Title: Todays Overview
1Todays Overview
- Writing Assignment Update
- The Drake Equation (LIU Ch 11)
- SETI (LIU Ch 11)
- The Fermi Paradox (LIU Ch 13)
- Video Kidnapped by UFOs?, The True Story of
Alien Abductions - Assignments for next week
- Short quiz on the previous lecture (Life in our
Solar System and Extrasolar Planet Detection) and
this lecture - Please take 1 page to describe your impressions
of the video we watch today. - Read an online excerpt from the Lewis Clark
Journal (3/23-4/27/1805. - http//www.pbs.org/lewisandclark/archive/idx_jou.
html
2Writing Assignment
- Today the mission destination tables were due,
but there is an extension until Friday (5/28) at
5pm. Please email me your table by then. - Your paper will be due during class in the final
week of classes, although you may turn it in
earlier if you like. Your paper should be 3-5
typed pages. - Remember that during the final class, you will be
doing a 5 minute presentation that summarizes
your mission.
3Gendenkan experiments
- Do you think we are currently being visited by
alien spaceships on a regular basis? - Do you think primitive life exists elsewhere in
the Universe? - Do you think other advanced civilizations exist
somewhere else in the Universe? - Do you think humans will colonize other Solar
Systems?
4SETI
- The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
- According to Merriam Webster, intelligence is the
ability to learn or understand or to deal with
new or trying situations - SETI defines intelligence as a civilization from
which we could potentially receive a signal (ie.
radio). - Nb The first use of radio on Earth occurred in
the early 1890s. High frequency radios (ones
that can penetrate the Earths ionsphere) werent
developed until after WWII. Should we expect to
receive signals from other civilizations?
5Fundamental Question
- Are we alone out here in the Universe?
- Ie. Are we special?
- The Weak Anthropic Principle if the laws of
nature had been slightly different, then humans
would not have transpired. - The Strong Anthropic Principle the laws of
nature were established so that humans could
prosper.
6The Great Demotions
- In the 17th century, humans had thought that
Earth was the only world. Galileo proved this
wrong by revealing that the Moon certainly does
not possess a smooth and polished surface and
that other worlds might look just like the face
of the Earth itself. Wrong! - The Earth is at the center of the Universe.
Wrong! - The Sun is at the center of the Universe. Wrong!
- Our Milky Way is the only galaxy. Wrong!
- Our galaxy is at the center of the Universe
(center of the expansion of the Universe). We
have a unique vantage point on space. Wrong! - No other star has planets. Wrong!
- If our position in space doesnt reveal our
special role, our position in time does Weve
been in the Universe since The Beginning (give or
take a few days). Weve been given special
responsibilities by the Creator. The Earth is
6,000 yrs old. Wrong! - There is something special about our motion here
on the Earth. Newton called this a privileged
frame of reference. Albert Einstein later
postulated that all inertial frames of
reference hold the same physical standards.
This is his Special Theory of Relativity. Wrong! - Well, even if our position, our epoch, or motion,
and our world are not unique, maybe we are.
Were different from the other animals. Were
specially created. The particular devotion of
the Creator of the Universe is evident in us.
Then Charles Darwin demonstrated the power of
evolution, and that we are descendants of
animals. Wrong! - Even if were closely related to some of the
other animals, were different not just in
degree, but in kind on what really matters
reasoning, self-consciousness, tool making,
ethics, altruism, religion, language, nobility of
character. Wrong! - Maybe were humiliatingly related to apes, but at
least were the best there is. God and angels
aside, were the only intelligent beings in the
Universe. Wrong?
Information from Pale Blue Dot by Carl Sagan
7The Drake Equation
x flife
x fciv
- This is a variation of the Drake equation first
expressed in 1961 by Cornell University
astronomer Frank Drake. Dr. Drake is known as
the father of SETI, and has been a pioneer in the
field since its inception. - He and others were optimistic about the fractions
and they used this to begin SETI.
8What we think we know
- Nstars200,000,000,000
- fhp?
- Fraction of stars with planets 0.1-1.0
Planets found to date are most common around
metal rich stars. But still 10 of stars
surveyed for Jovians are known to have at least
1. And the surveys are just now reaching far
enough out to detect our own Jupiter if it were
around another star. Some believe fplanet1.
9Which Stars make Good Suns?
- They must be old enough so that life could arise
(Billion years) - this rules out the massive O B main sequence
stars - They must allow for stable planetary orbits
- this rules out binary and multiple star systems
(about half) - They must have relatively large habitable zones
- region where large
- terrestrial planets
- could have a surface
- temperature that
- allows water to exist
- as a liquid
10Habitable Planets
- fplanet 0.1 to 1.0
- But fhp0.01 to 0.1 (1/10th of fplanet)
- Long enough life 1 Billion years
- Large enough Habitable zone
- Why dont we know the exact value?
