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SETI Predicts We'll Find ETs by 2020 780

FTL writes "Based on the Drake Equation, Moore's Law, and the Allen Telescope, a new prediction has been made that Earth will make first contact with aliens within 20 years. Of course once we find the first aliens there's the question of can we decode their signals, would they spot our reply, and what's the lag time."
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SETI Predicts We'll Find ETs by 2020

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  • by mrpuffypants ( 444598 ) * <mrpuffypants@gm a i l . c om> on Friday July 23, 2004 @11:56AM (#9780119)
    And I predict that I'll get laid by 2020....
    • by JoeNiner ( 758431 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @11:57AM (#9780143)
      When you meet the aliens? Are you James T. Kirk?
      • by s20451 ( 410424 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:25PM (#9780510) Journal
        No, he's Zap Branigan. Kiff, I have made it with a woman! Inform the men.
      • by Doug Merritt ( 3550 ) <doug AT remarque DOT org> on Friday July 23, 2004 @04:01PM (#9783065) Homepage Journal
        I'm a big fan of SETI, but they tend to downplay the fact that we're only likely to be able to pick up signals beamed directly at us.

        We can't currently pick up ET signals equivalent to what Earth is broadcasting to space, even if they were coming from Alpha Centauri; they're just too weak.

        This is an analog problem of signal to noise ratio, far more than anything else, so faster processing won't help a bit.

        A cryogenic Allen array (to minimize thermal noise), especially in space far from Earth, or on the far side of the moon, would help a tremendous amount.

        Usually discussions about SETI itself don't bring that up, because of issues of optimism and such, but it was easy to find web hits on the eseentially identical question: can ETs pick up Earth signals?

        "No", says this Seti League guest editorial "ET Detection of Earth TV Unlikely" [setileague.org] that goes into a little technical detail.

        Similar comments [madsci.org] by John Dreher, Staff Astronomer, SETI Institute, although he goes on to assume that ETs would be able to pick up weaker signals than humans are able to -- assuming implicitly that ETs will have better analog technology than we do (maybe they do, but that doesn't help us to do the same).

        What about ETs actually beaming a signal at us? Maybe they do so to all nearby stars, one by one. Maybe...would we do that?

        "...it has been agreed by all relevant groups that we should not be actively sending out messages to try to reach other civilisations", says another page [setileague.org]

        Ok, so we would not be so foolish as to attract undue attention from an unknown and possibly hostile galaxy, but maybe ETs will be more naive than that. Or a lot more confident (play ominous music here ;-)

        So, bottom line, this is a cool topic, but are we planning to build a cryogenic Allen array in space in the next two decades?

        I think we should, but any predictions really should be based largely on that one issue.

        P.S. the recent lab verification of photons having orbital angular momentum, able to carry arbitrary amounts of information per photon, implies a new medium we'll need to check for ET signals. Maybe that's what all advanced civilizations use.

        See e.g. Photons Spin More Data [photonics.com]

        • I'm a big fan of SETI, but they tend to downplay the fact that we're only likely to be able to pick up signals beamed directly at us.

          That may be true now, but not necessarily in 20 years. Heck, in 20 years we may discover a more practical way to transmit over vast distances... and suddenly discover aliens are already trying to communicate with us.

          Or maybe not. A lot can change in 20 years though.
    • by artemis67 ( 93453 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @11:58AM (#9780157)
      The green alien babes don't want you, either...
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:45PM (#9780723)
      Top Ten Questions about the aliens:

      1) Will the aliens be allowed to backup media that they legally own?

      2) Do they have oil? Maybe we can go to war with them...

      3) Will the aliens be hit with DirectTV threat letters from their Uranus for intercepting a crappy signal?

      4) How will the $3,500 DirectTV blood money be converted into their currency?

      5) Will the patent office be flooded with new alien claims to gifs, automatic software download and Linux? Maybe aliens created ELF?

      6) Will they be covertly tagged with RDIFs when they arrive, so they can be tracked by Walmart?

      7) Are these the same aliens that are on Opra and Jerry Springer, which thrive in our trailer parks?

