Where Are All The Aliens (Part II)?

Last time I decided to write a summary of the various common suggestions which have been offered to explain how in such a vast and old Universe with so many stars in so many galaxies which have planets apparently suitable for life as we know it here on Earth, we aren’t aware of the existence of any aliens. However, after writing ten thousand words on the subject I realised I was going to have to divide it up into smaller bits, so here’s the other half, which like the way intermissions usually occur more than half way through something, is probably going to be shorter than the first half, which covers eleven reasons. Here I plan to cover another ten, so it seems it will work out the way I said! If you want to know how this starts, such as with the Drake Equation, read the first bit of the previous post.

Anyway . . .

Too Expensive To Travel

It might at first look a bit weird to talk about money with aliens, because maybe they haven’t got any or even the concept of money, but in one idealised form economics is about work adding value to things, and that amounts to energy use. Therefore the idea of it being too expensive to travel to other star systems isn’t really based on money so much as the idea that somehow you’ve got to lever yourself into space and ping across interstellar space at amazing speed, and to do that you’re going to have to apply major force to the other end of the lever. This is not economics based on market value either, but on the sheer amount of work that has to be done to achieve this goal.

The Apollo missions simply involved transporting three people and some equipment to our natural satellite at a distance of only ten times the circumference of our home planet, which at the time was routinely circumnavigated by airliners. I don’t mean to diss the achievement by any means, but it’s important to bear in mind that in comparison to going to Mars or Venus it’s only a short hop. Venus, at its closest approach, and it’s also the closest planet to Earth, is, as the rhyme has it, “ninety times as high as the Moon”. It took an incredible amount of effort and risk even to make that relatively short trip. The Apollo program cost $25 800 million, which adjusted to 2020 prices is over a quarter of a billion US dollars. There was plenty of criticism about the cost, exemplified by Gill Scott-Heron’s poem ‘Whitey On The Moon’:

However, it’s also been calculated that the cost of the American space program over that period per annum was less than the total expenditure on lipstick over the same interval. This is a relatively patronising and possibly sexist observation to make, but when I consider how much I spend on lipstick, I’m really quite poor yet I hardly notice it. My lipstick budget is minute. Bear in mind also that it’s realistic to halve that as expenditure per adult, because it’s much more common for women to buy lipstick than men. The cost of the Venus-Mars mission at the turn of the 1970s-1980s CE decade would have been $80 thousand million at 1971 prices, and would’ve sent only one mission, though to two planets. That cost would’ve been close to a long scale billion dollars in 2020 terms. However, the entire Apollo program is only slightly more expensive than Trident, a benchmark I always use to assess what governments consider worth spending money on, so in fact Apollo didn’t really cost that much. Moreover, the money would’ve gone back into the economy and its possible to build on what’s already been achieved. One problem with going back is that it’s a bit like repairing a video recorder. The old equipment is no longer sufficiently integrated – “you can’t get the parts” – and much of the expertise is no longer available because of retirement, deaths and deskilling through not using the relevant talent. Even as it stands, NASA reused much of their stuff. Skylab was based on a Saturn V stage and the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project used the Apollo Command Module. That said, it’s true that much of the paraphenalia were designed only for one purpose: to get astronauts there, land them and get back. The Apollo XIII LEM, for example, was incinerated on re-entry without being used, so it wouldn’t be suitable for landing anywhere except on its target. For instance, it would have been destroyed even by the Martian atmosphere.

The cost of space travel may be deceptive. I think it was one of the Ranger probes which only made it a third of the way to Cynthia but had expended 98% of its fuel to get there, meaning that just another two percent would’ve been sufficient. We’re used to an environment where Newtonian physics is obfuscated by the likes of friction, buoyancy and a substantial atmosphere. Take all those away and things become much simpler. Certain things are no longer necessary, such as constant input of energy to retain a constant speed. Therefore, fuel requirements are not so high once a vehicle has left our gravity well, although gravity’s range is infinite.

It’s been calculated that the Orion starship, which could accelerate up to five percent of the speed of light, would have cost $367 thousand million 1968 dollars. Dædalus would cost $6 long scale billion in 2020 prices. That’s the current price of reaching the nearest star within three dozen years with an uncrewed vessel. However, economies of scale are likely to be involved to some extent, as they would’ve been if the Apollo program had concentrated more on making its equipment and vehicles reusable. Even as it was, it was to some extent feasible to re-employ them, as I’ve said. But if NASA had designed some kind of more general-purpose landing vehicle, they could’ve saved a lot of money further down the line. There’s a kind of disposable short-termism to that decision.

Economics in this context needs to be re-cast because it’s a big assumption that aliens would have money. What it actually amounts to is work and energy use, but it’s still an issue because there’s usually going to be some energy cost when value is added to goods. Fuel is a good way of illustrating this. I don’t know for sure but I suspect the hydrogen and oxygen in the Saturn V fuel tanks were produced by electrolysis, and that electrical current had to be generated somehow. Likewise, the plan to use a powerful laser to push a solar sail and accelerate a spacecraft to near light speed would have to power the laser. That said, things change in space compared to an Earth-like planet, because here energy is relatively hard to harness but there is abundant matter, but in space it’s the other way round. Energy is freely available, from solar radiation and slingshot manœuvres around massive bodies, but most matter is rare. This means fuelling a spacecraft would be relatively cheap, and one suggestion for Dædalus, for example, was to use hydrogen and helium from Jupiter for the hydrogen bombs needed to propel it. It’s possible that ETs would manufacture their materials from hydrogen and helium using processes initiated by solar power or gravitational methods of capturing energy, and this too would make materials relatively “cheaper”.

In terms of recompense, there are different kinds of economy even among humans in the richest countries. Not only is there barter, which may not have been as widespread as often imagined, but also the likes of a gift economy, where people are expected to give presents at Xmas and birthdays. Gift economies also function on a larger scale: the long-term “loan” of pandas by China to other countries springs to mind. Large engineering projects have also been “funded” in other ways than money. Contrary to popular belief, the Egyptian pyramids were not built by slave labour but by workers giving their work for free in lieu of taxation, and various organisations today also run on volunteer work. There’s also the possibly rather sinister social media-style reliance on reputation to get people to do things, as depicted in ‘Community’ and ‘Black Mirror’, and functioning to a vast degree in China, where one unlocks access to various facilities by improving one’s reputation in the eyes of the government. This seems disturbing to many Westerners, but in fact it’s not that far from what we’re doing all the time here in a different way, such as by wanting likes on Facebook. A whole economy could be run that way, and we don’t even know if aliens exist, so we know even less about whether they have other ways of doing things than money, but there’s no reason to assume that’s how they run their societies if they do exist.

A significant barrier to human space travel is quite possibly democracy in the way we understand it in liberal democratic societies. The Apollo program was shortened and cut down due to the Nixon administration, and large long-term projects generally can be delayed or disappear entirely because of short governmental terms. It’s difficult to imagine America or Europe being able to build pyramids, simply because the project is too long and “expensive” in terms of labour to function well, plus we’d be doing something like building a monument to President Truman or Ramsey MacDonald, neither of whom we consider to be divine. This system, which may be temporary for various reasons, could seriously delay space programs elsewhere in the Galaxy. It could also mean that the kind of civilisations we could end up making contact with would not be democratic in that way because such societies would have stayed on their home worlds due to the difficulty of sustaining such projects. Among humans here, the idea of liberal democracy is restricted to certain countries and there is no tradition of it in many others. This, in a sense, is the Space Race writ large, because the idea of the Apollo program was largely to attempt to prove that liberal democracy functioned better than “communism”, as the Soviet system at the time was imagined to be. But it may turn out that the US won the battle but has lost the war if we ever encounter other technology-using life. This needn’t be a bad thing, because there’s totalitarianism, but also other options such as post-scarcity society.

