• TealTallMachine@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    All this time? What like less than 100 years looking only? That’s a blip on the cosmic scale. 100 lightyear sphere of our galaxy is what, less than 1%? With all the theories and possibilities of what’s going on out there, it’s way too rash to start theorizing like this in my opinion.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    FTA:

    “Either extraterrestrial civilizations (ETCs) are incredibly rare (or non-existent), or they are deliberately avoiding contact with us (aka. the “Zoo Hypothesis“).”

    There is a 3rd possibility - it may not be deliberate.

    Our position in the Milky Way is really out on the ass-end of it. We are nowhere near galactic central. If our current understanding of slower than light travel is correct, it just may not be possible for other civilizations to reach us.

    When it comes to communications, and our radio sweeps of the galaxy turning up nothing, well, we’re assuming any advanced civilization is still using radio transmissions.

    Look at our recent experiment with laser based communication:

    https://www.cnn.com/2023/12/18/world/nasa-space-laser-cat-video-scn/index.html

    100 or so years after radio communication was widespread, we have the technology to eliminate it. There may be other methods orders of magnitude beyond that. We could be awash in alien communication streams we just can’t percieve because ours are too primitive.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      There are also hundreds of other theories that can potentially explain it. Like, 100 years really isn’t a long time on cosmic scales. Maybe we’re late to the party and intelligent life wiped itself out already. Maybe we’re early, and we will wipe ourselves out before a new intelligence even figures out where the copy paper is.

      For as big as space is, time is bigger.

    • evranch@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      We don’t want to be near the galactic center, there’s too much radiation. A quiet spot out on one of the arms away from supernovae and active objects is a much better place for life to evolve.

      At this point our own radio is even too advanced for an alien civilization to detect. An interesting thing about radio is that aside from a few lingering powerful analog signals (AM/FM radio, active radar) our modern spread-spectrum radio is hard to distinguish from background noise. It’s an interesting consequence of information theory, as bandwidth and noise tolerance grow, if you aren’t looking for a signal it becomes almost invisible. We also do a lot with very little power now due to these amazing encoding methods, when I was a kid and the analog cell phone was novel we would have outright said that a phone could never communicate directly with satellites. Not enough power or antenna in your pocket. Yet here we are.

      So any civilization that develops radio is only likely to send out a short burst of detectable radio before disappearing within 100 years, even without switching to an alternate technology. This makes radio an almost impossible thing to search for in a vast galaxy where time can separate us even more than space.

  • wjrii@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    From SETI’s FAQ:

    If an extraterrestrial civilization has a SETI project similar to our own, could they detect signals from Earth?
    In general, no. Most earthly transmissions are too weak to be found by equipment similar to ours at the distance of even the nearest star. But there are some important exceptions. High-powered radars and the Arecibo broadcast of 1974 (which lasted for only three minutes) could be detected at distances of tens to hundreds of light-years with a setup similar to our best SETI experiments.

    Every moment adds to our data of course, but the idea that we’re at some sort of tipping point in how we should perceive the odds of extraterrestrial civilization is silly. Some of this feels like sour grapes from aging nerds who come to believe that it won’t happen in their lifetimes, so it is obviously never gonna happen.

    • Sonori@beehaw.org
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      10 months ago

      To be fair, the odds of an intelligent civilization arising at the exact same time as us are rather absurdly remote on astronomical timelines. Aliens should be somewhere between a billion years old to at least a few million, and that is plenty of time to colonize vast reaches of space and build telescope arrays in the scale of small galaxies with only known tech.

      I agree though, it is rather silly to think that we’ve passed any point of significance in our search recently.

      • wjrii@kbin.social
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        10 months ago

        True, and I suppose that’s a certain filter of its own. I suppose the main thing that makes me roll my eyes is that having done SETI by half measures for a handful of decades, the article is asking if it’s time to assume that the rather presumptuous (though not absurd) zoo hypothesis is “the answer”.

        This all is what it is. The results so far imply virtually nothing about anything, except I suppose that there is not a very close civilization intentionally listening for our types of signals and eager to communicate back.