      8) Will jobs be outsourced or "co-sourced" to their planet? Will I have to wait on hold for 6 hrs for someone to translate my problem?

      9) Can they work 14 hr days? You know, because they would be salaried employees of course.

      10) Are they democrats or republicans? You know we don't really like independants ;)

      int27h
  • by SYFer ( 617415 ) <syfer@[ ]er.net ['syf' in gap]> on Friday July 23, 2004 @11:56AM (#9780128) Homepage
    I'm glad "sending a radio message back will take centuries," because I'm not sure that a response back of "humans on earth, eh? we'll be right over," is a Good Thing (TM).

  • by mcg1969 ( 237263 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @11:56AM (#9780129)
    ...and monkeys will start walking erect, too.
    Oh, wait.
  • by MoxCamel ( 20484 ) * on Friday July 23, 2004 @11:57AM (#9780133)
    ...we'll intercept their communications, and then some alien lawyers will serve earth with a big-ass lawsuit, for illegally downloading bootleg copies of "Frobzug and the Gleems." This will be a huge cosmic joke, because Frobzug and the Gleems are like, so totally ten million years ago, and anyway you can pick their albums up in the ten-blork bins. Part of the agreement will be that we agree to "uninstall" our illegal SETI programs, and promise to never download illegal communications again. The Sub-Etha net community will, of course, be outraged that the [unpronouncable high-pitched wheezing noise] industry is picking on a planet that's only 4.5 billion years old.

    I could be wrong.

  • ET (Score:2, Funny)

    by kob43 ( 513124 )
    I've seen it at least 10 times since it's first release. I'm starting to get sick of Elliot's whinning.
  • by SeaDour ( 704727 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @11:57AM (#9780142) Homepage
    This calculation doesn't include the number of people turned off from the SETI@Home project by the new BOINC [berkeley.edu] software.
  • Within 20 years? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by indros ( 211103 )
    It is 2004, right? Wouldn't that set the date to 2024?
  • Problems (Score:3, Insightful)

    by TheWanderingHermit ( 513872 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @11:58AM (#9780147)
    there's the question of can we decode their signals, would they spot our reply, and what's the lag time

    And is their primary goal "To Serve Mankind?"...
    • Re:Problems (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      ..on a platter. With mushrooms, and perhaps with a nice side of granite crunchies.
  • 2020 eh? (Score:3, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 23, 2004 @11:58AM (#9780148)
    2020, just in time to send my first and brightest to Battle School.
  • We're already here.
  • ... they don't find us first?
  • Deadline! (Score:3, Funny)

    by mfh ( 56 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:00PM (#9780187) Homepage Journal
    SETI says 2020, so now we have a new Internet deadline to watch. I bet they strike gold next year sometime or the year after. And when they do, I bet the Aliens look like giant chickens [gotfuturama.com] and they kick our asses for KFC.
  • Better wording (Score:4, Informative)

    by TopShelf ( 92521 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:00PM (#9780192) Homepage Journal
    A misleading article summary on /.? I'm shocked and appalled!

    A better way to state this story is that within 20 years, SETI will have the capacity to detect transmissions from across our galaxy, rather than just a small slice of it. Whether or not there's any signal to pick up is another matter entirely...

    • There is a STTNG episode "The Chase" where they discover the prior existance of beings from 5 billion years ago who they themselves found that there was no other life in their galaxy at the time.

      That episode has always made me wonder if we could be in the same predicament. It could be that we're just "first". I'm sure that it would be wishful thinking for some people, but I would find it unfortunate.
      • Re:Better wording (Score:4, Interesting)

        by orac2 ( 88688 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:43PM (#9780684)
        David Brin has a rather lovely little story in his collection "The River of Time." that tackles this: Human beings have been exploring the galaxy, but finding hardly any habitable worlds and no sign of anyone else to talk to. Then they find an artifact, which contains the coordinates of a bunch of other habitable planets. What's been happening is that the universe is still too young for there to be more than one space-faring race around at a time. So the first race to realise their predicament left artifacts with pointers on all its planets for the next race that would eventually come along, and so on. Also included is the coordinates of a particular black hole; when each species gets bored of kicking around with no one to talk to, it departs for a near-event horizon orbit around the black hole, where it waits, along with the other early races, for the galaxy to fill up with interesting people.
    • I think we're better off with the small slice for practical purposes. What if we did detect signals from a million light years out? Those signals have no current relevance, and there's no way we could hope to give a meaningful reply.
    • From the article: "Shostak came up with an estimate of between 10,000 and 1 million radio transmitters in the galaxy."