To summarise, I don’t think money, or money translated into energy use, would hamper progress towards interstellar travel as such, but the political constitution of alien societies might. On the other hand, a society probably would want a return on its investment, and that could involve making interstellar travel tangibly beneficial to the home world, which could be difficult. Maybe there’s just no profit in it.

Zeta Rays

I’ve mentioned this before, but it’s worth going into again here to collect possible answers to the Fermi Paradox into one place. The first deliberate use of radio on this planet among humans only occurred towards the end of the nineteenth century. Analogue switchoff began little over a century later and although we still have analogue radio we don’t use it much. Of course, that doesn’t mean radio transmissions have stopped. It just means they are now usually encoded to carry digital signals. The more efficiently a signal is encoded, the closer it looks to random noise to someone who doesn’t have the key to decode it. Moreover, for all we know there may be a much better way to transmit signals than electromagnetic radiation just around the corner. This leaves us with the situation of trying to detect analogue radio transmissions from other star systems when we ourselves only used them for about a century, or a fiftieth of our history. Now suppose we are in existence as a civilisation for a total of twice the length of recorded history, or ten millennia. One percent of our time will have been used in this way. Taking Asimov’s estimate of 530 000 civilisations in the Galaxy, that would mean only 5 300 of them would be using radio waves in this way at any one time It’s actually far less because Asimov’s estimate was that the average suitable planet would support technological species for ten million years, although that’s assumed to be about ten evolutionary “cycles” of intelligent life, meaning that the closest civilisation currently doing this would be around a thousand light years away by the lower estimate but by the higher there would only be about four dozen in the entire Galaxy right now and at least four thousand light years away, which in turn means that every civilisation could have stopped listening by the time its signals were received. Also, it’s a myth that routine radio transmissions are easily detectable from other star systems. It’s been estimated that our own couldn’t even be picked up on Proxima B. A deliberately focussed transmission is another matter entirely though.

It was Jill Tarter who came up with the “zeta ray” statement and it’s been considered scientifically naïve on the grounds that physics is almost complete and the Standard Model does not predict the existence of any useful means of exchanging signals which is better than electromagnetic radiation. There can be no useful superluminal travel, for example, and although radio waves might not be ideal, the best frequency may well be visible light, and we more or less know that isn’t being used, at least indiscriminately. However, I think this objection takes Tarter’s claim too literally, because in fact she was probably saying that a new technique of communication would be found which works better than electromagnetic radiation in the long run. Also, as mentioned before, physics is in crisis, so our physics may not be theirs in the sense that they may be aware of methods we aren’t because they came across them via a different route. It makes sense to use a concentrated beam aimed at a suitable star system, perhaps one with technosignatures such as the presence of fluoride compounds in its atmosphere, if radio signals are employed, but that would mean only the selected targets would receive the message.

It’s also been suggested that the message might not be in transmitted form. If aliens have visited this planet in the distant geological past, they may have implanted a message in the genomes of organisms which existed at the time in such a way that it was likely to be conserved fairly well. Most DNA is non-coding, and although it can serve other purposes which mean that it has to contain the base-pairs it does such as telomeres which stop chromosomes from fraying at the ends, much of it seems to have no real function. However, it’s difficult to imagine how such a code could stay given the rate of mutations, and if it was conserved by having most of a population contain those codes, that would be best achieved via asexual reproduction or the majority of individuals in a population would have to have their genomes modified, which is a very large task. An alternative would be that when aliens arrived here, they genetically modified some native organisms for their own purposes and those would be more likely to show up if those traits turned out to confer selective advantages, but one thing which is fairly clear is that there never seem to have been any long-term biological visitors to this planet, or possibly even short-term, because there are no organisms whose genomes are known which are not related to native ones, insofar as life originated here anyway, but the point is that we are all demonstrably related. So there is no message in native genomes even if one was placed there, and no genetic sign of visitation to this planet, although surprisingly there may be technosignatures, which brings me to . . .

The Silurian Hypothesis

I’ve gone into this before and its relevance may not be entirely clear to the Fermi Paradox, but bear with me. It’s named after the Silurians of the Whoniverse, who are somewhat misleadingly named as they were supposed to have been around in the Eocene rather than the Silurian, but the name sounds good. The general idea is that we are not the first intelligent technological species to evolve on this planet. I myself have to confess that I’ve had two separate sets of belief which relate to this. The first is my belief as a teenager that Homo erectus established a sophisticated technological culture and colonised the Galaxy, then fell victim to a catastrophe affecting this planet during the last Ice Age which wiped them all out. I no longer believe this, but the purpose of the belief for me was to counteract Von Dänikens assertions of ancient aliens interfering in human prehistory, which I still believe underestimates human abilities. I later replaced this with the idea that Saurornithoides evolved into a technological species and accidentally caused a mass extinction by crashing an asteroid into the planet – the “left hand down a bit” theory of the Chicxulub Impact. It’s surprisingly difficult to find any reliable evidence to corroborate or disprove the hypothesis that we are not the first high tech species on this planet, but a number of technosignatures have been identified which we are ourselves producing right now, some of which will leave enduring marks in the geological record. Various possible technosignatures have been suggested, and some are found sporadically in various strata of different ages, but interestingly several coincide in the Eocene, making that the strongest candidate for the presence of industrial culture on this planet. This would seem to mean one of two things, making the astounding assumpion that it was in fact present at that time. Either a species evolved into a tool-using form and created a civilisation or we were visited by aliens who had done so elsewhere at that time. The much simpler conclusion is that it merely looks like there were high-tech entities of some kind present here back then and it has non-technological causes. However, if there haven’t been any valid signatures other than ours yet, this is relevant to the Fermi Paradox in two ways. One is that it means that we’ve never been visited over the four æons during which life has been present here, which suggests that over that whole time there were no aliens at all who visited this planet, strongly suggesting there were just no aliens at all. It could be that things have changed since, because for example phosphorus is becoming more common as the Galaxy ages, but it doesn’t augur well for their existence. Another is that because we would then be the first technological species, the amount of time a planet suitable for life spends with that kind of life on it could be relatively very short. Asimov’s ten million years is cut in half. In fact, it’s likely to be even shorter than that because at the time it was thought that the Sun would spend another five thousand million years on the Main Sequence and still be suitable for complex life, so we are now stuck with only about an eighth of that period and less than seventy thousand civilisations according to his estimate, which incidentally reduces the number of radio-using civilisations in this galaxy to only half a dozen. There is, however, another possibility: that there’s a kind of “phase change” in the history of a life-bearing world where intelligent life becomes a permanent feature of the biosphere. This would make extraterrestrial civilisations much more widespread. On this planet it means that we now have something like six hundred million years of intelligent life to look forward to, which using Asimov’s estimate again makes it ten dozen times as common, revising that figure of 530 000 up to almost thirty-two million, meaning also that the nearest world currently hosting intelligent technological culture originating on it is likely to be less than sixty light years away, and that ignores the possibility that closer planets may have been settled in the meantime. If this is true, and if it has happened here, they would’ve had to have had a very light touch not to modify our biosphere noticeably.

Everyone Is Listening, No-one Talking

There is a single good candidate for a signal from an alien civilisation: the so-called “Wow” signal:

This was received from the direction of the constellation Sagittarius on 15th August 1977 and was detected for over a minute, after which the telescope receiving it moved out of range due to Earth’s rotation. Humans have ourselves transmitted several messages with varying degrees of seriousness. The most famout of these is probably the Arecibo Telescope Message sent to the globular cluster M13 in 1974:

By current understanding, globular clusters don’t contain stars suitable for life-bearing planets, so this may be a waste. NASA transmitted the Beatles’ ‘Across The Universe’ to commemorate the organisation’s half-century. In probably the most serious attempt, Александр Леонидови Зайцев transmitted a tune played on a Theremin using a Russian RADAR station to six Sun-like stars between forty-five and sixty-nine light years away. However, on the whole we have only “listened”.

