Milky Way Star Births May Have Influenced Life 144
eldavojohn writes "Space.com has an interesting article that speculates that the period when our galaxy was giving birth to stars resulted in huge fluctuations and impact on earth. From the article, 'Some 2.4 billion years ago when the Milky Way started upping its star production, cosmic rays — high-speed atomic particles — started pouring onto our planet, causing instability within the living. Populations of bacteria and algae repeatedly soared and crashed in the oceans.' Causes one to wonder what the probability for life arising on a planet is given that our own seemed to be in a very unique situation on many different counts."
Probability theory (Score:5, Insightful)
Insert God Jokes Here (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
This was right after he stole the handle, preventing the train from stopping (though it might slow down.)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Most people will agree that humans are still special even if we find an advanced civilization outside our solar system. However, the majority of Christians (and other religions) believe we were placed here by a supreme being in his likeness and the whole universe is ours and ours alone. The idea of another race of beings on another planet would basically shatter the
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
It's important to note that it doesn't say what God did on days eight through infinity. There's no reason he couldn't have made other planets, other peoples.
By the same token, the bible never even add
According to its kind (Score:2)
The account of creation in Genesis leaves room for at least microevolution [wikipedia.org]: God created each plant and animal "after its kind", where "kind" translates a Hebrew word corresponding roughly to the taxonomic family [wikipedia.org].
Re: (Score:2)
By the same token, the bible never even addresses the issue of evolution, so people who are using it as a basis for believing or not believing in evolution are a bunch of chumps.
What has been will be again,
what has been done will be done again;
there is nothing new under the sun.
Is there anything of which one can say,
"Look! This is something new"?
It was here already, long ago;
it was here before our time.
...just saying.
Re: (Score:2)
An interesting argument a friend presented: the entire "Intelligent Design" movement is probably heretical, in some fashion. Because:
1. As you say, an omnipotent god could set up the universe so that evolution achieves his ends.
2. Intelligent Design argues that evolution does not work, that certain things have evolved that would not evolve without some kind of guiding assistance, becau
Evolution and G-d (Score:3, Interesting)
But not
Re: (Score:2)
Why do you spell god that way?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
(To my knowledge it's probably actually fine for a non-Jew to write it out... my understanding is that conversion to Judaism is discouraged because according to Judaism if you're a non-Jew you basically just have to be a good person to go to heaven but if you're a Jew you need to also follow like 3000 laws. So conver
Re: (Score:2)
The very first paragraph was bible-specific, the rest was not. Honestly my whole post was about telling religious people evolution wasn't bad, not about telling evolutionists they need to join a rel
Re: (Score:2)
Also, if you believe what you read in your Orson Scott Card novels (such as Speaker for the Dead), they'd also be among the first to go out and try to convert it. :P
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Why, the same way that the sanctity of marriage will be destroyed once gays can tie the knot. Don't you watch FOXNews?
Re: (Score:2)
I just love when people try to use "probability theory" to argue for something when they can't possibly know the probabilities involved.
Re: (Score:2)
And what if the chance is 1? So far, we have only briefly landed a few probes on the moon and mars. Certainly not enough to conclusively say that there is not life there.
Basically, we lack statisical data. When both "we are the only place in the universe with life", and "life is everywhere in the universe" is a reasonable position to have in a debate about the issue, the whole issue stops being science untill we gather more data. Three is more or less accepted as the minimum statistical significant number
Re: (Score:2)
Proof:
The chance of a die landing on 3 for a given roll is 1 in 6. If I roll a die six times, how many times will it land on 3? On AVERAGE, 1, but for a specific set of 6 rolls, it could be as high as 6.
So, if the odds that life would develop around a star (not counting bodies orbiting that star -- I am reluctant to use the term planet because Pluto could house life and is not longer considered [by others]
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I really don't see why this hypothesis (star birth triggering life) would make it any less likely that life is common. It's not like star birth wasn't widespread throughout the galaxy, or that radiation from stars being born is restricted to tight beams that only shone on
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I pointed out that the probability is unlikely to be 1 in NUMBER_OF_STARS because that would make our own existence very unlikely. Our own existence is one of the rele
Re: (Score:2)
This is the trickiest part - we should see abundant life just within the Milky Way, and given the distances involved most civilizations should spread out to all of its stars within a billion years or so. So, either we're first, or they're not saying "Hi" (who could blame them since we haven't either).
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Could be - or we might have an unusually robust biology that can possibly travel to another solar system with just a mile-long ship's worth of supplies. That seems like we're calling ourselves special again, though, so the Zoo still makes some sense.
