Business Standard

The human quest for life beyond Earth

- DEVANGSHU DATTA

A recent paper, “Estimating the prevalence of malicious extraterre­strial civilisati­ons”, from Alberto Caballero of Vigo University (Spain) has generated interest across social media. The paper estimates there may be four “malicious extraterre­strial civilisati­ons” in the Milky Way.

Caballero is doing a PHD in Conflict Resolution at Vigo and calls himself a criminolog­ist. The paper, which he calls a thought experiment, hasn’t been peer-reviewed. It’s a follow-up on a paper (peerreview­ed), which he published in Cambridge’s Internatio­nal Journal of Astrobiolo­gy: “An approximat­ion to determine the source of the WOW! Signal.”

A patents clerk called Albert Einstein based the Theory of Relativity on “thought experiment­s” as he himself called them. So we can’t denigrate the paper on those grounds. Researcher­s have for decades been chasing leads that may pinpoint alien activity. Some hypotheses are crackpot; others are rational “thought experiment­s”.

In 1961, Frank Drake, an astrophysi­cist, formulated a thought experiment that estimated the possible number of active, extraterre­strial civilisati­ons in the Milky Way, which could possibly communicat­e with Earth. Drake was among the founders of the SETI — the Search for Extraterre­strial Intelligen­ce, which uses crowd-sourced computing resources to analyse radio signals from space.

Drake didn’t actually put a number down. Instead he challenged everybody to combine what’s known about the number of stars with planets; the fraction of planets likely to have conditions supporting life; the fraction which would actually develop life; the few species that develop intelligen­ce; the few intelligen­t species that develop detectable communicat­ions; and the length of time such a civilisati­on may need to exist before any signals become detectable from Earth.

There’re at least 100 billion stars in the Milky Way and a large proportion are likely to have planets. Even if a very small percentage of planets can harbour life, and a very, very small percentage of life is intelligen­t, and capable of long-distance communicat­ion, that may still aggregate to a very large number of possible civilisati­ons with detectable communicat­ions.

But distance is a barrier. Humans have been spewing out radio signals for 120 years. Radio signals are electromag­netic waves travelling at light speed. Our civilisati­on is thus detectable by some alien that can monitor radio signals only if that alien is located within 120 light years of Earth. That’s a comparativ­ely tiny sphere of space. Any civilisati­on more distant would have to wait until the first transmissi­ons arrived.

This brings us to SETI, which analyses radio data. Stars and other astronomic­al objects spit out loads of radio signals — indeed, radio telescopes are commonly used to observe space. SETI looks for possibly non-natural signals buried in radio telescope data.

One of SETI’S promising transmissi­ons was the socalled WOW! signal, which Caballero tried to locate. In 1977, the Big Ear Radio telescope at Ohio State University recorded 72 seconds of radio signals, which didn’t seem to have natural causes. The researcher analysing this, the astronomer Jerry R Ehman, called it the “WOW!” and the name stuck.

There’s a “Nikolai K ar dash ev scale” for alien technology. numbered 1-7( he originally proposed three levels ), theka rd ash ev type 1 civil is at ion would be capable of using the entire energy of its home planet; a type 2 could use all the energy of its solar system; while a Type 7 would be capable of using the energy of multiple gala xi es.ka rd ash ev( another Se ti pioneer) reckoned humans were perhaps at 0.7— capable of using most of the Earth’s energy.

If civil is ed aliens exist and if they could reach earth, they would be far more technologi­callyadvan­ced.as Stephen hawking pointed out, when technologi­cal ly advanced societies meet primitives, our colonial history indicates that the primitives always get badly hurt.

A recent experiment that estimates four malicious civilisati­ons in the Milky Way is the latest attempt to trace alien life

More on business-standard.com*

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India