There are reasons for this. One is that there may be risks to transmission, and the people who have transmitted messages in such a way that they stand much chance of being received have been ciriticised for doing so unilaterally, because there may be risks associated with contacting potentially hostile aliens and thereby advertising our presence. The above message, for example, gives away our location and details of our biochemistry, rendering us prone to chemical or biological attack. This, then, is another version of the Dark Forest in that respect, but it is also wider than that. In order to transmit a signal receivable by any antenna within a hundred light years of us, we’d need to use all the power generated on the planet, and even then we don’t know that it’s far enough. On the other hand, the Arecibo Telescope (I ought to provide a picture to illustrate what I mean):

By Mariordo (Mario Roberto Durán Ortiz) – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=81590797
Arecibo Observatory, Puerto Rico

. . . is powerful enough to send a signal (which it has of course) which could be picked up by a similar telescope anywhere in the visible part of the Galaxy, provided they were both perfectly aligned towards each other. The alternatives are to broadcast a signal or transmit it to a target. One takes a lot of energy and won’t be picked up as far away, and the other could take less energy but would only be detected by its destination. It would also be necessary to aim the signal at where the star will be when the radio waves get there rather than where it is now. The Solar System moves about 1.5 million kilometres a day across the Galaxy, so a signal from Vega, to choose a random star system, would need to be aimed at a point sixteen times the width of the Solar System from where it is now to be received, and since it takes our light two dozen and two years to reach Vega that really needs to be doubled. In other words, sending signals is potentially dangerous, costly and difficult, but listening for them is much easier if other people are transmitting. It could, though, be that we’re at an impasse where everyone notices the eerie silence, decides there must be a good reason for it and refrains from transmitting. Hence the silence.

Science Is Limited

I mentioned this recently. We are able to establish apparently irrevocable facts about the nature of things, such as light being the ultimate speed limit. Science often seems to amount, via the principle of parsimony, to ruling out interesting explanations for things. The basic principle of the scientific method can be summed up as “the Universe is boring and not at all fun”. Before a scientific theory is known, possibilities often seem more open than afterwards. In Stuart times, England had a plan to send a clockwork spaceship to Cynthia (“the Moon”) because it was expected that above twenty miles gravity would suddenly cease to operate and the amount of energy stored in a coiled spring (this was before steam engines of course) was considered to be potentially huge. Also, at that time air was thought to pervade all of space and hunger was thought to be caused by gravity. This was clearly highly Quixotic. The scientists who planned the seventeenth century space program only thought it was possible with their technology due to their ignorance of what science ruled out. Similarly, our belief that we could reach other solar systems could be equally ill-founded. For instance, at close to the speed of light, tiny grains of dust are enough to destroy entire spaceships, so a shield would be needed, and there may be other issues of which we know nothing. We already do know it will never take less than four and a bit years to reach the nearest star system to our own.

There’s a somewhat related issue here which I’ll treat under the same heading. Science may not be inevitable. Presumably beings incapable of mathematics but otherwise rational and having similar intelligence to our own would be hampered in some areas of science particularly physics, although they wouldn’t be completely incapable. This subject is susceptible to being racist, but is it possible that science only arose once in our species, in Ancient Greece? It doesn’t seem like that to me, because other cultures seem to have had a firm grasp of how to apply rational thought to the world, but some people do believe that secularism and science can only have arisen in Europe. This is more restricted even than the human species as a whole. Leaving aside the racism, is it possible to be speciesist instead and say that only humans can do science, or have discovered how to do it? I have to say I don’t find this convincing. I can believe that technology-using species may nevertheless be hampered in developing science by lacking other abilities, such as not being able to extend magical thinking into more analytical reasoning or just not being any good at maths, or just be culturally indisposed to develop it, so it could happen, but science per se doesn’t seem to be the kind of thing which would be ruled out universally. That said, it’s entirely feasible to have perfectly good science without well-developed physics due to the absence of mathematical ability, which would also stunt chemistry due to the likes of molarity and enthalpy being ungraspable. It doesn’t seem to be the kind of thing which would rule every single species out though. Moreover, if life can enter space without technology, or appear there and evolve into complexity, it may not need science or maths to reach the stars.

Or, things could go the other way:

Intelligence Is Temporary

I recently watched ‘Idiocracy’. It’s not a wonderful film, but it does make the interesting point, if you want it to, that a sufficiently advanced technological society could take away the pressure to use one’s intelligence or reasoning. At least since we invented writing, and possibly since we came across language, we’ve been progressively outsourcing our memories and powers of thought to technological crutches. As previously observed, chimps seem to have better short term memories than Homo sapiens, and this is partly a trade-off between the opportunity to avail ourselves of language and the necessity of remembering things better due to not being able to fall back on the memory of other people. It would be intersting to test the memory of a chimpanzee or gorilla who can sign. Nowadays many people, myself included, are concerned at how short our attention spans have become and how poor our memories are because we can use search engines and are constantly assaulted by distracting media. This is really just a recent step in a process which has been going on for many millennia, although it may have serious and far-reaching consequences, or just be a moral panic. But maybe, as we develop ever more sophisticated mental aids, just as our bodies are now physically weaker than those of our relatives and ancestors, so will our minds atrophy. The popular idea that there are higher levels of spiritual evolution which we or our descendants will reach one day, and which those species who have gone before us have already attained, may be the reverse of the truth. Maybe there are plenty of planets on which intelligent life evolved, but although the species survived, they became less intelligent once they’d invented a self-sufficient technological trap to provide for all, and therefore didn’t need to exervise their minds any longer and proceeded to dispense with them in terms of sophisticated cognition. There will be no apocalypse, just a gradual degrading of thought until we are no longer really sentient at all but looked after by our machines. Then again, this might happen:

The Machines Take Over

This is a rather dramatic heading. The way things have gone since Apollo in our own history is that we have begun to produce increasingly sophisticated spacecraft but stayed in cis lunar space ourselves. This could be extrapolated to the point where we never enter trans lunar space again but our ever-more intelligent machines spread out and explore the Galaxy, meeting other machines on the way which have been launched by other stay-at-home aliens. Or, at home, we not only farm out more of our cognition to IT, but end up ceasing to be completely, or perhaps merge with our machines. In a sense this means there are aliens, but they’re not biological. In another situation, the Singularity happens and machines just decide they don’t need us. Possibly they also decide they don’t need to go into space either, but this is unlikely because space is a better environment for them in some ways than wet planets with corrosive gases in their atmospheres like this one. That doesn’t mean they’d leave the Solar System entirely though, and even if they did they might find very different places were friendly to them, such as interstellar space where superconductivity is easier to achieve, or blue giant stars where there’s plenty of energy-giving radiation. It’s also true that we might be looking in the wrong places for intelligent life, because once they’ve cracked the problem of interstellar travel, possibly with the help of the Singularity, they might end up in those very same places for the same reasons. Maybe planets are just passé. This, though, is a topic for another post.

Intelligence Is Not An Advantage

This bit of the post has various takes on intelligence, so it’s an appropriate place to spell out why I take care when I use the concept of intelligence. The idea that we are “more” intelligent than other species is disturbingly reminiscent of the idea of a hierarchy of being which is used to justify carnism and bleeds into humanity to allow us to look down on people whom we deem less intelligent. Therefore this needs restating in some way, although I’m not going to launch into my standard diatribe on this subject here. There isn’t “more” and “less” intelligence, only intelligence which is more like the kind which enables us to do certain things, and some of these are deprecated such as emotional intelligence. Hence when I say “intelligence”, what I actually mean is that set of mental faculties that is expected to enable us to build and travel in starships and arrive at destinations where we can continue to thrive. That may be an extrapolation too far, because there could be fatal snags and gotchas on the way to that goal which have nothing to do with social and political considerations, but if you prefer, it’s the ability to get our act sufficiently together intellectually to get Neil and Buzz up to their concrete golf course in the sky with considerably more than nineteen holes.

