Key Takeaways:

  1. A new perspective on the Fermi paradox suggests that intelligent aliens may not find planets with life interesting unless they exhibit advanced technology.
  2. The study proposes that aliens might be selective in their communication, focusing on planets with signs of both biology and technology.
  3. The Fermi paradox questions why, given the age of the universe, we haven’t had contact with intelligent aliens; this paper offers an alternative explanation.
  4. Earth’s radio signals, broadcast since the 1930s, may not have reached intelligent civilizations unless there are over 100 million technologically advanced planets in the Milky Way.
  5. The absence of communication may be due to the limited range of Earth’s signals and the possibility that intelligent life is waiting for more substantial technological evidence.

Why haven’t aliens gotten in touch? Maybe they think Earth is boring.

A new preprint paper published to the arXiv database suggests that intelligent extraterrestrials might not find planets that host life particularly interesting. If life has evolved on many planets in the galaxy, then aliens are probably more interested in the ones where there are signs not just of biology but technology, study author Amri Wandel, an astrophysicist at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, wrote in the paper. The paper is yet to be peer-reviewed.

The study explores the Fermi paradox, which holds that given the age of the universe, it’s likely that intelligent aliens would have developed long-distance space travel by now, and thus it’s likely that they would have visited Earth. The fact that they haven’t (as far as we know) may be evidence that there is no other intelligent life in the Milky Way galaxy.

But experts have offered other explanations for the missing aliens: Perhaps they visited Earth in the past, before humans evolved or were capable of recording the visit. Or maybe long-distance space travel is more difficult than believed. Perhaps aliens evolved advanced civilization too recently to make it to Earth. Or they’ve deliberately decided not to explore the cosmos. It’s even possible that they’ve killed themselves off.

In the new paper, Wandel offers another possible explanation: that life is actually really common in the Milky Way. If many of the rocky planets orbiting in the habitable zone of stars host life, aliens probably aren’t going to waste their resources sending signals to every one — they’d likely end up trying to communicate with alien algae or amoebas.

If life is common, intelligent aliens are likely much more interested in signs of technology. But tech signals may be tough to detect. Earth has only been beaming out signals detectable from space (in the form of radio waves) since the 1930s. In theory, these signals have now washed over about 15,000 stars and their orbiting planets, but that is a tiny fraction of the up to 400 billion stars in the Milky Way. Furthermore, Wandel wrote, it takes time for any return message from aliens to travel back, so only stars within 50 light-years have had time to respond since Earth started broadcasting off-planet.

Even worse, Earth’s oldest radio signals weren’t deliberately broadcast into space, so they’re likely so garbled after about one light-year that aliens would be unable to distinguish them, according to Universe Today. (Earthlings sent out the first deliberate high-power broadcast to aliens with the Arecibo message in 1974, directed to the globular star cluster M13. Some scientists think it’s time to send another.)

Wandel found that unless intelligent civilizations are very abundant, with more than 100 million technologically advanced planets in the Milky Way, it’s likely that Earth’s signals haven’t reached another form of intelligent life. However, with time, and as our planet beams out more and more radio chatter, it becomes more likely that Earth’s technological signals will find intelligent listeners, Wandel wrote.

The findings suggest that perhaps there are no intelligent civilizations within about 50 light-years of our planet, he wrote. But intelligent life could still be out there — they’re just waiting for our call.

 

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