The Indisputable Visitor
The Indisputable Visitor.
"We the People" web
page was inaugurated in the US in September and requires a response by the US
administration to an emailed tabled question signed up to by a large number of
signatories. This produced an administration response to a website petition question
on the existence of extraterrestrial life, that the US was hiding information, it ‘denied that the knowledge of life outside
Earth, is being hidden from public’. In response, Phil Larson of the White
House office of science and technology policy further wrote that the US government
has no evidence that life exists outside Earth, or that an extraterrestrial
presence has contacted any member of the human race. "In addition, there
is no credible information to suggest that any evidence is being hidden from
the public's eye," Larson wrote.
“White House: there is no
evidence that aliens exist”.
So went the article headline in
the guardian on 8.11.11. It is a notable one, in so far as this perennial
question of life ‘out there’ still has the power to raise any interest at all
considering the much more important and pressing aspects of daily life here on
earth.
I suppose it does offer a moment
of lite relief to consider the question is still one that many people are
interested in, ignoring the huge implication of an answer to the question or
indeed the potential of actual proof!
The search for life goes on and a
recent exploration shot by NASA on 26.11.11. as a Mars rover mission called ‘curiosity’ is
designed to offer an answer, even though
it will take 8.5 months to arrive at its destination, it is unlikely to find
the stuff of ‘war of the world’, it just might bag a protozoa bug to make it
worth while. If it does find life, it creates a wide pathway of discussion for
how extensive and complex life might be within the solar system, galaxy or
beyond..
In some way the answer to this question
of, is there life out there, can be broken down into a number of stages. On the basis of (as scientist might say) probability,
at best estimate there are 100 / 200
billion galaxies in the universe with 200 / 400 billion stars each and a multiplicity
of planets of 400 / 800 billion of no size limited. Of which some just may be
in the ‘Goldie Lock’ zone as defined by humans, the zone that has fluid water (or
something) for life. This allows a rough estimate (dependant on what constructed
formula one uses to generate an estimate; 200 / 400 billion planets holding
life with <100 / 200 billion being potential habitable to complex life and 10
/ 20 billion holding (undefined) intelligent life. From this, one can extrapolate
down to consider those that might have recognisable comparable human attributes
if not actually hominoid.
Drawing a comparison with the
time taken for life to start on earth, with earths existence put at 4.8 billion
years and life beginning at 3.7 billion years. Puts the limited scope of time that humans have been in
existence (200K - 1milion years) into a miniscule universal context. As the universe
is assumed to be 15 billion years old, it has possibly taken a third of that
time to form the physical structure of life. Perhaps then, of those planets holding life some 33 / 66
billion might be capable of complex life. And given that humans have only been on the steps
to human evolution 1> million
years ago, it could suggested that 1 to
2 billion planets have high conscious comparable intelligent life. So far, there is no way of knowing just what form
of life that life could take, or to what extent that any could be ‘human’ but just
to be positive, there are some planets that will compare with earth onto which
one can bestow the humanity status. . .
Less than 2 billion ‘intelligent’
planets seeded throughout the universe is not a lot given the immensity and unknown boundary
limits, moreover in extremist, any number beyond two intelligent occupied planets,
creates a problem and might be as far as one can go to outline a probable answer
to the question of; is there life out there?.
The problem is this answer does
not wholly satisfy a desire to know. So let just assume that there is
comparable life out there, another intelligent occupied planet and submit
another perhaps solvable question; if there is life ‘out there’, why is it not evidentially
here?
If it
has taken humans 1m year to raise this far, enough to ask the question and
using this as a percentage of the overall time it has existed against the
number of planets holding undefined
intelligent life <2 billion then there may be X + 1 planets in the universe
that has life “as we know it”. This may be a conservative or generous figure as
you wish but it does extent the bounds of possibility to consider that there is
similar intelligent life and leads to the substitute question, why is it not detected
here?
The petition response was wise
enough to leave the original question open and could do little with the purported
evidence. That there has been a number of reported visual contacts of debatable
and contested veracity, the scarcity and irregular nature of such evidence
leads one to think that something is occurring that is philosophically tenable.
