Life beyond the solar system

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

News

'Alien signal' sent from Mars decoded by father-daughter team Nov. 2, 2024, 2:05 AM ET (Space.com)

For thousands of years humans have wondered whether they were alone in the universe or whether other worlds populated by more or less humanlike creatures might exist. In ancient times and throughout the Middle Ages, the common view was that Earth was the only “world” in the universe. Many mythologies populated the sky with divine beings, certainly a kind of extraterrestrial life. Some philosophers held that life was not unique to Earth. Metrodorus, an Epicurean in the 3rd and 4th centuries bce, argued that

to consider the Earth the only populated world in infinite space is as absurd as to assert that in an entire field sown with millet, only one grain will grow.

Since the Renaissance, fashionable belief has fluctuated. Practically all informed opinion in the late 18th century held that each planet was populated by intelligent beings. However, except for those who followed Percival Lowell, the prevailing informed opinion in the early 20th century held that chances for extraterrestrial intelligent life were insignificant. The subject of extraterrestrial intelligent life is for many people a touchstone of their beliefs and desires. Some urgently desire evidence for extraterrestrial intelligence, and others equally fervently deny the possibility of its existence. The subject should be approached in as unbiased a frame of mind as possible. The probability of advanced technical civilizations in the Milky Way Galaxy depends on many controversial issues.

The Drake equation and extrasolar life

American astrophysicist Frank D. Drake devised a simple approach that illuminates the uncertainties involved in determining whether extraterrestrial intelligence is possible. The number of extant technical civilizations in the Milky Way Galaxy is estimated by the following equation (the so-called Drake equation, or Green Bank formula): N = R*fpneflfifcL where R* is the average rate of star formation over the lifetime of the Milky Way Galaxy, fp is the fraction of stars with planetary systems, ne is the mean number of planets per star that are ecologically suitable for the origin and evolution of life, fl is the fraction of such planets on which life arises, fi is the fraction of such planets on which intelligent life evolves, fc is the fraction of such planets on which a technical civilization develops, and L is the mean lifetime of a technical civilization. A consideration of the factors involved in the choice of numerical values for each parameter follows. These estimates are little better than informed guesses; no great reliability should be pretended for them.

There are about 200 billion stars in the Milky Way Galaxy. The age of the Milky Way Galaxy is about 10 billion years. A value of R* = 10 stars per year is probably fairly reliable. While most contemporary theories of star formation imply that the origin of planets accompanies the origin of stars, such theories are not developed well enough to merit much confidence. More than 250 extrasolar planets have been confirmed. They have been observed via several different means: by “wobble,” which detects the changing wavelength of a star’s light as the star gets closer and then farther away from Earth as a massive planet tugs it from the center of the system; by transit, which detects the dimming of a star as a planet crosses between it and Earth, much like a solar eclipse; and by infrared observation, which observes a planet directly.

Owing to limitations of current detection methods, most of the planets discovered so far have masses at least as great as the solar system’s largest planets, Jupiter and Saturn. Most of these planets are also very close to their stars, much closer than Earth is to the Sun, so life systems similar to Earth’s could not exist on them. This difference has led scientists to consider new models for planetary formation. For example, Gliese 876, a red dwarf star one-third the mass of the Sun and 15 light-years away in Aquarius, has three planets: a gas giant half the mass of Jupiter that orbits Gliese 876 every 30 Earth days, another twice the mass of Jupiter that orbits exactly once for every two orbits of its neighbor, and a third six times the mass of Earth that orbits every 2 Earth days. HD 168443, lying 123 light-years away in Serpens, has one planet 8 times Jupiter’s mass and another 18 times the mass of Jupiter, which is beyond the scale that had been considered possible for a planet; this giant may be a brown dwarf. Several planets even smaller than Saturn have been found. Gliese 581, at 20 light-years away, has three planets, one of which is only five times the mass of Earth. NASA’s Kepler mission, launched in 2009, used space-based telescopes to observe Sun-like stars that host Earth-sized planets and discovered thousands of extrasolar planets.

Because the wobble method can detect only a planet that has been observed for a significant portion of its orbit, finding a planet like Jupiter with an orbital period of 12 Earth years requires several years of observations. Nevertheless, some planetary systems similar to the solar system have been found. HD 190360A, at 52 light-years away, is very similar to the Sun and has a detectable planet similar in size and orbital distance to Jupiter. Systems like HD 190360A could also have smaller planets arranged like those in the solar system. The existence of large planets around so many nearby stars demonstrates that a significant fraction of stars do indeed have planets in orbit around them.

Another indication that planetary formation is a general process throughout the universe is the satellite systems of the major planets of the solar system. Jupiter with 79 satellites, Saturn with 82, and Uranus with 27 resemble miniature solar systems. Considering the wide range of temperatures that seem to be compatible with life, it can be tentatively concluded that fpne is about 1. However, since liquid water is considered to be crucial to life’s origin and evolution, fpne probably has a significantly smaller value.

Because of the short time it took for life to arise on Earth, as implied by the fossil record, and because of the ease with which relevant organic molecules are produced in experiments that simulate the early Earth, the likelihood of life’s arising during a period of billions of years may be high. Some scientists believe that the appropriate value of fl, the fraction of planets with life, is about 1. For the quantities of fi, the fraction of planets with intelligent life, the parameters are even more uncertain. The evolutionary path leading to mammals depends on a great many specific circumstances and historical accidents; it is therefore highly unlikely that such a path will ever repeat. However, intelligence clearly has a great selective advantage and is not necessarily restricted to the single evolutionary path that occurred on Earth.

Similar arguments are made for fc, the fraction of technical civilizations. Intelligence and technical civilization are clearly not equivalent. For example, dolphins appear to be intelligent, but their lack of manipulative organs limits their technology. Both intelligence and technical civilization evolved about halfway through the lifetime of Earth and the Sun. Some, but by no means all, evolutionary biologists would conclude that 1/100 is a conservative estimate for the product fifc.

Still more uncertain is the value of the final parameter, L, the lifetime of a technical civilization. A technical civilization here is defined as one capable of interstellar radio communication. Thus, human technical civilization is only a few decades old. Technical civilizations may tend, through the use of weapons of mass destruction, to destroy themselves shortly after they come into being. If L is then taken to be 10 years, multiplication of all the factors assumed above leads to the conclusion that only one technical civilization exists in the Milky Way Galaxy—our own. But if technical civilizations do not produce massively destructive weapons or use them to annihilate themselves, then the lifetimes of technical civilizations may be very long. In that case, the number of technical civilizations in the Milky Way Galaxy may be immense. If even 1 percent of developing civilizations make peace with themselves, then about 1,000,000 technical civilizations may be extant in the Milky Way Galaxy. If such civilizations were randomly distributed in space, the nearest would be several hundred light-years from Earth. These conclusions are very uncertain.