11Detection Problem
- Earth is 1010 times fainter than the sun at
optical wavelengths - 106 times fainter
- at 10 microns
- At 10 pc, habitable
- zone is only 0.2
- (Earths orbit appears as a dime at 6 miles)
- (Earths diameter would be a dime at 150,000
miles)
12Future observatories
- Kepler
- Planetary transits
- Terrestrial Planet Finder
- Interferometry mission to image Earth-like
planets - fhp in the Solar Neighborhood will be coming soon!
13Flife?
- So what is the fraction of habitable planets
where life actually forms? - Again, life seems ready to start given the right
environment. This seems to hold for the Earth,
atleast. - What do we know about the other planets in the
Solar System?
ppts\mforce.wav
14Our Best Candidate for Extraterrestrial Life
- Mars is the best candidate to host life for
several reasons - Mars was apparently warm wet for some periods
in its distant past - It had the chemical ingredients for life
- It still has significant amounts of water ice
- Pockets of underground liquid water might exist
if there is still volcanic heat - Mars exploration focuses on finding evidence of
water, biological activity and ultimately fossils.
Mars at 2001 opposition Hubble Space Telescope
image
15Fossils on Mars?
- If we never find fossils on Mars, then flife is
probably small. - If we ever find fossils on Mars, then flife is
probably 1.0. - Again, stay tuned
16On what fraction of living worlds do
civilizations develop? fciv
- Again, we have only 1 example (1 for 1, or 1 in a
billion)? - Certainly fciv is not 1.0 since some planets are
doomed to be destroyed by parent star or large
meteor collisions, but it could be a large
fraction. - Mayr is not optimistic. He points out that only
one branch of bacteria has ever made it to
multicellular status. - Perhaps all complex life evolved from a single
lucky bacteria. - Lets assume fciv is only 0.01 (1 in a 100 living
worlds develop a civilization).
17Civilizations out there now? fnow
- Carl Sagan and others pointed out that technical
civilizations may be short lived. - Most of Suns history we havent been here and at
most well be here for about 20 of the Suns
life. - That is we might destroy ourselves (and maybe all
advanced life) - Nuclear War
- Biological warfare
- Run out of resources (overpopulation)
- Run away greenhouse
- Or we are destroyed
- Parent star dies
- Nearby supernova
- Major asteroid impact
- If lifespan is 100 years, then fnow0.00000001
- Lets assume fnow0.001 (10 million year life)
18Putting it togetherNumber of Civilizations in
the Galaxy right now
- Nciv Nstarsx fhpx flife x fciv x fnow
- Nstars 200,000,000,000
- fhp0.01 to 0.1
- flife0.1 to 1.0
- fciv0.01
- fnow0.001
- Ftotal 1 in 100,000,000 to 1 in a million.
- Nciv2,000 to 200,000 today
- But there have been 2,000,000 to 200,000,000
civilizations before. - Can we find each other?
19Practical Example of the Drake Equation
- How many piano tuners are in LA?
- What are the relevant numbers?
- Can we accurately estimate this number?
20So how many piano tuners are in LA?
- How many people live in LA? 9,000,000
- On average, how many people are there in a LA
household? 3 - How many households get their pianos tuned
regularly? 1/100 - How many times per year does a household get
their piano tuned? 1/2 - How long does it take a piano tuner to tune a
piano, including travel time? 4 hrs. - How many hours does the average piano tuner work
a day? 8 hrs. How many days a week? 5 How many
weeks in the year? 50 - Calculations
- 9,000,000 people 1 household/3 people
3,000,000 households - 3,000,000 households 1 tunes regularly/100
households 300,000 households tune regularly - 300,000 households tune regularly1/2 tune each
year 150,000 pianos tuned in 1 year - 1 piano tuner can tune 2000 hours/year1/4hours50
0 pianos/year - This means that we calculate there should be 30
piano tuners who work full time in Los Angeles.
According to the Yahoo! yellow pages, there are
43 piano tuning services in Los Angeles County.
Even without doing any statistical studies, we
were within a factor of 2 within the real value!
21What types of civilizations are possible?
- Planetary civilizations (Type I) they use the
resources of their home planet. - Stellar civilizations (Type II) they use many
of the resources from their host star. This
includes reworking their own Solar System. - Galactic (Type III) civilizations they use the
resources of their entire galaxy. - Dyson Spheres idea that a civilization would
build a sphere around a star, which would collect
and utilize the most energy possible. The sphere
would emit radiation in the infrared.
M.C. Escher's Concentric Rinds
22Can we find these other civilizations?