Re: (Score:2)
Perhaps it takes an average of four billion years for a star of our generation to develop intelligent life (supported by observation), and then a few hundred thousand years for life to develop interstellar space travel (we're pretty close to that and we still don't have it), then maybe after you DO travel for centuries or millennia to the nearest habitable star maybe you want to stay put for another fifty thousand years and concentrate on filling up
Re: (Score:2)
Agreed. Isn't Earth a third-generation Milky Way star though? So there have been at least two go-arounds of this cycle so far. Unless we _need_ a third generation star with its heaviest elements for life to succeed, or perhaps for there to be enough nuclear fissible material to get technology moving. Clearly far more questions than answers with a sample size of 1.
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe when the aliens arrive (or better yet we go out and meet them) we'll be able to ask. In the meantime nothing to do but speculate.
Re: (Score:2)
Or interstellar travel and colonization is as hard as we think, but harder than we would like to dream of.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And with a huge enough number of civilizations, at least a few of them will beat the odds and discover ways to make the distances between us meaningless.
Re:Probability theory -- The Drake Equation (Score:2)
Some people speculate that the reason we have not had any results from SETI so far is because this last factor is extremely small: the time between when a civilization is able to communicate galactically and the time it discovers nuclear weapons and s
Wrong probabilities, dude (Score:2)
Never? Do you have any idea how long "never" is?
That's a favorite quip of mine, which I stole from a camera commercial circa 1980. But in this case you really don't know how long "never" is. The universe is big not just in space but in time. If the human race lasts long enough, there will be plenty of time to search out the galaxy. Say it takes us 10,000 years to colonize the nearest star system. (If we can survive that long without destroying ourse
A long time ago (Score:5, Funny)
Re: A long time ago (Score:3, Funny)
Are more on their way for the dupe?
A long time ago, Joni Mitchel sang We are stardust (Score:2)
We are stardust
Billion year old carbon
We are golden
Although we know quite a bit more now than then, TFA is recycling really old news.
Not too much different from other changes (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not too much different from other changes (Score:4, Funny)
100 Billion (Score:5, Insightful)
Estimations are that there are 100 Billion stars in our galaxy. Thats:
100,000,000,000 -- Let's say 1 in ten of those are in a good region of the galaxy (not a bunch of cataclysmic crap going on)
Thats: 10,000,000,000 -- Let's say 1 in ten of those have planets.
Thats: 1,000,000,000 -- Let's say 1 in ten of those have a planet in the stars habitable zone
Thats: 100,000,000 -- Lets say 1 in ten of those have adequate amounts of water
Thats: 10,000,000 -- Lets say on 1 in ten of those simple life arises.
Thats: 1,000,000 -- Lets say on 1 in ten of those complex life develops.
Thats: 100,000 -- Lets say on 1 in ten of those intelligent life develops.
Thats: 10,000 -- Lets say on 1 in ten of those advanced civilization pops up.
Thats: 1000
10,000,000 planets that foster life, and 1000 advanced civilizations.
I think the chances are pretty good.
Fermi Paradox (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
You missed World War III (Score:2)
World War III was the Cold War, which started in Korea, spread to Vietnam, and ended with the breakup of the Soviet Union. We're in World War IV [wikipedia.org] now, the war on militant Islam.
Re: (Score:2)
For us to even detect an undirected signal--as in, not particularly meant for us--at 10,000 lightyear
Until you consider exponential growth (Score:3, Insightful)
Read the link in my GP post about the Fermi Paradox. It explains that once a civilization develops that starts colonizing other worlds, it will tend to generate two (or more) other inhabited planets. This will then lead to 4, 8, 16, until after 40 such doublings you have over a trillion inhabited planets (i.e., about 10 for every star in the Milky Way). Obviously there will be limiting factors (such as the number of inhabitable planets), but you'd think that eventually (i.e., in less than a few million year
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The thing is, you can do a little better than 0.0007 c just by sporadically launching to a nearby system whenever one comes close. The relative motion of stars in the galaxy is surprisingly fast. And what's to keep ships from traveling further than just the nearest star system? Especially if they have a good idea what's out there from probes? 100 light years would take 10,000 years to cross, for example. And suddenly you're talking 0.005 c for the colonization front propagation speed. That's only 20 million
Re: (Score:2)
You'd tend to try and reach the nearest habitable system to establish a colony. You COULD go further, but you probably wouldn't, if your goal was colonization. Even reaching the nearest habitable star going so slowly would probably be a big stretch. How many resources does it take to build a starship that can reach a significant fraction of light speed AND maintain generations of its occupants for centuries or m
Re: (Score:2)
I think that's a substantial overestimate. It took a lot less than 500 years for European colonists to the Americas and Australia to reach a mature level of civ
Re: (Score:2)
You won't have a bunch of colonists who swarm over a planet, develop it, then decide to go on to the next one. We're talking about multi-generations and a LONG time. If they're anything like us their coloniza
Re: (Score:2)
And we're to assume that once they found us, they'd say hi?
