Alien encounter? Maybe, but not for 1,500 years

A new view of the Whirlpool Galaxy, one of the two largest and sharpest images Hubble Space Telescope has ever taken, is released by NASA on Hubble's 15th anniversary April 25, 2005. The new Whirlpool Galaxy image showcases the spiral galaxy's curving arms where newborn stars reside and its yellowish central core that serves as home for older stars. During the 15 years Hubble has orbited the Earth, it has taken more than 700,000 photos of the cosmos. EDITORIAL USE ONLY REUTERS/NASA/Handout YH

The Whirlpool Galaxy. Image: REUTERS/NASA/Handout YH

Blaine Friedlander
News Editor, Cornell University
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Extraterrestrials may one day try and get in touch with us, but after deconstructing the Fermi paradox and pairing it with the mediocrity principle, astronomers say it won’t likely happen for at least 1,500 years.

“We haven’t heard from aliens yet, as space is a big place—but that doesn’t mean no one is out there,” says Evan Solomonides, an undergraduate student at Cornell University who presented his unpublished paper this week with coauthor Yervant Terzian, professor of astronomy, at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society. For Solomonides, this research was inspired by an assignment in the astronomy course, “The Search for Life in the Universe,” taught by Terzian.

“It’s possible to hear any time at all, but it becomes likely we will have heard around 1,500 years from now. Until then, it is possible that we appear to be alone—even if we are not. But if we stop listening or looking, we may miss the signals. So we should keep looking.”

The Fermi paradox says billions of Earth-like planets exist in our galaxy, yet no aliens have contacted or visited us. Thus the paradox: the cosmos teems with possibility. The mediocrity principle–originated by 16th-century mathematician Copernicus–says Earth’s physical attributes are not unique, as natural processes are likely common throughout the cosmos, and therefore aliens won’t discover us for a while.

Hunting for extraterrestrials means sending out signals like television broadcasts, for example. As Earth’s electronic ambassador, TV and radio signals are sent into space as a byproduct of broadcasting.

These signals have been traveling from Earth for 80 years at the speed of light. For aliens receiving these transmissions, they would likely be indecipherable, says Solomonides, so extraterrestrials would need to decode light waves into sounds, then parse 3,000 human languages to grasp the meaning of the message.

Nonetheless, Earth’s broadcast signals have reached every star within about 80 light years from the sun—about 8,531 stars and 3,555 Earthlike planets, as our Milky Way galaxy alone contains 200 billion stars.

“Even our mundane, typical spiral galaxy—not exceptionally large compared to other galaxies—is vast beyond imagination,” says Solomonides. “Those numbers are what make the Fermi Paradox so counterintuitive. We have reached so many stars and planets, surely we should have reached somebody by now, and in turn been reached…this demonstrates why we appear to be alone.”

Combining the equations for the Fermi paradox and the mediocrity principle, the authors suggests Earth might hear from an alien civilization when approximately half of the Milky Way galaxy has been signaled in about 1,500 years. “This is not to say that we must be reached by then or else we are, in fact, alone. We simply claim that it is somewhat unlikely that we will not hear anything before that time,” Solomonides says.

“We are on the third planet around a tediously boring star surrounded by other completely normal stars about two-thirds of the way along one of several arms of a remarkably average spiral galaxy. The mediocrity principle is the idea that because we are not in any special location in the universe, we should not be anything special in the universe.”

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