      The Drake Equation is just a fancy way of saying SWAG (silly wild-ass guess). Personally, I find this SWAG to be wild high by several orders of magnitude.

      Personally, my guess is that our galaxy has 0-5 other species actively transmitting.
    • by andyrut ( 300890 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:27PM (#9780526) Homepage Journal
      Whether or not there's any signal to pick up is another matter entirely...

      It is another matter, but Shostak also addressed it in his prediction:
      Within a generation, radio emissions from enough stars will be observed and analysed to find the first alien civilisation, Shostak estimates.
      So not only doese he think we'll have the capacity to detect the transmissions, he also predicts that the transmissions are just waiting there for us to pick up, based on the Drake Equation.
  • I remember reading about Drake equation, and the reasoning behind it looks valid. But if I remember correctly, the results vary wildly depending on what you pick for some of the variables. The equation can "predict" life on every other planet, or it can predict that Earth is the only Big Blue Marble in the game.

    I guess I'll go read that fine article now. :)

    • Yes, depending on what you use for your variables, the Drake Eq can spit out very different results. But it's hard to get it to say that Earth is the only place where there's life in the universe- ok, not hard, but the numbers you have to use are really huge and really, really tiny (depending on the variable) to yield only 1, values outside our best estimates.
    • by Surt ( 22457 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:51PM (#9780803) Homepage Journal
      Yes, you have to try to pick valid values for the variables, however, many of the variables are rapidly becoming well defined:

      http://www.activemind.com/Mysterious/Topics/SETI /d rake_equation.html

      If we consider only our galaxy:

      N = N* fp ne fl fi fc fL

      of which we have answers for

      N* = number of stars in galaxy (~100billion)

      fp = fraction with planets (at least ~20%)

      ne = number planets per star that can spawn life (???)

      fl = fraction on which life evolves (??? but if we discover life evolved on mars and earth separately we'll have to assume this is reasonably large, so this might be settled soon)

      fi = % where intelligent life evolves (???)

      fc = % which communicate (???)

      fL = % of planetary lifetime during which communication takes place (currently we can assume this is a small non-zero value, and the longer we use radio waves the larger we can assume this value is).

      fp is rising rapidly as we discover more and more extrasolar planets.

      fL is rising steadily as our radio emitting civilization persists.

      ne may be more accurately guessable once we find out if mars, venus or europa harbor or ever harbored life.

      The key to the drake equation is that N* is a very very big number. And now that we know fp is not small (up to a few years ago many people argued that fp would be close to 0) we know that the other fractions need to be quite tiny to avoid having radio communicating civilizations other than our own around.
  • will they get sued by SCO?
  • Doesn't this imply they believe that alien life is thousands of years ahead of us in technology?

    Consider this paragraph:
    Within a generation, radio emissions from enough stars will be observed and analysed to find the first alien civilisation, Shostak estimates. But because they will probably be between 200 and 1000 light years away, sending a radio message back will take centuries.

    Ok, if they are on roughly the same time line we are, they'd have to have sent the messages 200 to 1000 years ago for us to
  • by KillerHamster ( 645942 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:01PM (#9780209) Homepage
    ...oops, a few years too early.
  • ... in three to eight years we will have a machine with the general intelligence of an average human being ... The machine will begin to educate itself with fantastic speed. In a few months it will be at genius level and a few months after that its powers will be incalculable ... -- Marvin Minsky, LIFE Magazine, November 20, 1970
  • That there is a big difference between making "first contact" and "detecting their transmissions".