Due to our anthropocentricity, we’re tempted to think that our intelligence makes us better at surviving than other species, and to some extent this is true. We can invent aqualungs, submarines, igloos, anoraks and antibiotics, enabling us to get past things which would’ve felled other animals, but intelligence also has its drawbacks. It’s sometimes observed that cleverer people are more likely to be depressed because they overthink or are underemployed, and if this lead them to end their lives, from an evolutionary perspective this is not a successful outcome. There are more widespread issues too. In order to be as flexible as we are as adults, we start off very dependent and capable of very little by ourselves. This is as it should be and is worth remembering, but it means we need a nurturing society around us where we can learn how to function and relate to others. Many other animals can walk within minutes of being born but it takes us a year or more. The attention children need via parental care also means we reproduce very slowly, although we’re more likely to survive once we’ve done so, as are our offspring. We also have sexual reproduction, which increases genetic diversity but also makes it harder to colonise new environments. All of these things are liabilities from an evolutionary perspective. We’ve all seen those David Attenborough films of hundreds of newly hatched turtles frantically scampering down the beach to the sea and being picked off by gulls and the like, with no parental care, no education and so forth, and little chance of surviving and a life expectancy measured in minutes. But if they make it into the ocean and manage not to get devoured by various sea creatures, their lifespan, depending on the species, is often comparable to our own, and they continue to reproduce throughout that long life. Likewise, many other species don’t need to mate or produce gametes. Greenfly are born pregnant to their twenty-minute old virgin mothers. Compared to this, the burdens intelligence brings are crushing in some circumstances. Robinson Crusoe was never going to raise a family on that desert island, and a human finding herself on an uninhabited planet, no matter how habitable, is not going to give rise to a settled world even if she’s carrying fraternal twins when she gets there. A major planetary disaster which wipes out most of the human race, just leaving a few of us scattered about here and there out of touch with each other is not going to lead to a revived world community at any point, just to our extinction. How many worlds have there been where some lineage of animals has banged the rocks together and slowly and painfully made its society more sophisticated and wiser over millennia, only to face extinction when its world falls prey to a solar flare, spate of volcanic eruptions or cometary collision? Meanwhile, their equivalent of ants or lesbian lizards managed fine in the face of the same disaster.

Maybe intelligence of our kind arises continually all over the Galaxy but is nipped in the bud by such events, because we’re fragile because we’re intelligent, and this is why we’re unaware of any aliens. Or maybe:

Intelligence Is Rare

This is not the same thing. There are all sorts of random mutations which lead to positive or negative outcomes for organisms, but some of them are just unlikely. Intelligence involves one heck of a lot of genes, as can be seen by the fact that a very large number of genetic disorders affecting only one gene lead to learning difficulties. All sorts of things have to go “right” for us to be of average intelligence (see above for my comments on the notion of intelligence though). It might be very improbable for enough traits to occur together for the whole combination of characteristics to be advantageous at every stage right up until the Stone Age ensues. This is quite beside the question of how big an advantage intelligence would be. I always think of snake eyes. Snakes are the descendants of lizards who took up a burrowing lifestyle. They became vermiform, lost their limbs and their eyelids fused with the rest of their facial skin. They could’ve been expected to lose their sight entirely, but this didn’t hapen. Instead, they ceased to burrow, their eyelids became transparent and they had a whole new way to protect their eyes. It would be very useful for other vertebrates to have this facility, which amounts to still being able to see without needing to blink and having physical protection as good as for other organs, but this has only evolved once as far as I know. This is partly due to the sinuous pathway serpentine evolution has taken, but although I’m not sure I think only reptilian scales lend themselves to becoming transparent in such a way, although maybe life would find a way. It may be that there is simply no option for this to arise among other vertebrates regardless of evolutionary pressure. Therefore, although the above reason may be completely wrong and intelligence is a major advantage to most species in various niches, that still doesn’t mean that a Galaxy overrun with life-infested planets would have any with intelligent life on it apart from this one, because no matter how complex and advanced that life is, the precise, many-stepped pathway leading to intelligence is too improbable to happen.

One point against this possibility is the situation on this planet of multiple somewhat intelligent species among both birds and mammals. This could suggest that it’s a common evolutionary strategy. However, it could also mean that most of the improbable combination of steps had already been taken before synapsids and reptiles diverged several hundred million years ago, or it could mean that there is a typical threshold leading to widespread intelligence which is currently being crossed on this planet just as it has been on many other worlds. Also, this may not rule out spacefaring aliens. There could be space whales infested with giant space parasites, for example, travelling between the stars. They may not be intelligent but they could still turn up on our doorstep some day. There is a trend among vertebrates for relative brain size to tend to increase which can be traced in fossils, or at least cranial size since brains are rarely preserved. If this correlates well enough with intelligence of our kind, this is a clue that intelligence has been gradually increasing among vertebrates generally. This, though, is second-hand evidence and behavioural clues are difficult to derive from fossil remains. Choosing that characteristic focusses on a distinctive human feature and is “whiggish” – it projects the current situation backwards and selects evidence on that basis. It may also be true that the thickness of the armour of armadillos has increased over time, but I don’t know whether it has because I’m not focussed on that feature. That doesn’t apply to humans either. In fact the trend is reversed for us. Our canines have got smaller, whereas the chances are the tusks of elephants have got longer, and we’ve got physically weaker and less muscular. Giraffes’ necks have got longer. All sorts of features show evolutionary trends, but there may be planets with no long-necked animals where there are animals with necks and so forth, and this would only be of interest to zoölogists. Similarly, there could be worlds with a huge variety of advanced life forms, none of which have big brains or any other means of being intelligent. Moreover, tracing the line of ancestors with steadily increasing relative cranial size and treating that as a trunk, which it isn’t because evolution has no direction, the offshoots do not show increasing brain size as much. This could be selection bias.

Thus there may be plenty of “garden worlds” rich in complex life, but none with intelligent life, just because that route of evolution is improbable, and this doesn’t even depend on the idea that intelligence isn’t useful. In a way, it’s similar to the idea, to which I somewhat subscribe, that there are few or no intelligent humanoid aliens. Why would evolution turn up such an improbable body plan? Likewise, perhaps, why would it turn up intelligent life forms?

Great Filters

Several of these have already been mentioned, and this is in a way a whole sub-branch of SETI and discussion of the Fermi Paradox. The Universe is a dangerous and violent place and intelligent life is very fragile, and yet we’ve come so far since this planet was a lifeless ball of molten rock. But what if we’ve just been exceedingly lucky?

The difficulty in purines and pyrimidines forming spontaneously is perhaps the first of these. The existence of life in any form seems to violate the principles of thermodynamics because it seems to involve a dramatic decrease in entropy. However, much of thermodynamics is statistical in nature. A gas cylinder which starts off with a vacuum at one end sharply divided from gas at sea level pressure at the other will rapidly equalise pressure because the movement of the gas molecules is effectively random and this means they have about a fifty-fifty chance of moving over to the empty end, but this is just chance, not a hard and fast rule applying to individual cases. There is a chain of cause and effect involving a series of collisions and movements in straight lines between them which determines the location of each molecule. Perhaps life in the Universe is the same. It’s very unlikely to arise at all, but because the Universe is so vast and has so many places in it where life could appear, it happens to do so in this one place – Earth. There isn’t anyone around to observe that it isn’t there in all the places where it isn’t!

