New Paper Offers Additional Reasoning for Fermi's Paradox
KentuckyFC writes "If the universe is teeming with advanced civilizations capable of communicating over interstellar distances, then surely we ought to have seen them by now. That's the gist of a paradoxical line of reasoning put forward by the physicist Enrico Fermi in 1950. The so-called Fermi Paradox has haunted SETI researchers ever since. Not least because if the number of intelligent civilizations capable of communication in our galaxy is greater than 1, then we should eventually hear from them. Now one astrophysicist says this thinking fails to take into account the limit to how far a signal from ET can travel before it becomes too faint to hear. Factor that in and everything changes. Assuming the average communicating civilization has a lifetime of 1,000 years, ten times longer than Earth has been broadcasting, and has a signal horizon of 1,000 light-years, you need a minimum of over 300 communicating civilizations in the Milky Way to ensure that you'll see one of them. Any less than that and the chances are that they'll live out their days entirely ignorant of each other's existence. Paradox solved, right?"
We humans are God's only children. That's why there's no one else in the universe. And the universe was created 6k years ago. Duh! Scientists... what useful things have they ever done other than bring up heresy?
I thought it was because as they reach our level of civilisation, they built giant particle accelerators for research and turned their planets into black holes.
FIRST POST!
We humans are still a bunch of young, angsty teenagers. We desperately want to make the "first contact", crying and yelling and suffering from the depressive thought of loneliness.
Other galactic civilizations simply matured and stopped worrying about such pointless things. They make themselves busy with real business.
Grow up, humans.
Colorless green Cthulhu waits dreaming furiously.
Exactly. Maybe all those "crazy" people are actually talking to aliens.
No - Those people really are crazy.
The aliens talk only to me and I have the good sense not to answer them (at least not out loud). I just carefully carry out their instructions and try to get mixed up with those crazies.
He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
It's not like we're located close to Downtown Galaxy. We live out on the edge. There's probably some galactic equivalent of AT&T or Comcast that is telling everyone else "We'll be providing them with service 'soon'. So our monopoly is justified."
Either that or the installer showed up and we were too busy/unaware to answer the door. So they said they'd be back later.
Invalid Checksum. Retrying.
I don't know about you, but I prefer a link to a blog over the actual paper. Mostly because I don't speak Astrophysicsese.
I went ahead and clicked on the blog for you, and the link. Here's the paper (You can get a PDF if you want), it was submitted to the International Journal of Astrobiology.
http://arxiv.org/abs/0901.3863
I understand your reluctance, after all you're the one who posted:
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1112493&cid=26694469
Don't worry, you can continue to click on links out of curiosity. I put one above, go ahead, click it. You know you want to. everyone else is clicking it. Now with more fiber, and it cures Alzheimer's too.
Hence, gamma-ray bursts. The advanced-technology equivalent of flaming laptop batteries.
Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
The 1,000 year thing seems like the weak point of this theory. Sure, most communicating civilizations may not last more than 1k years (and this is an idea based entirely on observation of our own civilization). But as soon as you get interstellar travel, how likely is it that the species manage to die off entirely in a short span? Its easy enough to wipe out one planet, but what about the next? And every spacecraft that manages to escape?
Right now our civilization is like a closed source application running on a dev box off the network. If the hard drive dies, the code is toast. But as soon as you get that code in Git, its a whole lot harder to kill.
Ok, so that was a terrible analogy.
Hello (hello, hello)
Is there anybody in there?
Just nod if you can hear me
Is there anyone home?