- SETI has been searching for intelligent life over
the past 40 years. - Frank Drake started Project Ozuma where he
searched for artificial radio emission from a
number of nearby Sun-like stars. - For a short amount of time NASA was involved in
SETI, but then it withdrew its funding. Now SETI
investigations are carried out by the SETI
Institute and UC Berkeley.
23What types of signals are there?
- Signals used for local communications.
- With our technology, we could only detect these
signals from a civilization less than 1 lyr from
us. - Signals used between a civilizations home planet
and a nearby colony or some other spacecraft. - With our technology, we could only detect these
signals from a civilization within a few lyrs. - Intentional beacons that broadcast to anyone who
may be listening. - With our technology, we could only detect these
signals from a civilization out to a few tens of
lyrs.
24Search for ExtraTerrestrial Intelligence
- Maybe travel is much harder than we think. What
about communication instead of spaceships? - That is the idea behind the SETI program.
- Use radio telescopes to listen for encoded radio
signals. - search strategies are used to decide which stars
to observe - now they scan millions of frequencies at once
- Due to low chance of success and large amount of
time required, SETI is now privately funded.
25SETI
Arecibo radio observatory
- Radio SETI
- Project Phoenix (largest program to date) ended
March 5, 2004. - Searched all 710 star systems within 150
light-years of Earth. They searched 70 million
radio channels simultaneously. Nothing! - Does imply there are not large numbers of
civilizations transmitting at many frequencies
Frank Drake (2004) - Other programs SERENDIP, META (Megachannel
ExtraTerrestrial Assay), BETA (Billion-channel
Extraterrestrial Assay) have tried other
strategies Nothing! - Problem theres a lot of radio background these
days. Its difficult to distinguish a true
alien signal. - Optical SETI
- Optical signals are a less efficient means of
transmission for civilizations, but this still
seems like a viable means of communication. The
Allen Telescope Array will be fully operational
this year (?), and it will be maintained by SETI
and UC Berkeley. - There are some unresolved events, but all have
lacked reproducibility. Weve never been able to
find any of them again.
Allen Telescope Array Element Prototype
26Sending our own beacon
- In 1974, we sent out our own beacon to the stars.
Specifically we sent notice of ourselves to M13,
which is a globular cluster that has a few
hundred thousand stars. - M13 is 21,000 lyrs away, so a return signal
wouldnt be received for atleast 42,000 yrs! - Many people in the public argue that we should
not be so quick to send out information about
ourselves. They think we should just sit back
and listen first!
This is the signal sent to M13. From left to
right are numbers from one to ten, atoms
including hydrogen and carbon, some interesting
molecules, DNA, a human with description, basics
of our Solar System, and basics of the sending
telescope.
27Where are the Aliens?
- Assuming, like us, most civilizations take 5
billion yrs to arise. - the Galaxy is 10 billion yrs old, 5 billion yrs
older than Earth - IF there are other civilizations, the first could
have arisen as early as 5 billion yrs ago - there should be many civilizations which are
millions or billions of years ahead of us - they have had plenty of time to colonize the
Galaxy - Will we colonize the galaxy? With modest
improvements in technology it is plausible that - within a few millennia, out of curiosity or
boredom, we could colonize a few nearby stars - in 100,000 years, our descendants could spread
out to 100s of light years - in a few tens of millions of years, we could have
outposts throughout the Galaxy
28Where are the Aliens?
- Sowhere is everybody? Why havent they visited
us? - this is known as Fermis paradox
- named after physicist Enrico Fermi, who first
asked the question in 1950 - Fermi also produced first controlled nuclear
reaction. - Stronger version Time to evolve civilization is
longer than the time to colonize the galaxy. So
it should be winner takes all!
29Maybe civilizations are too far away, or they
dont know about us?
- TPF will only work to 10 pc, and it might take us
a long time to reach 100 pc. - Also, our tv signals only reach 10s of pc.
- 100 pc sphere has a volume of 4.1x106 pc3.
- Includes only 1.7 million stars.
- So from our fractions, thats from 0.02 to 2
civilizations. - Maybe were just not looking far enough?
30But TPF Turned Around
- Ben Zuckerman (UCLA) has used the possibility of
TPF to argue against intelligent life. - If we can search for life bearing planets nearby,
why couldnt aliens find us? - He points out that the Solar System is moving
relative to other stars so our neighbors are
constantly changing.
31Solar Motion
- The Sun and other stars are moving at about 220
km/sec around the Galaxy. - But we arent moving identically. Typical stars
move 10 or 20 km/sec faster or slower than this
average rate. - Sun moves 16.5 km/sec
- compared to local average.