    We could stumble across a repeating, non-natural signal tomorrow, and granted this would be one of the top 3 (if not the greatest) scientific discovery ever, but it is unlikely we would be able to do anything with this discovery for a very, very long time. Understanding the message would probably take decades, sending a reply would take light years, and holding any kind of meaningful communication would requ
  • ...that Aliens are susceptible to Macintosh Viruses! (What was that movie? Was it "Judgement Day"? I forgot the name.)
  • Singularity [wikipedia.org] or Alien Life. I'm going to go out on a limb and say that they're both going to happen within a year of eachother. What if the first transmission was source code for AI?
  • by w3weasel ( 656289 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:04PM (#9780252) Homepage
    Attention Greeblorgs!
    Top Greeblorg scientists have determined that an alien species located on Sol 3 have discovered our civilization!
    All radio and digitized light arrays should be temporarily taken off-line and back-ups of all data secured.

    A phenomenon the Solerians refer to as Slash-Dotting is certain to disable all arrays with less than a direct quantum connection to the central data core

    Greeblorg drones have assured the prime council that appropriate measures are in place to protect the central data core from damage, though interruption to communications to and from the central data core are likely

    That is all

  • by Lord Grey ( 463613 ) * on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:04PM (#9780256)
    Within a generation, radio emissions from enough stars will be observed and analysed to find the first alien civilisation, Shostak estimates. But because they will probably be between 200 and 1000 light years away, sending a radio message back will take centuries.
    OK, I'm curious. How is this 200-1000 light year estimate derived?
    "But predicting the date, the decade or even the century of contact is another matter because the 'other end' of the communications link is completely out of our hands. ..."
    Our planet emits enough radio energy to look like a small sun, but it hasn't done so for very long. Some scientists believe that it won't continue at the present level, either, because future requirements will demand higher-capacity transmissions -- radio transmission will fall off in favor of something that's more tightly-focused, in other words.

    Making the large assumption that an alien race will go through a similar radio transmission curve, and considering the fact that we don't know how far away said alien civilization is, the chances of us finding them between now and 2020 seems very remote.

  • by Hortensia Patel ( 101296 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:04PM (#9780257)

    From the first sentence of TFA:

    If Intelligent life exists elsewhere in our galaxy, advances in computer processing power and radio telescope technology will ensure we detect their transmissions within two decades (my emphasis)

    Even if ETs do exist, there are a host of long-standing doubts about whether they'll be using "transmissions" (questionable), or whether those transmissions will be distinguishable from random noise (OK, probably).

    Sensationalist, moi?

  • What if... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Progman3K ( 515744 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:05PM (#9780263)
    What if we finally detect messages from alien civilizations and all they say are things like

    - Enlarge Your Penis
    - Make $$$$ At Home
    - A Letter from Npambara Ngamba: My Dear Friend, I am trying to move a large quantity of money out of my country...
  • ...one, someone keeps paying to listen (not a guarantee, but I hope it happens) and two, there's somone out there for us to here. If there isn't, it sure is an awful waste of space, seeing as how we're not exactly jumping to fill it. But that's another matter entirely.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Why would an advanced technology use a method limited to the speed of light to communicate across the galaxy?

    SETI brings to mind a picture of some remote tribe looking for smoke signals as a sign of intelligent communication while standing next to a satellite dish.
  • will make first contact with aliens within 20 years.

    Now that sounds like a safe prediciton. Rather like the we'll have flat-screen televisions that we just unroll and hang on the wall in 5 years that I've been hearing for the past twenty.

    Seriously though, the idea that life must exist elsewhere, and will communicate in a method we can detect across interstellar distances, is still just that -- a theory.

  • It will be 2047. The'll come fleeing another race. We'll build lots of stuff with them. And then the other race will come to hunt us both down. 300 years later, the earth is destroyed and we're homeless. But we also take back most of the known space about 10 years after that.

    I know this becasue I wrote it. :)
  • by Embedded Geek ( 532893 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:11PM (#9780333) Homepage
    what's the lag time....

    ping -s -R -A inet6 -a aliencivilizations

    Duh.