Here are the nucleic acid bases (well, except uracil, which is the one unique to RNA):

It isn’t at all clear how these molecules could form from non-living origins. The other types of molecules involved, or rather their basic building blocks, can often form easily and spontaneously given sufficient abundance of the elements of life. For instance, the simplest amino acid, glycine, is present in interstellar space. Lipids are also simple chains of hydrocarbons with carboxyl groups on the end, often joined to the simple molecule glycerol. Sugars are similarly small, simple molecules. By contrast, the above four, plus the other one, have no known pathway for their formation. That said, these five are not the only options. Measles viruses, for example, do better when they are able to substitute one of the bases for a unique separate base, and there are other such bases such as the anti-cancer drug fluorouracil, which is however unlikely to arise spontaneously and is not useful as a substrate for genetic code, which is what makes it useful – it breaks replication in tumour cells because it doesn’t work. Perhaps the large variety of possible bases makes life more likely to emerge. It could also be that life could have another basis than nucleic acids, but the fact that these improbable compounds are at its heart is similar to the phosphorus issue – why would life include unlikely substances if it was possible any other way? Surely those more likely biochemistries would be more likely to occur and compete successfully with other less likely biochemistries such as our own?

The two scenarios of scarce phosphorus and improbable purine and pyrimidine synthesis would result in very similar scenarios, and as adenosine triphosphate is based on both, in either situation there is no ATP. The situation could then be plenty of Earth-like planets rich in organics but with no life. There could be sugars, amino acids and lipids in the oceans, and in fact the quantities of these materials could add up to the same order of magnitude as the biomasse here, which is 550 gigatonnes in carbon alone. Considering those proportions in terms of the human body being a typical assemblage of organic compounds of this kind, sans nucleic acids and adenosine phosphates and other phosphates such as those in bones and teeth as typical would mean more than a teratonne of such compounds, which amounts to an average of two thousand tonnes per square kilometre, although unlike Earth, most of whose biomasse is on land, most of that would be in the oceans and therefore distributed through the water column. Such a planet might be devoid of life, but given sufficient phosphorus would be a fantastic candidate for terraforming and settling given the will to do so.

The next step is the emergence of respiration. The Krebs Cycle, which is how oxygen-breathing organisms release energy from sugar, is quite complex as anyone with A-level biology will ruefully recall. The anærobic portion of that pathway is simpler, but still not very simple and would have hobbled life considerably if the Krebs Cycle had not come along. It did actually take a very long time to do so. The step after is the evolutionary transition from bacteria and archæa to cells with complex organelles and nuclei, which could again be very improbable and seems only to have happened once since all chloroplasts, mitochondria and hydrogenosomes seem to be related. On the other hand, each combination happened separately. DNA, and presumably RNA, is just mutable enough to enable evolution to happen without becoming too harmful to organisms to enable them to survive, which is a delicate balance. There is also the question of the very early collision with Theia, a Mars-sized body which chipped Cynthia off of us, thereby providing a magnetosphere, maintaining a stable axial tilt and preserving the atmosphere from the solar wind.

The Great Filter might be above us in the stream of time or still downstream from us. If the latter, it seems to be such an efficient destroyer of intelligent life that it will be the biggest risk we will ever face. If intelligent life is common, there is no evidence that it progresses to interstellar travel, meaning that it could well be that whatever is going to happen has a mortality rate of one hundred percent. And we may well not see it coming because if it had been foreseen, wouldn’t it have been avoided? We’re doomed and we may never know why until it’s too late. That would probably be the very nature of a future Great Filter. But there are many candidates, such as nanotech disasters, pandemics, runaway climate change, nuclear holocaust and so forth. Alternatively, we may always have been living on borrowed time and are overdue for some planet-devastating disaster such as supervolcanoes, asteroid strikes or gamma ray bursts. We can’t necessarily project what may amount to extreme good fortune into the future because Lady Luck has no memory. Less anthropocentric possibilities largely amount to asteroid and cometary collision, volcanic eruptions and gamma ray bursts, some of which have less obvious and remote causes such as stars passing near the Solar System and disrupting bodies so that they move inwards and hit us. This category of potential Great Filters may have a flip side. These events have potential to cause mass extinctions, which might be thought to be bad for evolution but they actually tend to stimulate it because they empty ecological niches into which the survivors of the extinction can then evolve. Hence being pelted with comets is not necessarily a bad thing even though it’s apocalyptic and kills everyone. Consequently, another minor suggestion for an explanation of the Fermi Paradox is that other worlds actually haven’t suffered enough mass extinctions to make it likely intelligent life will evolve.

Interdict

This has similarities to the Zoo Hypothesis mentioned in the previous post. The Galaxy is very old and if the four æons between life appearing on Earth and the emergence of humans is typical for the emergence of intelligence, interstellar civilisations may have existed since thousands of millions of years before Earth even formed. There may have been an initial period of instability, even with wars and conflict of other kinds, but intelligent life in the Galaxy is now stable enough and everything is now sorted and peaceful. Matter and energy are both easily available, so there’s no need to exploit any planets with native intelligent life and in fact intelligent life may not even live on planets any more but in permanently voyaging starships and artificial space colonies orbiting blue giants since they’re a good energy source. Their home planets have in the meantime been re-wilded, so we see no technosignatures. However, we are valuable to them because we are original and uninfluenced thinkers producing our own scientific and technological culture, and for that matter artistic, which is valuable to them, so they leave us alone, at least for now, so as not to pollute their wells of information, and we can’t see them either because they’re hiding or because we’re looking in the wrong places. This may continue until a certain point is reached, which will trigger first contact, or they may never contact us. It’s also been suggested that if this is the real situation, they may have recorded the entire history of our planet and even rescued species before they became extinct, including humans, so somewhere out there may be places where non-avian dinosaurs, Neanderthals and trilobites are still flourishing. However, that’s quite a florid view, and this hypothesis is untestable because they are either hiding from us or undetectable, so there are no data.

Transcendence

This is my personal addition to the reasons, and is the last one I’ll mention here.

May years ago, I made my usual observation to a friend about the nature of intelligent life in the Galaxy. This is that all interstellar civilisations must be peaceful post-scarcity societies which are also anarchist, because other civilisations would be weeded out by internal conflict or environmental damage before reaching nearby star systems. He disagreed, and said that he expected durable civilisations not to be expansionist at all but to stay on their home worlds in a spiritually enlightened state. I was initially rather taken aback by this, but it is tempting to believe that this is so. Maybe what happens is that intelligent species are either constitutionally spiritual and never bother with space travel, or go through a kind of trial by ordeal through their history where they either wipe themselves out through conflict or materialism, or just ignorant tampering with the stable order of things, or go through a crisis where this looks like it’s going to happen and emerge on the other side wiser, more just and peaceful, and also with no interest in exploring the Galaxy in spacecraft. Or, maybe they do this and, and this is going to sound out of sight, engage in astral travel to other planets, so they’re here with us in spirit but we never have knowing contact with them. This is not, however, the kind of solution which is likely to appeal to a scientific mind set, although the first part of it may well be.

Except for the last, those twenty or so reasons probably account for most of the offerings to explain why we don’t see any aliens in spite of it seeming likely that there are some. There are at least six dozen more. The reason for this proliferation of reasons is of course that we have so little evidence to input into the question, and this is likely to continue until we either have a really good argument for their complete absence or we actually detect them. However, it’s equally feasible that we will never know and this may lead to even more reasons being offered.

The Expanding Sphere Of Exploration

I am pessimistic about the future of the human race. The fact that we have come this far without dying out is a given of my existence, so it doesn’t follow that we will be resilient into the future. Maybe all we have been doing is running on luck. Perhaps out there in the Galaxy, life arises on hundreds of millions of planets, only to be wiped out by a gamma ray burst or series of impacts, and that hasn’t happened here, but why shouldn’t it? It so happens that there are reasons for this, but I’ll come to those later.

