Title: Extra-Solar Planets
1Searching for Extraterrestrial Civilizations
2The Drake Equation
In 1961, Frank Drake synthesized an equation to
estimate the number of civilizations currently
communicating in our Galaxy.
- Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- where
- N the number of stars in the Milky Way
- fp the fraction of stars that have
habitable planets - np the number of habitable planets per system
- fl the fraction of habitable planets where
life evolves - fi the fraction of life-planets that evolve
intelligence - fc the fraction of civilizations that
communicate - fL the fraction of the stars life that the
civilization exists
3Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- The number of stars in the Milky Way is
relatively well known. We can measure the
density of stars in the vicinity of the Sun and
we can estimate how the light from stars changes
with galactic radius. The Milky Way contains
roughly 200,000,000,000 stars.
4Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
In the past few years, we have detected planets
around many stars. But stable orbits about
binary stars are almost impossible. (Over time,
the planet would either be ejected into space,
crash into one of the stars, or be thrown into a
very eccentric orbit.)
- Unless the two stars are very far apart, binary
stars cannot have planets. This eliminates
perhaps half the stars in the sky.
5Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- During the first billion years of the Solar
System, all the planets were constantly being
bombarded from space by debris left over from the
protostellar disk. Such planets are not
habitable.
6Main Sequence Lifetimes
O, B, and A stars dont live long enough for life
to develop. Also, M stars are so faint that
their habitable zones are negligibly small.
7Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- Finally, most metal-poor stars dont have planets
(or, at least, Jovian planets). This excludes
most stars with metallicities less than the Sun.
1/3 1/2 1 1.8 3
Metallicity (compared to Sun)
After you eliminate binary stars, O,B,A, and M
stars, and metal-poor stars, only about 10 of
stars are left!
8Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- If Jupiter-size planets spiral in from the outer
solar system, they will destroy all the habitable
planets in their path.
But this doesnt mean that planets cant form
after the in-spiral. Also, their moons might be
habitable!
9Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- A star may have many planets orbiting it, but in
order to support life, it must have planets in
the habitable zone.
If the planet is too far from the Sun, there is
no energy to support life. If too close to the
Sun, the planet will not have any liquid water
(or similar compound) to move nutrients around.
10Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- In the Solar System, np ? 1, since Mars borders
the habitable zone. But the size of this zone
depends on the luminosity of the star the
brighter the star, the larger the zone.
Note that this assumes solar heating. As we have
seen, there are other ways of heating a planet.
(For example, Europa is heated by tides, and
perhaps could have life in its oceans.)
11Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- There may other factors that limit the
development of life. For example - Planets without large moons may have the
direction of their spin axis shift over time.
This may produce long term climatic shifts. - Planets with very large moons may have unstable
crusts due to tides.
Mars
0 2 4
6 8
10 Million Years ago
12Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- This is out of the range of astronomy. Take a
guess.
13Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- Not all intelligent life can or wants to
communicate - Maybe theyre dolphins
- Maybe they have a Congress
14Ncivil N ? fp ? np ? fl ? fi ? fc ? fL
- Our Sun spent the first 4.5 billion years of its
life without hosting a civilization capable of
communication. We only achieved this capability
50 years ago. How long will we keep it?? - Extreme Optimistic Case we continue as a
civilization for the rest of the lifetime of the
Sun fL 1/2 - Extreme Pessimistic Case we destroy ourselves
in the next 50 years fL 100 / 10,000,000,000
0.00000001
Now multiply the numbers together. What do you
get???
15Distance to the Nearest Civilization
- Lets approximate the Milky Way as a large disk
2000 light years
50,000 light years
The volume of the Galaxy V 1.5 ? 1013 cubic
light years
The density of communicating civilizations is
Ncivil / V
The distance between civilizations is
16How Long to Say Hello?
17Extraterrestrial Communication
- Radio waves are least effected by interstellar
extinction. They also require the least energy
to transmit (each photon has very low energy) and
are easy to detect. Weve been transmitting them
for some time.
The atmosphere is transparent to radio waves.
Light at these wavelengths can not only enter the
Earth from space, but it can also depart the
Earth for space.
18SETI The Search for Extraterrestrial
Intelligence
- Rather than transmit (and wait for a reply), we
can listen for other civilizations. (But what
frequency? Will it sound like noise?)
19The Von Neumann Machine
- Before we start, consider
- The age of the universe 13,700,000,000 yrs
- The age of our solar system 4,500,000,000
yrs - The age of our written history 5,000
yrs - The age of our technology 100 yrs
Where will our technology be in another 100 (or
200 or 1000) years?
20N 1?
- Suppose there is at least 1 extra-terrestrial
civilization out there that is more advanced than
us by at least a few hundred years. Suppose at
least one person in that civilization wants to be
famous. He/She/It could - Build a spaceship that could go to another star.
In 1977, NASA did this. They built two Voyager
spacecrafts, which flew by Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus, and Neptune. In the 1990s, these
satellites passed the orbit of Pluto, and both
will eventually reach nearby stars (in 25,000
years).
21N 1?
- Suppose there is at least 1 extra-terrestrial
civilization out there that is more advanced than
us by at least a few hundred years. Suppose at
least one person in that civilization wants to be
famous. He/She/It could - Build a spaceship that could go to another star.
- Program the spaceship/robots to look for a planet
or an asteroid around that star
Voyager did this as well. While passing by the
outer planets, it found many new moons.
22N 1?
- Suppose there is at least 1 extra-terrestrial
civilization out there that is more advanced than
us by at least a few hundred years. Suppose at
least one person in that civilization wants to be
famous. He/She/It could - Build a spaceship that could go to another star.
- Program the spaceship/robots to look for a planet
or an asteroid around that star - Program the spaceship/robots to land and explore
the object
Weve been doing this for the past 40 years
23N 1?
- Suppose there is at least 1 extra-terrestrial
civilization out there that is more advanced than
us by at least a few hundred years. Suppose at
least one person in that civilization wants to be
famous. He/She/It could - Build a spaceship that could go to another star.
- Program the spaceship/robots to look for a planet
or an asteroid around that star - Program the spaceship/robots to land and explore
the object - Program the spaceship/robots to build an
unmistakable sign, indicating the existence of
the person - Program the spaceship/robots to use the materials
on the planet to duplicate itself twice. The
duplicates would then fly off to other stars and
repeat the process.
24N 1?
- If someone could build a Von Neumann machine
(even one moving as slow as Voyager), then - After 70,000 yr, there would be a sign up in
1 star system - After 140,000 yr, there would be a sign up in
3 star systems - After 210,000 yr, there would be a sign up in
7 star systems - After 280,000 yr, there would be a sign up in
15 star systems - After 350,000 yr, there would be a sign up in
31 star systems - After 420,000 yr, there would be a sign up in
63 star systems - " " " " "
" " " " " " " - After 2,590,000 years, there would be a sign up
in over 200,000,000,000 star systems. There
would be a sign around every star in the Galaxy!
And remember, the Galaxy is about 13,000,000,000
years old.
25N 1?
- Even at the speed of the Voyager spacecraft, it
would only take only 2,590,000 years to populate
the entire Milky Way Galaxy with signs announcing
your presence. This is 0.02 the age of the
Galaxy. - Why hasnt someone/thing done this already.
Where is the sign in our Solar System???
26Final Exam
- Final exam in
- 108 Forum (Section 2) and
- 111 Forum (Section 4)
- at 800 a.m.(!) on Thursday, December 18
- See you then!