Advanced alien civilisations are absent from local universe – or we are too stupid to find them
I started reading this and thought "Journalists!" but then I decided that it was not too bad (not sure which universe the reporter thinks alien civilisations might be in -the Multiverse?).
Nathalie Cabrol's words were never truer: "We tend to ask questions in
the way we do. But what kind of thought process an alien civilisation
may have, we really don't know. We are somewhat advanced, but we are a
teenage civilisation. We are playing with toys and technologies but we
don't know the rules very well yet."
ET, are you there? The Green Bank Telescope is one of many radio telescopes being used by SETI to detect alien radio signalsJarek Tuszynski / Wikimedia Commons
Kepler-444 hosts five ancient Earth-sized planets.Tiago Campante/Peter DevineAlien
civilisations are either extremely rare or absent from our local
universe, or as a species we are not advanced enough to detect them.
Michael Garrett, from the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy,
used radio measurements to scan the cosmos for waste heat – thought to
be a signature of advanced alien life able to harness huge amounts of
energy.
Kardashev Scale
Firstly, it is worth
noting scientists have categories for how advanced any alien
civilisation is depending on the power available to them – called the
Kardashev Scale. Humans are almost Type I, being able to harvest resources from our own planet and produce energy equivalent to the solar insolation on Earth.
ADVERTISING
Type
II is a civilisation capable of harnessing all of the radiation energy
from its own star. Type III civilisations can harness energy on the
scale of their own galaxy. Kardashev Type III civilisations are expected
to be detectable in the mid-infrared part of the spectrum through the
emission of significant waste heat.
Candidate Galaxies
Previously,
astronomers had identified several hundred candidate galaxies where
there are unusually extreme mid-IR emissions. However, this kind of
emission can also be generated by natural astrophysical processes.
Garrett looked at these candidate galaxies with radio measurements
and found most of the systems have an emission best explained by
natural processes – most likely dust generated and heated by regions of
massive star formation.
"The new analysis suggests that
this is probably an understatement, and that advanced Kardashev Type III
civilisations basically don't exist in the local Universe. In my view,
it means we can all sleep safely in our beds tonight - an alien invasion
doesn't seem at all likely!" Garrett said.
"Some of
these systems definitely demand further investigation but those already
studied in detail turn out to have a natural astrophysical explanation
too. It's very likely that the remaining systems also fall into this
category but of course it's worth checking just in case."
However,
Garrett also noted it is concerning that Type III civilisations do not
appear to exist, as it is contrary to what is predicted by our physical
laws used to explain the universe. "We're missing an important part of
the jigsaw puzzle here," he said.
"Perhaps advanced
civilisations are so energy efficient that they produce very low waste
heat emission products - our current understanding of physics makes that
a difficult thing to do. What's important is to keep on searching for
the signatures of extra-terrestrial intelligence until we fully
understand just what is going on."
Humans are too stupid to find aliens
Another explanation for the lack of contact with advanced civilisations is that we are just too primitive
to detect the signals they may be sending out. Nathalie Cabrol, who
leads the search for alien life at the Seti Institute in California,
told the Daily Mail that
while we might find a simple lifeform outside our planet within the
coming decades, anything more advanced is off our radar – quite
literally.
"See how much progress we have made in the
past 100 years. If there is a civilisation out there that is only 1,000
years older than we are, who knows what type of technology, or what type
of process, they've put into communicating with others. We're just
scratching the surface here. We're looking at the universe from our own
standpoint," said Cabrol.
"We tend to ask questions in
the way we do. But what kind of thought process an alien civilisation
may have, we really don't know. We are somewhat advanced, but we are a
teenage civilisation. We are playing with toys and technologies but we
don't know the rules very well yet."
No comments:
Post a Comment