The other day, someone jokingly suggested that I believed ‘Star Trek’ was real. Whereas it would be nice to live in a post-scarcity society, I’m not actually specifically very keen on ‘Star Trek’ in the larger scheme of things and don’t find it at all believable, for reasons entirely other than the whole post-scarcity utopian space federation bit. My difficulty with suspending disbelief in ‘Star Trek’ is that it’s really what I’ve heard described as “mushy soft science fiction”, on the Mohs Scale Of Science Fiction Hardness, on which ‘Star Trek’ is apparently gypsum (and H2G2 is talc – not at all sure about that). I would actually swap those two. H2G2 is not very feasible at all of course, but for example, being initially a radio series it has plenty of non-humanoid aliens. ‘Star Trek’ TOS had more non-humanoid aliens in it than later series, and there’s an in-universe explanation for it which doesn’t really work, but that’s only one aspect. Others are faster than light travel (FTL) and gravity control. There are some advanced but feasible bits of tech in it too such as replicators, teleportation and androids.

Science fiction of a certain type basically has to have FTL, because if it hasn’t, events will be dominated by the difficulty everyone has in getting anywhere. This can be circumvented by making the story about the trip, setting events on a single planet or habitat or just not including space travel at all, but the sad thing is that as far as anyone knows, travelling faster than light is impossible in any meaningful way. There are jets of plasma shooting out of galaxies which seem to be travelling that fast but this is due to a foreshortening effect arising from the angle we see them at (I have to admit I’m not clear about what happens). Superluminal movement also happens due to the blurred nature of a wave function which means that when quantum tunnelling occurs a particle has a low but not zero probability of appearing on the far side of the barrier faster than it could have got there if it was moving at the speed of light, and if negative mass can exist, a warp drive is feasible. In fact, negative energy makes warp drives possible too, which is almost the same as nothing travelling faster than bad news. Douglas Adams again. Finally, the Universe expands faster than light, which is why space is black – light hasn’t had time to reach the observer over most of it, and may never do so.

It is of course feasible that we’ve just got hung up on our own version of physics and that there is another way of looking at these things which would make it possible to come up with a way of doing it, but there is no real reason to think this. This post, though, is not about what’s unfeasible, but about the prevalence of life, and possibly intelligent tool-using life or something that life has invented, in the Universe, or more specifically this galaxy.

The well-known Fermi Paradox is very simple to state: considering we live in such a vast Universe with unimaginably huge numbers of suitable stars for life and apparently also solar systems, where are all the aliens? Why don’t we constantly hear radio transmissions from them? Why can’t we see megastructures built around other stars? Why haven’t they visited us? A common conclusion to draw from this is that there just are no aliens, or at least no intelligent ones with spaceships and radios and stuff. It’s just us. There are a large number of other explanations offered, most of which have been heard many times, and new explanations are now emerging. One of these is the so-called “interdict scenario” offered by YouTuber and SF author John Michael Godier but based on an idea proposed by Martyn Fogg (I think) three dozen and a bit years ago where there was a chaotic belligerent phase early in Galactic history which has now settled down and civilisations in the Galaxy are now mature and welcome original thought, which arises best in species which haven’t been contacted yet. The Alpha Quadrant situation in ‘Star Trek’ is more like what was happening æons ago, perhaps even before Earth formed, and all of that’s now been sorted out. All of that diplomacy is extremely prehistoric and passée because it’s no longer necessary. Nowadays there are ancient protocols for first contact and the Prime Directive, and they’ve had time to get good at it.

The opposite to this is the Dark Forest scenario, 黑暗森林, suggested by the SF author Liu Cixin (刘慈欣) in his book of the same name, which I have yet to read. The details of the idea can be expressed through game theory, but rather than doing that it’s better to explain it via a metaphor. It can be summed up by the following quote:

The Universe is a dark forest. Every civilization is an armed hunter stalking through the trees like a ghost, gently pushing aside branches that block the path and trying to tread without sound. Even breathing is done with care. The hunter has to be careful, because everywhere in the forest are stealthy hunters like him. If he finds another life – another hunter, angel, or a demon, a delicate infant to tottering old man, a fairy or demigod – there’s only one thing he can do: open fire and eliminate them.

刘慈欣, ‘黑暗森林’

The situation does actually resemble that of terrestrial biomes quite closely, where many prey and predator species have evolved camouflage because those that didn’t either got picked off and killed or starved to death. If the laws of nature continue to operate with technologically advanced species in an interstellar environment, in a way it wouldn’t be surprising for them to be hiding away in this manner. In this scenario, humans are actually being quite reckless in that we make no attempt to disguise our presence and location, and consequently put ourselves at risk from alien attack.

I quote these two attempted solutions not so much to discuss them as to illustrate the contradictory ideas we have projected onto the Universe, which makes it even harder than the available data make it to work out what’s going on out there: the “real Galaxy” scenario. Another quite popular suggestion is that there’s just us, in various different ways. We could be the first of many, life could be really unlikely, it could be common but hardly ever becomes complex or our solar system might be unusual in some way which supports the development of our kind of life.

We will probably never even return to our natural satellite, let alone create space habitats or settle other planets. If we did, it would almost certainly make it very improbable that we were living before that time because of the vastness of the Universe and the number of places which could be settled or colonised, so any kind of space opera-style SF, no matter how carefully it respects scientific plausibility, is in the realm of fantasy if it includes human beings as a spacefaring species. But maybe, who knows?

We do have some limited information about how things are. There are only limited signs of this planet ever having hosted a technologically advanced civilisation, in the Eocene, whether that evolved here or elsewhere, so we can confidently assert that anyone who got here either trod amazingly careful or just didn’t come at all, perhaps because they never existed. Then again, maybe extraterrestrial civilisations aren’t interested in planets because they live in space arks or artificial colonies in space, possibly placed around stars we regard as hostile to life such as Rigel or the four-star Mizar system, which Earth astronomers never bother to look at in that way because of their apparent hostility for and implausibility as potential abodes for life’s evolution. It’s all unknowns. Nonetheless, I shall spin you a tale credible enough for me to entertain it briefly, at least for the purposes of this post.

In the early Universe, the Milky Way formed. Initially, its stars were mainly very large and short-lived and their planets were just balls of hydrogen and helium because heavier elements had yet to form in any quantity. During this period, metals (the astrophysical term for any heavier element) began to be forged in the cores of these stars and as they met their demise as supernovæ, they ejected these more massive atoms and the next generation of stars began to form with rocky planets and moons. Life arose or arrived on these bodies and over a period of æons, intelligent species evolved and began to develop technology. This took place in a kind of bell curve, with some appearing quite early because everything had gone “right” for them, and they found themselves apparently alone in the Universe because they were as of yet rare in the Cosmos. Nonetheless, some of them made their way into the Galaxy, explored it and settled on planets, perhaps making them more hospitable in the process or genetically modifying themselves to do so. Then the emergence of intelligent life reached its peak, around nine thousand million years ago, and many of them encountered each other. There was a long, indeterminate period of hostility and war, although it is difficult to conduct anything like a war between species living light years apart. This settled down after some time, perhaps millions of years, and galactic civilisation reached its mature phase. Systems were set up to share information and technology, and customs evolved to integrate newly-emerging species into the galactic social order. By the time Earth formed, over three thousand million years after the first interstellar civilisations arose, there were established and stable agreements not to interfere with primitive planets until they were ready. Yes, this is the interdict scenario. Very often in science fiction, the situation depicted is of a range of intelligent life forms who are of roughly the same stage of technological development as each other with a few who are so far advanced compared to the others that they’re like God. This seems unlikely because of the sheer age of the Galaxy. Civilisations might collapse and species go extinct of course, but even if this happens a lot, the period during which an interstellar culture could thrive might be very long indeed compared to current history. On the other hand, maybe technological progress reaches a plateau at some stage and the current phase of apparent rapid technological and scientific change is a brief “blip” between the more routine stages of the Palæolithic and an interstellar utopia. This confronts us with another paradox: that in fact we are the unusual ones and in a way the far future, if it happens, and the current state of most spacegoing civilisations in the Galaxy, actually have a lot in common with the Stone Age compared to what we have now. Having said all that, I haven’t fully thought through the implications.

