Newsweek stated that "half of the 100 billion suns in the Milky Way have the status to support life on one of its planets, much like Earth." I myself am a firm believer that there are numerous planets in the galaxy that support life, both more developed and less developed than our own kind. The only thing we need to prove it is flooding space exploration agencies such as NASA with an unimaginable amount of money, and the invention of a ship that can maneuver much further than the extent of our moon, Mars, and beyond. --------------------------------- By Andrea Pitzer, Special for USA TODAY The search for intelligent life in the universe is still on. Despite the absence of interstellar tourists to date, astronomers at the SETI Institute (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) are hoping that we are not alone. And with new spacecraft to locate planets circling nearby stars, as well as more effective listening devices here at home, scientists have more tools at their disposal to find Earth-like planets or signs of other life forms. But the possibility of intelligent life is what interests scientists at SETI. Using SETI's 42-antenna Allen Telescope Array in Northern California, they can listen in many directions for unusual radio signals coming from space. According to institute astronomer Seth Shostak, Carl Sagan posited that more than a million civilizations might be capable of broadcasting signals. Scientist and author Isaac Asimov hypothesized that the number might be half that. SETI astronomer Frank Drake has estimated the number might be closer to 10,000. FIND MORE STORIES IN: Earth | Cornell University | NASA | Contact | Carl Sagan | Isaac Asimov | Enrico Fermi | Johannes Kepler | Mario Livio | Seth Shostak | Epicurus | Seti READERS: Do you think there is life on other planets? These represent the more optimistic calculations that have been put forward, but if these scientists are even in the ballpark, Shostak believes the Allen Telescope Array may well find extraterrestrial life in the next two dozen years. Meanwhile, NASA's Kepler telescope is collecting and transmitting data on a targeted band of stars up to 3,000 light-years from our sun, looking for planets that might be capable of hosting life as we know it. What's more, scientists say any evidence for or against interstellar company probably will tell us even more about ourselves. "Finding extraterrestrial life will provide crucial insights concerning the origins of life," says astrophysicist Mario Livio of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI). "The ultimate mind-changing idea is, 'What if we find something?' " says SETI astronomer Jill Tarter, who was the inspiration for Jodie Foster's alien-hunting character in the 1997 movie Contact and who was a consultant on the film. "That 'something' is going to be so different from us. It would hold up a mirror to the entire planet and trivialize the differences among us that we find so incredibly divisive." But if SETI does nothing but change our perspective as humans, she says, it will still qualify as "one of the most profound endeavors in history." An ancient concept Around 300 B.C., the Greek philosopher Epicurus wrote that the universe is full of other worlds where life might exist. But some contemporary skepticism about extraterrestrials comes out of a lunchtime chat at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico in 1950, when physicist Enrico Fermi famously asked, "Where is everybody?" If there were Earth-like planets and other forms of life, Fermi suggested, we should have been visited by extraterrestrials long ago. A decade later, Cornell University astronomer Frank Drake performed the first SETI experiment, Project Ozma, listening for unusual radio signals from other solar systems. In 1961, he came up with the "Drake equation," a formula designed to calculate how many intelligent life forms we might be able to contact based on estimates of the number of stars in the galaxy, the likelihood of habitable planets, the odds of intelligent life arising there, and the chances that life will send detectable signals into space. But with the exception of a lone signal recorded at an observatory outside Delaware, Ohio, in 1977 and never found again, no extraordinary emissions have been confirmed. Billions and billions of stars… Does this discourage alien hunters? Not at all, says Tarter, who notes that the Milky Way alone may contain as many as 400 billion stars. Concluding there is no extraterrestrial life based on current data, she says, is equivalent to "deciding that the ocean has no fish on the basis of one glass of water." Tarter also points to discoveries of more Earth-like planets, as well as evidence of water on Mars and "extremophiles" here on Earth. Extremophile organisms, she explains, can survive and even thrive at the bottom of the ocean, in nuclear reactor waters and in pure salt crystals. "It appears that there's more habitable real estate than we once thought," Tarter says, which suggests planets previously thought too hostile might actually be capable of hosting life. But researchers such as Robin Hanson of George Mason University in