
There Used to Be Aliens in Our Galaxy, but They Destroyed Themselves
In a new study, researchers suggest the answer to the Fermi paradox could be pretty bleak: Maybe all the intelligent civilizations have annihilated themselves. Jeez, 2020, thatβs a little on the nose. There Used to Be Aliens in Our Galaxy, but They Destroyed Themselves.
There Used to Be Aliens in Our Galaxy, but They Killed Themselves Off
This is the Fermi paradox stated at its most succinct: The universe is unfathomably gigantic, but so far, weβve never seen any sign that thereβs intelligent life anywhere else.
Weβve never observed an extraterrestrial living thing, or uncovered any evidence for extinct ones. As we peer further out into our corner of the universe using more and more powerful telescopes, for example, people continue to hold out hope that weβll find evidence of a civilization, Dyson sphere, or anything just around the next corner.
But thereβs a problem with that line of thinking. A civilization that weβd see from this far away, let alone one that could have built something like a Dyson sphere, is likely to be peering back at us.
Why arenβt they sending telescope satellites through our part of space? And how can it be that out of all the planets and systems weβve peeked into so far, weβve seen nothing?
There are as many individual theories as there are theorists, and these run a huge gamut.
βThe existence of extraterrestrial intelligence is directly related to habitability and a galactic habitable zone (GHZ); where habitable planets are located and where potential life are most likely to form,β the new study’s researchers (three Caltech physicists and one high school student), write:
βOverall, previous studies of habitability and the likelihood of intelligent life have provided many valuable insights; however, the precise propensity of galactic intelligent life to emerge has not yet been explored with spatial and temporal analysis, nor has any research explicitly estimated an age distribution for potential life within the Galaxy.β
These researchers wanted to add nuance to the discussion by increasing the depth of their analysis, and they wanted to gauge how relatively βoldβ any alien civilizations are likely to be. This is a critical factor in whether or not a civilization can even travel in space or put out intergalactic feelers, because they can only do that from a key βsweet spot.β
Too young, and, like us before very recently, they simply wonβt have the means yet. Too old, and they could be stripped of technology in a post-apocalyptic burnout.
They could even be extinct. In fact, the research includes parameters for extinction and the idea of βself annihilation,β a probability that could be extraordinarily high.
βSince we cannot preclude the high possibility of annihilation, [this result] suggests that most of the potential complex life within the Galaxy may still be very young,β the scientists explain. That means there could be a proliferation, but itβs of other civilizations that canβt push out into the galaxy yetβjust like us.
Whatβs the point of research like this? Itβs fair to ask, the same way itβs fair to ask questions about projects like SETI, the Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence, in the first place.
But these researchers have a clear goal, which is to place a touchstone for others who want to continue to explore the Fermi paradox. They explain:
βThe exact number of the intelligent life estimated here is not the focus of our work. [R]ather, it is instead the development of a statistical, comprehensive galactic picture tracing the potential growth propensity of intelligent life over a course of ~20 billion years.β
Indeed, we donβt know whatβs hiding around the next intergalactic corner.
source: https://www.popularmechanics.com/
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