute animals, and a lot of really weird porn. As long as we don't find an AOL logo (Andromeda On Line), I think we'll be ok.

  • Comment Link Saturday, 05 November 2011 17:54 posted by Captain Clay Crash

    I believe the conditions on Earth are absolutely unique. There just isn't any other place in reality that could engender and support life. I also believe this is part of divine design. God designed the universe to impress upon us the obvious (or not) evidence for a Creator.

  • Comment Link Saturday, 05 November 2011 15:12 posted by Jack Trudel

    We are totally engrossed by our singularity. Worldwide we are spending billions of dollars and incredible resources on disproving this, so let's be bold and expand upon that list. One obvious area not mentioned is the very opposite of one that was mentioned, namely that other forms of life may exist in extremis, in toxic environments of poisonous compounds and unfathomable temperatures, forces and/or radiation, or in size and scope from subatomic to intergalactic. The list also ignores things devoid of all known elemental chemistry or physics, whether organic or inorganic in nature. This latter crosses into the realm of the metaphysical, and although I'm not a religious person or into metaphysics or mentalism I do not discount it. I don't think out of body necessarily has to equate to the concept of spirituality half of all humankind harbors in some form. I speak from my one OOB experience, and can honestly say mine was pretty unremarkable and Twainlike, in that I observed my own operation and listened to the ongoing informal insipid discussion from above the surgeon's table. I was only eleven at the time. I was mostly fixated on the light fixture I floated next to on the 10' high ceiling. I couldn't understand how I could see the back of the chrome reflector. I did meet one other person who claims he can put himself in an OOB state but says to accomplish this he has to drop his heart rate down to a near-death state. I immediately lost interest. But really, who's to say? Our grand visions may be suffering from a form of scientific metamorphopsia. We are bound and determined to find another sentient being who can explain our raison d'être.

  • Comment Link Saturday, 05 November 2011 11:24 posted by SteveT

    Or one more possibility -- the possibility that there just are no extraterrestrials anywhere!

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