Fairfax, Va., wonder whether the big picture really looks so promising when it comes to advanced life. Hanson supports SETI but finds it telling that humans haven't come across anything yet. "It has been remarkable and somewhat discouraging," Hanson says, "that the universe is so damn big and so damn dead." Seeking the 'Jodie Foster experience' But if life does, or did, exist elsewhere, STScI's Livio suggests that finding elementary proof of it might be possible within 30 years and that Mars could give up more secrets before then. As far as how we'll find alien life, Livio says, "I will be thrilled if SETI gets there, but I will be amazed if they do." He suggests that "baby steps" of research — a slow progression from finding more Earth-like planets to investigating their atmospheres and looking for signs of rudimentary life — will more likely generate results. Biochemist Steve Benner of the Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution agrees. "No one will be more astonished than me if we have a Jodie Foster experience," he says, referring to Contact, in which the actress plays an astronomer who deciphers a signal broadcast from deep space. In any event, SETI's Shostak points out that finding Antarctica and the Northwest Passage on Earth took more time than we've spent searching all of space for other forms of life. So, he says, maybe we just haven't looked enough yet. --------------------- Discuss.
It would be impossible out of billions upon billions of different planets out there, that one does not support life. They only reason people don't believe, is because it most likely goes against their religion: which was formed before we knew as much about the universe.
I think that there is inteligent life out there but my only concern is that with inteligence comes a self destructive nature and that is one of the reason I think we havent met an inteligent species yet, because species wipe themselves out before they get to the technological stage where they can travel between solar systems
I think with the billions and billions of stars out there, and the trillions and trillions of planets out there, the chances of there being other life out there is (no pun intended) astronomical. But the fact is, it's only been around 30 years since we've put a man on the moon. We can't expect to, in such a short time, find other life when we've barely achieved space travel. If we can't get a clear picture of the surface of Pluto, how would we be able to detect life on other planets? The fact is that we haven't progressed far enough technologically to be able to find life. Is it out there? Yes. Will we find it anytime soon? Probably not.
I agree with you Raynne. I think there is life out there somewhere other than Earth, but what are the chances of us getting there. It would take years and years. People would have to be sent into space as a child to get to some of these planets that take almost a hundred years to get to.
Sadly we won't expect much space exploration such as moon visits until at atleast 8 years when Obama is out of the house as he hasn't stated so and is more keen in the development in America which is fair enough. Aliens exist end of
It's incredible to think that there may be a planet similar to ours with organism having the same thoughts as us. "Is there life out there". Scientists have found that one of Jupiter's moons, Europa looks as if it has a layer of ice on it. This means that water must be there which could possibly mean plant life can be sustained there. This just shows that life on other planets isn't so much of a wild theory as people might have thought.
sentinental? Is that like a sentimental sentient life-form? Well either there is other life out there or life on Earth is one big cosmic accident that should've never happened.
There's now way in hell there cant be any life forms out there. The universe has to have others no matter what. I mean really Around 3-5 billion Stars(suns) out there with its each solar system hmm definetly other life forms unless, black holes got them lolz JK lololzz.
This is pretty cool to find out life beyond our planet would be too much for me to handle, I'd want to know all about what we find regardless of it's intelligence.
Its perfectly possible. Its ignorant to assume that we are the only life form, or that we are the only technologically capable life form. Physics of the Impossible is an especially good read when it comes to these things. A good point many seem to miss is that there may be other extraterrestrial life forms more advanced than us.
i belive that there is not only intellegent life, but sentinent life, sentinent with empires of many sorts, military, scientific, diplomatic. i belive that once our planet unites to become the human empire, we will become a diplomatic empire aliens that are somehow related to each other, beingsd that have feeling, habits and family, the possibilities are never ending
I, like most others here in this debate believe that there is life somewhere out there. But I also think we will be severely disappointed when the aliens are just retarded ostriches, sticking there head in the ground to anything that moves.