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Finding Life In Space By Looking For Extraterrestrial Pollution

coondoggie writes: If what we know as advanced life exists anywhere other than Earth, then perhaps they are dirtying their atmosphere as much as we are. We could use such pollution components to perhaps more easily spot such planets. That's the basis of new research published this week by researchers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. They say that if we could spot the fingerprints of certain pollutants under ideal conditions (PDF), it would offer a new approach in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence."

3 of 95 comments (clear)

  1. Advanced? by KeensMustard · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Would an advanced race actually do something so illogical?

    In what other ways are we assuming alien life is like us?

    1. Re:Advanced? by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's worse than that. Pollution is highly specific to the existence of given technology at a given stage of development. How long, on astronomical time scales, would a given planetary atmosphere contain iodine-131 (half life 8 days) or even coal smoke, before more advanced versions of the same technology, or a different technology entirely, succeeds the one emitting the pollutant?

      Furthermore, we can only detect as pollutants substances that we already know about as side effects of our own civilization. If we were to look at some exoplenet and detect an oxygen atmosphere that has scandium dust in it, or which absorbs slightly more yellow that we think it should, we would have no way of associating this effect with possible intelligence until we experience the same kind of pollution ourselves.

    2. Re:Advanced? by WillKemp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pollution occurs wherever there is life.

      True. Earth was populated for millions of years by organisms that polluted the atmosphere with oxygen.