- This means our nearest neighbors are constantly
changing. - 400,000,000 stars have passed by since the
atmosphere became oxygenic! - Each was that close for an average of 6 million
years. - But no one appears to have
stopped by.
32Or did they?
- Could we be aliens?
- Fossil record shows a direct link from extremely
primitive life to us.
- Some have suggested that the early Earth was
seeded with primitive life. - But why not just send intelligent colonists or
robots? - To date, there are no artifacts on the Moon, Mars
or the Earth of any previous intelligence. - Most of Mars and the moon have now been mapped to
roughly boulder sized objects. Little if any
erosion on the moon during the past 4 Billion
years.
33Possible Solutions to Fermis Paradox
- We are alone.
- One or more of our fractions is way too
optimistic. - Earths are rarer than we think.
- Moon needed to stabilize rotation. Otherwise our
axis would often tip over creating climate
extremes. - Jupiter needed to sweep inner solar system of
debris. Otherwise bombardments would cause 100
times more mass extinctions. - Terrestrial planets are much rarer than Jovians.
We were an accident during the formation of the
sun. - Life almost never becomes complex.
- Lucky bacteria theory
- Civilizations are extremely rare and we are the
first one to arise - Then we are unique, the first components of the
Universe to attain self-awareness.
34Possible Solutions to Fermis Paradox
- Civilizations are common, but no one has
colonized the Galaxy. - Perhaps interstellar travel is even harder or
costlier than we imagine - But every civilization must have resisted the
urge. - Perhaps most civilizations have no desire to
travel or colonize - Perhaps most civilizations have destroyed
themselves before they could explore - Will we explore the stars, will we happen to
destroy ourselves first? - There is a Galactic civilization.
- It has deliberately concealed itself from us
- Are we the Galaxys rookies, who may be on the
verge of a great adventure? This implies the
aliens are obeying the prime directive by not
disturbing the us.
35More questions than answers.
- Life and even intelligent life may (or may not)
be a natural and common result of the
evolutionary processes of the universe. - Life may (or may not) be common.
- We may (or may not) colonize the galaxy.
- Alien intelligence may (or may not) know were
here. - We may (or may not) evolve into completely new
forms.
36UFOs Are aliens among us?
- Appearance
- Jet planes first introduced at the end of World
War II ? public aware of fast-moving aircrafts - First UFO claim in June 1947
- Flew erratic, like a saucer ? flying saucer
- 50 of the public believe in the existence of
UFOs
- Project Blue Book US Air Force Investigation
- 20-year active investigation
- 90 of claims discarded
- Remaining 10 indeterminate
- Lack of proof is no proof
37Crashed Aliens in Roswell, NM
An alien spaceship?
- Known facts
- Rancher found crash remnants July 1947
- Military personnel picked up the debris
- Remains shown next day in Fort Worth, TX
- Claimed to be remains of a weather balloon
- Claims by Stanton Friedman (1978)
- Crash an alien spacecraft
- Alien bodies also recovered
- Story hushed up by military
- Analysis
- Project Mogul balloon used for secret monitoring
of Soviet tests - Witness accounts in seventies contradicted or
discounted - Motive for secrecy not clear
- Ability to keep secret highly doubtful
38Area 51
- Aka. Groom Lake
- A secret military facility about 90 miles north
of Las Vegas. A 6 x 10 mile plot of land, which
consists of a dry lake bed used for landing jets. - Originally, the site was used to test
experimental jets and other aircraft. - Nowadays, Area 51 is notoriously associated with
US government UFO conspiracy theories. - If you cross the Area 51 border, you get arrested
and a 600 fine.
39Crop Circles, Abductions, etc.
- Crop circles
- Claim too accurate and too quick to be done by
humans - Shown to be possible, and there have been
organized competitions in crop circle making - Some are admitted to be pranks
- Abductions
- Sleep paralysis common dream during rapid eye
movement (REM) - Also known during day dreaming
40Ancient Visitations
- Ancient drawings
- Claim pictures of aliens
- Counterclaim other possibilities abound
- Nazca markings
- Claim needed unavailable knowledge
- Counterclaim did not need unavailable knowledge
- Claim could only be seen from space
- Counterclaim could be form of worship
- Egyptian pyramids
- Claim Egyptians could not build the pyramids by
themselves - Counterclaim it was shown that the pyramids
could be constructed with tools available then
41Cover-Up Scientific Disinterest
- Cover-up
- Motive to avoid alarm 50 already think that
aliens have landed - U.S. Government is notoriously unable to keep
secrets known by many for a long time. - All other governments need to participate in the
conspiracy, unless the aliens just chose to
negotiate with the US. - Scientific disinterest
- Stems from lack of evidence, not disinterest.
- If there was serious evidence, or the chance to
obtain serious evidence, scientists would jump at
it.