Sure, in the same way we said "hi"... (Score:2)
Sure, in the same way we said "hi" to the inhabitants that we found when we decided to colonize America... :P
(Actually, I can't really say I have any expectations one way or the other.)
Re: (Score:2)
I think the hypothetical Aliens might have watched monty python's "How not to be seen" and learned a lot from it.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
What's more, it stands to reason that civilizations will not grow indefinitely. There are any number of things that could halt the spread of a civilization. Then of course there's the possibility of war: for all we know there is a massive war raging on the other side of the galaxy right now that has halted expansion for our space-faring neighbo
Millions of years (Score:2)
Actually, that is what I believe I said initially. It could take millions of years. However, what are the odds that in the X billion years the Milky Way has been around, all of the (highly) advanced civilization
Re: (Score:2)
10,000 lightyears? Assuming each civilization spreads out in every direction, then they only need, say 50,000 years to meet at the middle, if they spread out at 10% of the speed of light. I think it's safe to say they will meet.
You don't need to start worrying about being able to "detect signals" when they land in your front yard, or you in theirs!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
It's not like the world is gradually approaching a state of more perfect being; we're just retelling the same stories again and again in different settings and different people.
If you have an example of how any human civilization is or was ever progressing into maturity I'd love to read about it.
Re: (Score:3)
Few people still believe that rats are created from piles of rags in barns. They used to a few hundred years ago.
Science continues to have a major influence on peoples' beliefs. It's not a stretch to say those humans educated in the ways of science have a significantly differently belief structure than those who aren't.
The percentages of people educated in science are increasing in most
Re: (Score:2)
Why wouldn't they give us anal probes?
When we contact wild animals, we usually end up doing one of the following
If anything, we should expect our encounter with a more advanced alien species to be taking one of the above-mentioned forms. Most likely they have encountered thousands of other civilizations, whereas it's our first. Our enthusiasm/fear/whatever
Re: (Score:2)
Within just the next thirty years we're going to have the technology to do a completely non-invasive high-resolution full-body scan and sequence/simulation of DNA for any creature on earth, making the 'chop up the critters' approach unnecessary.
Even if you argue that technology is still a hundred years off, we'r
Re: (Score:2)
So how are you going to find out the migratory patterns of deep-sea squids unless you probe them? You certainly can't find out by doing a full-body scan. And I have great trouble to imagine what other ways can exist to do it in the future. Most likely, we will impr
Re: (Score:2)
If you want to study migration patterns you have to leave them in-situ. Also, one has trouble asking a squid about its migration patterns.
Organism analysis is a far way off.
The sequencing part is effectively done. We can do a complete sequence for under $10K now. The simulation part is still too demanding of computer time but computers will be a million times faster than they are today in 30 years. Simulati
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Got news for ya. We are as "mature" as we're going to get. That's it. We're human and we are who we are.
It's not like the world is gradually approaching a state of more perfect being; we're just retelling the same stories again and again in different settings and different people. If you have an example of how any human civilization is or was ever progressing into maturity I'd love to read about it.
In the beginning, a nation warring with another nation would raze the land, rape the women to death, and bring home a few slaves.
Then Zarathustra came along, and with him his civilisation learned that it could leave the conquered nations alive and well, even build roads up to them and tax them.
A few thousand years later, the descended civilisations no longer even hold slaves.
Some societies now take care of their sick and wounded. Just a hundred years ago people were left to fend for themselves, or to rely o
No other galaxies required (Score:2)
According to the GGP post (to which I had responded) there should be 1,000 advanced civilizations in our galaxy. If only 1 of those had developed a desire and the ability to colonize nearby star systems (e.g., alpha centauri for us) a million years or so ago and then kept spreading out from there, they should be here by now. Again, see the link on the Fermi Paradox that I mentioned in the GP post.
I'm not claiming there's no life elsewhere, or even intelligent life, but the Fermi Paradox does put suggest s
Meeting in the context of loyal subjects (Score:2)
But you're ignoring exponential growth (Score:2)
Re:100 Billion (Score:4, Insightful)
The rate at which a species can expand through the galaxy is likely to be quite an awful lot slower than the maximum speed of whatever craft they have developed so for us to ever be aware of anyone else in the Universe we'd have to have arrived in a similar time frame and be very close to them spacially. It's possible there may be a fantastic co-incidence and a probe or exploration vehicle come across us but really the universe is so huge both us and them would need huge blocks of inhabited space which would at some point need to intersect.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Dont get me wrong, i'm entirely open to evidence either way and would be excited by a convincing reason to think there are other intelligent lifeforms, and for all i know such an explanation exists. This isnt one of them though.