  • by GoatChunks ( 758276 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:11PM (#9780336)
    I've been wondering this...and all of you people that think you're smart might be able to figure this out for me. SETI uses radio telescopes to search for E.T., right? Now, I understand that these radio telescopes don't just search for AM/FM radio signals, but basically waves within the full broadcast spectrum. So they're looking for AM/FM, TV, CB, Wi-Fi, wide band, short, wave, cell phones, etc. So I guess the basic thinking is that any intelligent race will use radio signals of some sort. How long have humans been using some kind of radio signals? In the general scheme of things, a very brief time. How much longer will we be using them? Is this something that will be with us forever, or will it die out as our technology advances? Assuming our technology will advance, somehow, to exclude broadcast signals, our planet, from space, will become rather quiet. Also assuming that all intelligent life evolves along a similar timeline, we can assume that these other planets will emit radio signals for only a brief period of time. But somehow we're assuming that that time will somehow coincide with our own. It makes finding a needle in a haystack even harder when the damned needle keeps moving around. Enlighten me. How can SETI possibly work? (That said, I do have the SETI@Home software running on all of my machines...so I'm hopeful.)
    • good stuff, i've often pondered that myself, what if they're sending signals via something like "sub-space" (sorry to get Trekkie on ya, i just didn't know how else to put it)
    • Well at the moment electromagnetic waves are the only way we're aware of for transmitting data over such great distances. That's not to say there isn't some other way, but at the moment radio is all we have to work with. So, regardless of whether it's the right track or not, it's the only track available to us. The best we can do is hope that the aliens want to be found and are sending out radio signals for primitive races like us to pick up.
    • by NanoGator ( 522640 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:35PM (#9780602) Homepage Journal
      "How can SETI possibly work?"

      Maybe because radio emissions aren't necessarily a result of communication? Lots of machinery generates RF, that's why the FCC has to approve electronic stuff in the USA before it's released.

      "Also assuming that all intelligent life evolves along a similar timeline, we can assume that these other planets will emit radio signals for only a brief period of time."

      We can't assume anything, we haven't met anybody else. Besides, even if we invent sub-space inverse tachyon communicators, who's to say radio would ever die out? It'll always be useful for something.

      I agree it's a long shot, but what's the harm in looking? Dismissing stuff is a lot easier than searching for what might not exist. Life would be more primitive here if the former happened routinely.
    • I fully agree with you, but consider that as our tech increases, we will (obviously) be aware of the new tech. Thus, once we come up with the next groundbreaking communications method, we can start looking for that as well. So now, we are looking for radio waves, maybe in 20 years, we'll all be communicating with psions or something, and someone will make a telescope that can look for those, too. Then our range of possible encounters will balloon. As we continue to develop new tech, we will continue to
    • Years ago I read a few books by Erich von Däniken [wikipedia.org]. I can't say I believe a lot of his theories, but I remember one point he made which made a lot of sense to me:

      Basically he said it was naive to be listening to radio signals, and his reasoning was like yours (how long will we continue using such a techology?). He wanted to explore other alternatives, such as telepathy. Now, I don't believe in telepathy, but I thought his point was good.

      Ironically, the man who wanted to explore telepathy is a found
  • Contact could have been expected by 2010, but release of the BOINC software has delayed the seti@home project by at least 10 yers.
  • If anyone's played Starwars Galaxies, they know that it's hard to interact with any aliens if your ping is too high.
  • What is this going to do to the Dept. of Homeland Security??? We've spent billions on setting up global war theaters! and now this?? what's the budget going to be for a universal war theater?? Get me Tom Ridge on the phone...
  • BWAHAHAHAHA (Score:5, Informative)

    by arvindn ( 542080 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:15PM (#9780373) Homepage Journal
    Reminds me of a joke:

    Museum tour guide: This fossil is two million and nine years old.

    Surprised visitor: How can you tell the date so accurately?

    Guide: Easy. I've been working here nine years, and it was two million years old when I joined.

    My point is, the Drake equation has so many variables that we can't even get a ballpark estimate of that any prediction based on it could easily be off by a couple of orders of magnitude.