But that the reason for the lack of hard evidence is a conjecture that might
best be approached by looking at the known obstacles to achieve an evidential presence.
The first obstacle would be the gaining
of a trappable power source, abundant enough and universal to cover distance.
This is the initial driver that an intelligence may require to move beyond the
limits of its own confines. So far, using SF, that energy source might be ION
drive, dark matter/energy, quantum drive, FTL propulsion, worm hole, spatial
slip, gravity+mass divergence and even require the creation of unnatural exotic
materials to handle energy stress . So far humans have reactive propulsion,
primitive ion drive and maybe at some stage nuclear or fusion drive. None of
this energy source is remotely possible within the realms of realistic science
or usable enough to allow practical space travel.
Assuming that an abundance of energy
was on stream and side stepping SF theoretical time or spatial short cuts,
distance is the next conceivable barrier. With the nearest galaxy being 25000
LY away means that travel through normal space by an intelligence could exceed its
life span or demand considerable extend life, hibernation and mass inertia
control. So, for this barrier, distance and life span seem a restrictive
limiting factor and as far as can be determined these are not currently feasible
dynamics to overcome, even for humans to exit the galaxy seems a fanciful and
remote idea in favour of them remaining planetary system localised. For
example, the oldest living thing may be pine trees at 4000+ years old followed
by reptile at 150+ years and with humans coming at 100+, it does not bode well
to consider that an extended life span will be sufficient to solve the time
required for galactic excursions.
If life span, development time,
feasible energy and distance are not problems, then behind these are the questions
of technical ability, organisation and resources application. Judging by human
example although the technical ability is growing and resources are available
on a global scale to enter space, the organisation ability is lacking as it is corralled
by cultural and economic structures and an undefined imperative drive to
justify the effort. These are sufficient species strictures to hamper rapid progress
or limit excursions to solar extremes and in this, there is no reason to
suppose that an alien intelligence would not experience a similar path of
constraints.
Even if the above limits were
solvable, there remain the problems of resource depletion, the consumptive factors
that can lead to an atrophy of life and overall entropy of a life systems
before gaining mastery of localised space travel. In the short time that humans
have been effective 10/20k years it has
manage to reach a precipice of extinction. However, being generous, if humans
survive for another 10k years they may just solve these tertiary problems to
become solar system travellers that will bring them up to the abyss of
cosmological space but, how much further?
Now one could think, as above,
that there are more than enough obstacles to stop any likelihood of
intelligences being able to roam a galaxy yet the questions still persist, is there life ‘out there’ and why is it not
here? Some of this need to know, is derived from humans own self centred belief
systems, but extending the unknowns to other posit like; what is to be gained
by extending such effort into space journeys, why would ‘it’ want to, or to being
able to do so in enough viable numerical strength, only complexes the issue.
Therefore in all likely hood if
there is life out there, which given the statistical possibility, ‘life’ can be
certain; there are clearly barriers to say that it is unlikely to arrive here under
its own control. But just supposing an intelligence solved all the problems
against it, it will have had to amass the wealth of sustainable knowledge over enough
time to perhaps be able to do things with some impunity that humans cannot
dream of. Just maybe, would it not have established flitting or undetectable
temporal existence to suit its own purpose, to establish a untraceable
inspection if it wished and maybe earth is not even special amongst the billions of other intelligent planets
to have to portray any great interest in it. Currently one could assume that an
affirmative answer to the question of life out there will be solvable at a
microbial level soon, one that has little challenging impact on humans’ self-interest
nor raise any concern in populations. However, with anything more substantial,
might it be best to have the comfort of the uncertainty of knowing, at least
for now, but what about in 96 years with an indisputable visitor?
The most difficult part of
offering an answer to the perennial idea of there being other comparable life
‘out there’ is that humans may never reach the opportunity state of being able
to answer the question directly. For them it will have been an empty lonely
place and their own existence in the universe may have been of no importance
what so ever. They will have blinked out of existence and not to be missed and with
no thing to know what they were, now that is a disheartening thought. The
futility of human existence!
© Renot 2011
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Labels: Aliens exist