If it were backed up with some evidence to suggest each of those probabilities, then it would be interesti
Re: (Score:2)
> each of those probabilities, then it would be
> interesting.
The numbers are used to show that it is *reasonable* to think that there is intelligent life besides us in the galaxy. It's not meant to be any kind of proof.
jfs
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, but if you consider that there are roughly 140 billion visible galaxies in the universe, and typical galaxies contain ten million to one trillion stars, you can easily overcome even the 1/100 odds.
Not that it really matters, with the distances involved we'll be swallowed by the sun before most of them could hear us say "Hello".
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
So, in other words... (Score:2)
... you just made up 10 numbers and multiplied them together. To say: "out of 10,000,000 candidates, let's say 1 in 10 develops simple life" or "out of 1,000,000 planets with simple life, 1 in 10 develops complex life" is to beg the question. We have no evidence whatsover of how likely it is that planets with the "right" conditions develop life. In fact, we have a sample size of exactly one. I can say "only 1 out of every 100 trillion planets with the "right" conditions (whatever they are) will develop simp
I knew it! (Score:2)
Non-unique (Score:3, Interesting)
While Earth does seem to be unique amongst the hundred or so planets that we're aware of, the above circumstance is not one of the reasons. Those cosmic rays would have been pouring onto every planet in the galaxy, or at least this corner of it. If that cosmic ray flux did have an effect on jump starting the primitive life that was around at the time, it may have done so on tens of thousands of planets.
It may also have wiped out the local equivalent of the dinosaurs - or even intelligent species - on some other planets.
Distance? (Score:2, Interesting)
All these stars were a long, long way away.
The amount of radiation (any sort) falling on a body decreases in an inverse square manner, so I doubt that even in the maddest periods of star formation there would have been more than a tiny effect on our atmosphere, especially compared with the effects of a cosmic ray emmitter only 8 light-minutes away that may also have been fluctuati
Re: (Score:2)
Rare Earth ? Think again... (Score:4, Informative)
The probability of life appearing on a planet may be high, and our planet's situation may not be as unique as you think. I study Planetary Science at the Open University (UK) and the fact that they decided to couple lessons about the search for life in the, primarily geology-themed, planetology course has to say a lot about what scientists think of the Rare Earth Hypothesis [wikipedia.org].
It is, however, natural that some people think that Earth is unique, as it is the only living planet we know of. Sure, your first lemonade was unique, your first PC was unique, and your first GNU/Linux distro was also unique.
Re: (Score:2)
Don't have the data (yet) on likelihood of life (Score:2, Insightful)
Hard radiation to generate mutations can't be a limiting factor because it's not in short supply in the universe. Without Earth's magnetic blanket, we'd be getting so much, even without major galactic star formation, the trick would be staying alive rather than generating enough mutations to do anything interesting.
The probability of life arising is much more difficult to pin down. Right now, we have one data point: Earth. Kind of hard to extrapolate any sort of line from that. Invented probabilities,
The scientist not the popular science mag (Score:2)
Okay, here is the link [www.dsri.dk] to
Henrik Svensmark, Danish Space Research Institute and his papes on
Cosmic rays and Earth's Cloud Cover. He is quoted in the story.
I am providing this in self defense since I prefer to discuss intelligently with people who do not need that popular s
Re: (Score:2)
Link to abstract (Score:2)
It seems we get clobbered when we pass through spiral arms, last time maybe 31 million years ago. So the idea of a static neighborhood tha
The same time span (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I wouldn't call stop using electromagnetic waves as killing yourself off. Besides, even on earth, our radio transmissions becomes more and more difficu
Re: (Score:2)
Well, what I meant was that it's likely that our present technology wouldn't able to detect a transmission sent with technology from a few thousand years in the future.
Of course, the interpretation you gave isn't impossible either. You have to know what to listen for, because the search space is too vast to simply find it by searching, signals too similar to random noise to find i
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
First, the average galaxy has 10 million to 1 trillion stars in it. Second, there are on the order of 100 trillion galaxies in the observable universe. That leads to, roughly, 10^18 to 10^23 stars in the observable universe. Add to that that the observable universe is likely only have as big as the probable lower bound for the size of the total universe. There just simply isn't any such thin
Re: (Score:2)
Show me evidence that there is life on other planets, and I will agree. Until then I will maintain that we don't know WTF is out there.
Right now our sample set says that life exists in one out of one solar system we have examined.
Statistics tells us that is not enough of a base to draw conclusions from.
I will avoid doing so.
Re: (Score:2)