  • I am wondering what (if any) protocols have been formalised for how 'exactly' we will choose to interact with ET's. I read an article somwhere that plans were already drawn up covering what to do in the event of contact, but my brain is broken today, and i can't put a decent google together. Anyone know of these contingencies?
  • While I like the idea of sending out ships with information, I do have to wonder about the wisdom of telling others exactly where we live. If we sent a ship out that did replies, I would have no issues.
  • If we havent decimated our existence or environment by that time. On that note, it will be interesting to know if the ETs want us to find them. It's very likely they know we are here, and want nothing to do with us other than observe how we have pretty much fcked up 60 billion years of evolution in 100 years.
  • Thinks of what will happen when our belief systems are overturned by the fact that another intelligence exists in the universe.

    Human sacrifice, dogs and cats, living together... mass hysteria!
  • What if... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by farzadb82 ( 735100 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:23PM (#9780479)
    The signals picked up are actually our own from twenty years prior ?

    Seriously, has anyone considered the possibility that the only intelligent life-forms in the universe maybe humans in past, present and future form ?

  • by trainsnpep ( 608418 ) <mikebenza@@@gmail...com> on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:33PM (#9780575)
    That's it...make a new protocol:

    A Lightweight Extraterrestrial Intercommunication Network Transmission Protocol. ALIENTP

    Now, ALIENTP is a protocol for transmission of data through high bandwidth - high latency (anywhere from 5s to 500 million years) networks....ALIENTP is composed of three basic components:

    The HUMAN, the SPACE and the EXTRATERRESTRIAL. The HUMAN (Huge Uber-Manlike Android Noisemaker) sends a type of EM AM signal through SPACE (Some Place Allocated for Cosmic Entities) to the EXTRATERRESTRIAL (Ex-Xenophobia Technical Race of Aliens Trying to Extract Ridiculous Rural Eccentrics Solely for Tests Requiring Initial Anal Lubrication).....


    I'm sick. I know

  • by khallow ( 566160 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:33PM (#9780581)
    The Foresight Exchange [ideosphere.com], a reputation-based betting market predicts a 24-27% [ideosphere.com] chance of intelligent extra-terrestrial life being detected by 2050. That includes radio signals from space, pyramids on Mars, and aliens landing on the Whitehouse lawn. If Seth Shostak is correct, then he can make a real killing of sorts on this market.

    And if you don't mind a little neo-liberal dig here, the unrestrained market is a superior rational process to the scientific method for estimating likelihood of events occuring. Especially events which involve a great deal of uncertainty, divergence of opinion, and emotion.

    Having said that, Mr. Shostak is boldly taking a stand by stating any sort of probability at all and I approve of it. It's very possible that this new information will change singificantly the odds on the Foresight Exchange as the traders digest it.

  • by uncadonna ( 85026 ) <<moc.liamg> <ta> <sibotm>> on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:34PM (#9780586) Homepage Journal
    I've thought this for a long time. Maybe this is the occasion to get this idea across to people who might be interested.

    While the equation is clearly true since it's basically redundant, it may not elucidate the problem very well. This is because some of the terms may be nonlinearly coupled.

    If interstellar propagation of a technological species is possible, the rate of emergence of such species is not independent of whether such species have emerged in the past. There is an ecological competition between hypothetical spacefaring species. Unless two such species emerge simultaneously and accomodate each other, the emergence of one will essentially foreclose the emergence of another.

    If the rate of formation of stable technological civilizations is sufficiently low, and the rate of interstellar spread of such civilizations is sufficiently high, there will only be time for one such civilization to emerge per galaxy. By the time the second one could emerge, the first one would have filled the entire niche.

    In this scenario, by virtue of the fact that we have emerged, we can conclude that no stable competitors have emerged yet.

    In fact, my intuition is that the universe is in precisely this regime, and therefore that we are very unlikely to succeed in SETI.