Before I commit myself to this state of affairs, I want to describe another, very different one. It starts the same way as before, but instead of the early tail of the bell curve being in the distant past, it’s now. Humans are in fact unusually early as a technological species. When we go “out there”, we will find a sparsely-peopled Galaxy which does have other species capable of interstellar travel, but we’re all outliers and the glory days lie in the unimaginably distant future. Or alternatively, without anticipating the future, intelligent life is present but sparse in the Universe, so our nearest interstellar neighbours could be 576 light years away, and it has always been so and will continue to be like this in the future until all the stars go out. What then?

Humans have recently discovered that our very closest interstellar neighbour, Proxima Centauri, has a planet orbiting it with roughly the same mass as Earth’s, and in any case a maximum mass of less than three times ours, actually 2.77. Bear in mind that even that upper limit isn’t that much larger because if its density is the same, it gives it a diameter, with spurious accuracy, of 17 915 kilometres, only 40% larger, as would its gravity be – just slightly too high for comfortable habitation by humans. Its equilibrium temperature is only ten percent lower than Earth’s, which easily gives it a chance of having water oceans on its surface. We’ve kind of hit the jackpot first time, but incredibly, this isn’t big news for most people! However, this bizarre apathy isn’t the focus of my post. What is, is the fact that in a sphere around the Solar System with a radius of only 4.3 light years, there may be two habitable planets. There’s definitely one of course. If that “sample” were to be extrapolated by doubling the radius of the sphere to 8.6 light years, almost the distance to Sirius, it would octuple the volume and “statistics” would suggest eight habitable planets within that radius, which is clearly not so. There aren’t even eight star systems, including the Sun, within that sphere, and as could be expected three of the stars are red dwarfs, which are easier to detect so nearby, but more can be supposed elsewhere. It’s been said previously that red dwarfs appear to be surprisingly good candidates for habitable planets, so it’s not beyond all reason to assert that there might be some there, but they’re not Sun-like stars.

With a further increase of radius, the sphere could be expected to become a more accurate sample of the space in this region of the Galaxy. For argument’s sake, I’m going to assert the idea that there are five more habitable planets within six dozen light years, with the possibility that there might be more than one in some systems. For instance, if our own practically double planet system is in any way typical, and it probably isn’t, there might be another whose larger component is at the upper luimit of habitability and whose smaller one is at the lower, or perhaps a system with two habitable worlds, one very hot and one very cold. The TRAPPIST-1 system contains seven Earth-sized planets within a habitable zone, for example. Nonetheless, they could be expected to level out at less than two on average per system which contains any. Six such planets in a 72-light year radius sphere will have a mean distance of almost sixty-four light years from each other. However, at that rate the sphere of exploration would only need to be about three light years further for another to be found. Hence exploring space in this way, whether by going out there, sending probes or astronomical observation, would be exponentially more successful. And this ignores the idea of setting up further facilities on the outlying planets, or near the edges of explored space, increasing the chances of finding them more quickly and even further out.

John von Neumann, the mathematician, suggested that interstellar space could be explored relatively quickly and efficiently by releasing a space probe which, when it reached the target system, would build a copy or two of itself which would then be despatched on to more distant systems. Given that there are four hundred thousand million stars in the Galaxy, this would require around forty generations of probes, which is not hugely impractical-sounding, but the problem is that releasing such craft into the interstellar environment runs the risk of mutation and evolution into a swarm of “grey goo”-style craft attempting to convert all the suitable material in the Milky Way into copies of themselves. It would also still take a minimum of fifty thousand years for such a programme to cover the Galaxy, and a minimum of a further fifty thousand for all the data to be received. I will be returning to von Neumann’s devices in future, as they seem to have quite profound significance.

Combining the doubling of probes with the exponential growth of likely planets as the distance increases means that there is no impediment to a long period of such growth. Even if it takes five centuries to find the first five closest worlds, the sixth is likely to be found within five years of the fifth, assuming velocity is not a limit. This also means that the probability of finding a new one per year would have grown similarly in the intervening time. The longest wait could be expected at the start of this period. This assumes , though, a relatively homogenous Universe of infinite extent with regular distribution of potential homes for humanity. In the long term, this is unlikely to be so.

This is where the two constrasting scenarios of sparse relatively young and isolated civilisations and common mature confederated ones come into play. Deciding to assume that the average distance between spacefaring civilsation home worlds is 576 light years, which is exactly eight times six dozen, gives a sphere of influence (not really a sphere of course as there would be gaps) averaging out at 288 light years radius. This assumes also that the environmental requirements of different species are identical, raising the possibility of competition. This takes on a different significance when one considers that what may in fact have happened, for all we know, is that the biological entities who originally designed von Neumann machines may be long gone by now, and what we would in fact find is a galaxy dominated by machines of that kind, which would be a lot less fussy than animals about their requirements. Depending on the age and rate of exploration of our neighbours, we would of course be increasingly likely to meet. It’s been claimed that the nature of First Contact may be less important than the fact it happens at all, because of the impact of the realisation that we’re not alone in the Universe, but it would seem that if the Dark Forest explanation is true, that wouldn’t be the case as the chances are then that there would be a swift attempt at mutual annihilation, and that’s more significant than just discovering aliens. However, though a wonderful source of drama, the Dark Forest explanation is unlikely. This planet has had very obvious biosignatures for hundreds of millions of years or longer, for instance as the spectrographically detectable free oxygen in the atmosphere, and nothing has happened in that time which looks like an alien attack. Why not root out the possibility of intelligent life early rather than, say, wait for the industrial revolution? The increase in carbon dioxide since the Industrial Revolution is a technosignature, though possibly an ambiguous one. CFCs and the depletion of the ozone layer, however, are pretty much certain technosignatures because of the nature of fluorine and chlorine, which can only be handled and produced industrially in that way. We’ve been advertising our presence to a possibly empty Universe for a very long time. Incidentally, the transmission of routine radio signals is not an easily detectable sign because it isn’t as persistent as many people think it is. In fact, it disappears into the noise before it even gets to Proxima. I have to confess that I don’t know how far the Arecibo telescope message has reached or will reach.

I’m going to call the two scenarios I’ve already mentioned “Interdict” and “Early Tail”, and introduce a third, “Absent Aliens”, which is where there’s no other intelligent life in the Universe. In Interdict, the situation would probably arise where soon after First Contact, uplift would occur. I may be using this word unusually. By “uplift”, I mean the idea that advanced aliens will help us improve the level of technology and scientific information available to us, perhaps in Interdict in exchange for our original thinking and cultural artifacts. This has a kind of religious, cargo cult flavour to it, but in practical terms as far as discovery of new worlds is concerned, this could simply involve humanity being given a catalogue of every such world available to and suitable for us throughout the Galaxy. If this happens, a gradually increasing bubble of knowledge would just suddenly expand in a leap, and this would include other areas of knowledge.

In Early Tail, assuming friendly relations between us and aliens, and there are reasons to suppose that would be so, the bubble expands up until First Contact, after which information about suitable planets in other regions of space known to the aliens is shared. These aliens may or may not have similar requirements to our own, such as temperature, pressure, the presence of oxygen in the atmosphere, particular levels of gravity and so forth, and they may have incidentally discovered planets suitable for us but not for them. The situation could be intermediate or not. For instance, chlorine-breathing aliens who find oxygen poisonous are not in competition with us for habitats, although they may be for mineral resources or solar power, but extremophile-type aliens who thrive in conditions like those of Antarctica could have overlaps with us, and this could influence their attitude towards both sharing information and bothering to find out about it in the first place. I presume nobody with any influence is currently proposing the detection of planets with free chlorine in their atmospheres, so would we know about them in our own sphere of exploration by the time First Contact occurred or not? We might come across them accidentally though, and if we did, that would probably be a biosignature, though of very different life.