        • Sonori@beehaw.org
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          10 months ago

          I mean i’d argue that the lack of any big sphere of space which is largely dark, save absolutely glowing in IR, does indicate that there is likely no one millions of years more advanced than us anywhere nearby. A K2 or K3 civilization millions of years more advanced than us should absolutely be visible to even our current telescopes if they were out there, and an absence of any massive otherwise explainable waste heat signatures seems to imply that they arn’t.

          That is a result which tells us a lot about the Fermi Paradox, but hardly one that proves one solution over another. Similarly, we’ve recently found habitable zone exoplanets are not rare, but have yet to find any with a strong biosigniture. This does indicate to us that the odds of abiogenesis may actually just be that rare.

          Negative results are still results, and indeed contrary to what the article thinks complex life being common around us while still lacking signs of intelligence would seem to be a lot stronger evidence of the Zoological Hypothesis than just a lot of dead rocks.

          We’d need a sample size large enough to contain a bunch of positive signs of spacefaring intelligent aliens to ‘solve’ the Fermi Paradox though, so until and unless that comes along it’s all just idle speculation around the fact that we just don’t have the data to know.

  • Sonori@beehaw.org
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    10 months ago

    No, rare intelligence and to a lesser extent rare earth remain as convincing as ever. Potentially habitable does not mean life sustaining, and given the lack of strong biosignatures on any of the examined near earth exoplanets, I’d say that there is indeed increasing evidence that life of any kind really is that rare, much less intelligence.

    It is just absurdly hard to get conditions right for microbes to form on a reasonable timeframe is a solution after all.

  • Paragone@mander.xyz
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    10 months ago

    The commenter who identified that we’re now able to eliminate radiowave-broadcast communications, via lasers ( & fiberoptics, etc ), is spot-on.


    There is another angle, though.

    Imagine a simplified-model of civilization…

    a batch of 7 newborn-babies, instead of hundreds of genetically-distinct populations in Africa…

    those 7 babies live in “eden”.

    they learn that they can consume everything they want, that doesn’t harm them.

    they learn that they have to be somewhat self-moderating, because others fight them when one crowds the other, too much.

    etc.

    they move away from each-other, & some lose their skin-pigment, others change it…

    an empire forms, in-which industry is the rule ( the Roman empire ).

    Now a momentum is set in-place, that is making the sequence of the Industrial-Revolutions inevitable…

    at the time of the Roman Empire, the children are, say, 11yo.

    at the time of the Industrial Revolutions, they are in puberty, their brains forced into chaos, & ALL sorts of new force-multiplying technologies landing in their hands…

    So, what is The Great Filter?

    What happens when it is unconscious-toddler-mind, or unconscious-adolescent-who-never-got-challenged, who has all the world-snuffing technologies that we now have, but who has the global-responsiblity-level of … drunk & drugged narcissistic children…

    Say you have 7 kids going into The Great Filter, representing the whole populations-sea of our world…

    Say only 1 of them survives The Great Filter…

    Are they going to be CAREFUL in what they do, technologically, from then on??

    Obviously.


    I don’t expect more than about 1.5% of this planet’s population to survive this century’s TANTRUM/POGROM that has narcissism-roots, politics-roots, religion-roots, food-insecurity-roots ( like total collapse of the terrestrial & marine food-webs, later this century ), etc.

    Will the remnant who survive this century, if any do, be as careless with technology as we currently are??

    How could they be?


    If The Great Filter is an automatic force-growing-up consequence of EVERY world-overwhelming-species, who mixes accommodated-immaturity with ecosphere-destroying technology, then whatever portion of worlds who reach The Great Filter have survivors of it, … it’d be inherent in the survivors’ experience that they have been made careful.

    Same as you don’t find incapable-of-self-discipline in career-military-officers, you don’t find our murderous carelessness/ideological-rabies in any survivor of The Great Filter:

    Universe automatically force-extinguishes populations who won’t grow up, who gain the technological-leverage that we’ve gained.


    So, silence depicts a lack-of-carelessness AND an absence-of-need to be throwing-away-energy through radiowave broadcast, both.

    When combined, galactic silence makes much fundamental sense.

    We’re in our species’ “puberty” stage, and haven’t survived our force-growing-up Great Filter, yet.

    If we do, well, then finding others who also did, will make sense.

    If we won’t, … then our epitaph will be that we wouldn’t grow-up, at ANY cost.

    _ /\ _