    • You've been beaten to this. It's called the "preemption scenario" (not the preemption doctrine). The idea is that it would take somewhere on the order of tens of millions of years for one space-faring species to colonize the galaxy - which is a small enough fraction of the age of the galaxy's stars to suggest that it should already have happened. But there's a lot of other variables: for instance, it's possible that the sun's population cohort is the first in a heavy-element rich enough environment to evolv
    • Suppose we were colonized by some brotherly (fatherly?) entity (such as via living cell deposits in the fresh ocean, which were somehow known would evolve into more complex organisms in this environment) and we are simply temporarily ignorant of our relation to "the rest of our civilization" because there is something significant about "growing up unique and without outside interference", but that at some point in the future "the news will be broken to us", along the lines of a child one day being "old enou
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:38PM (#9780633)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • We've only been broadcasting RF for about 100 years. Another possibility is that there are so many pre-communicative civilizations that advanced races simply aren't interested in Yet Another Mute Species and there aren't any alien RF detectors in a 100-light-year sphere of us to know that we've figured out how to make baby speech.

      Similarly, perhaps said races have been checking up on us ever 1,000 years or so. When they last visited in the 1400s, we were busy trying not to be killed by our own microbes,

    • by StrawberryFrog ( 67065 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @02:26PM (#9781931) Homepage Journal
      The exponential nature of tech growth implies that we are like apes to a civilization even 100 years ahead of us,

      Many of the key results of the 20th century involve the limits of what we can do. Godel incompleteness, and the speed of light to name two big ones. There is no indication at all that any civilisation, no matter how advanced, will be able to overcome the lightspeed problem and make us look like ants.

      technology to visit the entire universe at will ("c"restrictions from the current physics knowledge notwithstanding).

      You want the lightspeed thing to go away, don't you? Unfortunately wanting counts for nothing, and there's not a shred of evidence for that, and plenty against. Even given nigh-infinite knowledge, physical limits are physical limits.

      Many, including me, believe that within about 100 years, a civilization like our would have the technology to visit the entire universe at will

      It's entirely possible that a civilisation like our will, in 100 years, have A-bombed, bio-plauged, chemically poisoned or just polluted itself back to the early stone age. Or worse, wiped itself out entirely. I'm all for progress, but dude, go easy on the prozac.
  • Besides that fact that they are pulling numbers out of their ass, there is already a high probability that there is no other intelligent life in the galaxy.

    Proof? Easy. Look up The Fermi Paradox. One of the corollaries that convince me is the fact that, even at sublight speeds, it only takes 1-10 million years to fill up a galaxy, since a race would tend to fill up in a geometric progression. Given how old the galaxy is, it should have happened by now. It only takes one race in billions of years to have wanderlust for earth-like planets, and boom! No more intelligent life rising up.

    That it hasn't seem to have happened means we are alone.

  • Not convinced (Score:5, Interesting)

    by dfj225 ( 587560 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @12:41PM (#9780665) Homepage Journal
    I'm not convinced that there is life outside of earth to find. Even more so, I really doubt that if we find another planet that harbors life, it will contain intelligent life. Scientists are just beginning to learn how unique our planet really is. Things such as our cosmic location to even our (relatively) overly large moon add into the stability of our planet. Also, (and this is more of my own opinion) intelligence seems to be overrated as far as what we see on earth. For instance, apes are among the most intelligent creatures on earth, yet they do not have radio communications. Ants, on the other hand, have been around for millenia, yet are very simple creatures. If intelligence was such an important factor to survival, I think we would see more animals on earth nearing human intelligence. I also believe in divine creation of humans, the idea of which, I think, is helped out by the fact that we are so unique amoung all the species on earth.
    • Re:Not convinced (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Wubby ( 56755 )
      They are also finding out about how easy it is for life to exist in even the harshest of environments. Life is looking more and more simple to create and sustain than we ever thought in the past.

      Intelligence is not all that important for survival in general, but survival from other slightly "better" creatures. Is a rabbit more intelligent than a fox when it runs faster? Maybe not, but the wolf may be more intelligent when it works with 5 other to catch some rabbits.

      Ants, on the other hand, have been a
  • by JonKatzIsAnIdiot ( 303978 ) <a4261_2000NO@SPAMyahoo.com> on Friday July 23, 2004 @02:57PM (#9782297)
    Just a thought - is there anyone on earth working through not-so-positive first contact scenarios? I know the US government sponsors groups that work out worst-case scenarios with regard to war and terrorism. Does NASA cover this kind of stuff? What would we do if we were confronted by a hostile race with technology vastly superior to ours? If we had to, are we even able to hit an object in orbit with a cluster of nukes? I don't think that it's remotely probable, just more interesting than work on a Friday afternoon.
  • EXTREMELY alien (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Theovon ( 109752 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @05:37PM (#9784229)
    If you watch too much SciFi, you might get brainwashed into thinking that aliens might possibly look like humans.

    But the truth is, only the evolutionary history of earth could have produced humans. Slight changes at various points in our history could have radically altered what came to be the dominant life form and if that form was even all that bright.

    Some stuff I was watching on the Science channel recently explained that it was an ice age that created selective pressure in favor of hominids who were smarter, because our ancestors had to adapt to a changing environment faster than evolution could adapt. Only the hominids who could IQ their way around the problems (ie. invent clothing) were able to survive.

    Now, when it comes to aliens who evolved in an environment that is completely different from ours and with little or no possibility of us having common ancestors, you really can't expect much similarity.

    Now, we do live in the same universe with the same physical laws, which means they probably use some of the same chemistry. For instance carbon seems to be a much better basis for building life forms than the alternatives. Also, liquid water is a much better environment than the alternatives.

    We have to ask, for instance, if life can evolve in radically different temperature ranges. Can life evolve in liquid methane? How about molten iron? We do see some rather interesting "extremopholes" here on earth, but I suspect it's easier to adapt to an extreme environment than to evolve there in the first place. (That is, there may be life still on Mars from when it had liquid water, but it's a completely inhospitable environment for abiogenesis.)

    We assume that their math will be similar. I mean, if their technology is advanced enough that they could do, say, quantum computation, and they have electrons whose spin they can manipulate, well, presumably, they would have a concept that allowed them to distinguish between one electron, and then two electrons, and then three electrons. That is to say, electrons are discrete quanta, so if you're going to deal with them, you have to be able to count them. So we can assume that an alien culture will have that. But can we really assume that? What about a world 100% covered in water where live evolved in such a way that there aren't separate organisms, but really every living thing is just a part of the same continuous organism, where everything is connected in some way. If you evolved to live in a world where you perceive everything as continous and you therefore have no concept of discrete objects, then can you count? (I agree that there are some lousy assumptions here, but go with me here.)

    Much too much of our world seems fundamental to us because this is the environment we evolved in. For instance, predators had an effect on our evolution. Naturally, the aliens would have different evolutionary pressures... throughout all of the billions and billions of years in their evolution, completely different from ours. So, consider a world, for example, where metalic iron is sticking out of the ground all over the place. Think about how inhabitants would evolve to make use of this ubiquitous natural resource the way humans evolved to make use of wood and animal bones. (Or more fundamentally, how our cells evolved to make use of carbon compounds as building blocks.)

    Alien life could be so different that we might not even recognize it as life. No matter what you conjecture about what alien life might be like, if/when we ever do discover it, it'll be nothing like what you expect.
  • by SETIGuy ( 33768 ) on Friday July 23, 2004 @11:18PM (#9786715) Homepage

    It's time for my usual rant... SETI isn't a guy, SETI isn't an organization, SETI isn't a project. Saying "SETI predicts we'll find ETs by 2020" is like saying "Political Science ate tuna for lunch today"

    This prediction wasn't made by "SETI," it was made by a person, Seth Shostak. Seth Shostak doesn't work for "SETI," he works for an organization called the "SETI Institute." Some people at the SETI Institute do search for extraterrestrial intelligence, but I would guess that most do not. As a corellary to that, most people in the world that search for extraterrestrial intelligence professionally are not associated with the SETI institute.

    Seth is also an optimist and to some extent a salesman. He's not going to get donations for the SETI institute and the Allen Telescope by saying that it's never going to happen. Therefore he uses an optimistic Drake equation that results in 50,000 communicating civilizations in the galaxy.

    I, on the other hand, am more inclined to base my predictions on what we actually know, rather than optimism. My computation of the Drake equation puts an upper limit to the number of civilizations in the galaxy at 750,000. It also puts a lower limit of one civilization per 2 million galaxies. We don't have enough information to make a more specific prediction than that!

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