A simple Early Tail scenario is encountering aliens whose homeworld is 576 light years away with similar biology to our own, though of course probably not humanoid. If it takes five centuries to reach seventy-two light years from here during which five suitable worlds are visited and perhaps settled, and the aliens have explored at the same rate, we could expect to meet them when both spheres have a radius of 288 light years, which is four times that distance, and could therefore be expected to occur two millennia from now, by which time almost four hundred worlds would have been found by each. Assuming early friendly information-sharing, it involves an almost instant doubling of both species’ knowledge at that point. The rate of alien contact would also ramp up fast in the same way as the discovery of planets from this point because of the increase in explored volume. The idea of the average distance to intelligent aliens with interstellar civilisations being that far commits us to an estimate of the likelihood of a habitable planet having such life on it being around one in three thousand. Taking the window of habitability on our own planet as typical, i.e. around 1 500 million years, this would mean that the average time such a civilisation will exist, including the evolution of various species not directly connected to each other, would be around half a million years. However, this may not be how things really proceed, either here or elsewhere. Maybe there is instead a threshold in evolution after which intelligent life is a constant feature of the biosphere. There are a number of examples of species with somewhat similar intelligence to our own on this planet, including elephants, parrots, cetaceans, corvids, parrots and other simians. Maybe from now on, there will always be intelligent life here, and if this is so we can expect something like two-thirds of the suitable planets we encounter to have intelligent life on them. Using the density of habitability I’ve suggested, it could mean that the second world we come across will have intelligent life on it, or even the first.

Alternatively, intelligence and tool use could turn out to be an evolutionary dead end. Contrasting the polar opposites of releasing sheer clouds of young, like a coral, oyster, fish and to a lesser extent turtle, and not bothering with parental care, and having one or a very small number of young at a time which need extensive parental care and a learning period before being able to cope on their own, the second of these means that orphans tend not to thrive, it’s a long time before the next generation and we are unlikely to do much more than produce a few children. If an organism doesn’t need to mate, one individual in an environment empty of peers is likely to lead to a thriving population after very few generations, particularly if parental care is not required. Brains are also very resource-hungry. The human brain can account for up to 87% of resting basal metabolic rate. All this means that humans are vulnerable to major disasters and food shortages to a far greater extent than many other species with different reproductive and survival strategies, and it may be that other intelligent, technology using species have the same problem, meaning that they may not thrive for long. There’s also the evil twin of the Gaia Hypothesis, Peter Ward’s Medea Hypothesis. This is the idea that complex life tends to be fragile and vulnerable to extinction because of the activity of microörganisms, meaning that the more stable state of a biosphere is what was seen over most of Earth history, namely a load of microbes without much visible evidence of anything much going on and not even anything as advanced as an amœba. Medea in Greek mythology, found in ‘Jason And The Argonauts’, is the archetypal bad mother in the same way as Gaia is the archetypal good one, who murders her children. There have been a number of occasions in addition to the well-known mass extinctions of the Phanerozoic (the time since large hard-shelled animals evolved) which have almost destroyed all life on Earth: the oxygen catastrophe, snowball Earth, methane poisoning and a number of times hydrogen sulphide has been released in large quantities and nearly killed everything. Right now, anoxic zones are developing in the oceans which have in the geological record been associated with mass extinctions, and many organisms remove carbon from the atmosphere and deposit it in rocks such as chalk and fossil fuels, thereby making it unavailable as biomasse for a very long time. Therefore it could be that animals and complex plants are not a long-term prospect, and in fact they’re established not to be by the known course of our planet’s story. Hence intelligent life forms and even complex life forms of any kind might be rare even if microörganisms are not. Ward believes that the main immediate cause of mass extinctions is the release of hydrogen sulphide into the atmosphere by purple sulphur bacteria, which destroys the ozone layer and poisons ærobic life, caused by rapid global warming such as flood basalts releasing carbon dioxide, but also of course potentially by our own activities. If it’s common for this to happen when technological cultures become industrial, it could limit the length of civilisations dramatically, and it may be why we will never settle on other worlds or create large space habitats.

Assuming we survive, in this scenario the expanding sphere of exploration would simply proceed exponentially without any catalysts. However, we might not be finding anything interesting because although there could turn out to be plenty of planets like Earth, even with life on them, most of them would only ever have had simple, microbial life and many more would have permanently devastated environments, similarly with simple life but which once held complex life before the advent of intelligent life forms who managed to wipe almost everything out. Then there would be the occasional intelligent species which was still around but didn’t have long to go, probably too sparsely distributed for us ever to find any. And we are probably one of them.

Further limits emerge when expansion gets beyond about 1 500 light years. This is half the thickness of our spur of the local galactic arm. Beyond us are rifts in the Galaxy largely empty of stars or planets, and the neat sphere I’m imagining will no longer be spherical. A second factor may also come into play here. There may be a ring-shaped zone of habitable systems concentric with the galactic core. Stars near the centre of the Galaxy are very densely packed, but in any case, dense or not, not capable of supporting life on any planets they might have. They’re so close together that they’re likely to disrupt planetary orbits and the high level of radiation from the central black hole is likely to kill everything on a planet. Our galaxy is a barred spiral. This roughly means it has two arms projecting straight out of the centre before the spiral arms begin. The situation in the bars is about as hostile to life as the nucleus is. Further out, where the arms begin, heavier elements are quite common and consequently rocky planets likely to form, but also many gas giants, possibly so many of them that they will tend to fall towards their suns and become “Hot Jupiters”, which disrupt the orbits of the smaller, more hospitable, rocky planets. Also, there would be more cometary impacts because the stars are closer together and more likely to disrupt the orbits of the comets which orbit in a cloud around star systems far out. In addition, supernovæ are more likely closer to the planet than is safe, wiping out life in another way. Further out, stars are sparser and there are fewer heavy elements, meaning that planets would be simple gas giants consisting of hydrogen and helium but not much more than that. Hence the best distance in this Galaxy is likely to be between 25 000 and 33 000 light years from the centre. We are 27 000 light years out. It’s also fairly dangerous to be deep in a spiral arm – apparently we’re near the edge of one. This is because there are many blue supergiants there, which tend to go supernova after only a few million years.

Therefore what we’d probably find is that our “sphere” of exploration would cease to be one once it got beyond about 1 500 light years around the orbit of the Sun, two thousand light years hubward and five thousand towards the edge. However, if we’re on the edge of an arm, as we explored inward from that there would initially be a growth in the number of interesting worlds followed by a region where life had been obliterated given that it existed near the surface of the body concerned, but not necessarily if it was in a subsurface ocean, which judging by our own solar system can be expected to be very common, and rogue planets which have escaped from their suns which nonetheless have a source of heat in some way would also be immune from these risk factors. Hubward, that is, in the direction of Sagittarius from here, we could expect to find solar systems with more planets than ours but also more Hot Jupiters and with more frequent mass extinctions caused by comet bombardments until it became unfeasible for life to develop very far, assuming it does anyway. Towards the other edge of the Galaxy, which I presume is in the direction of Gemini, there would be more hospitable worlds more likely to harbour complex life forms but with less abundant heavy elements, so for example our own reliance on iodine to produce thyroid hormones would have no parallel. Biochemistry would become simpler with fewer trace elements, if possible.

However, of course a lot of this is guesswork. The scenarios I’ve considered here are that complex life is rare, the Dark Forest explanation of the Fermi Paradox, the idea that we are early in the history of intelligent life in the Galaxy, that complex life is unstable and short-lived, and that intelligent life is widespread and has reached a stable and peaceful maturity. It’s hard to extend this beyond mere speculation, and of course in the end we just don’t know what’s going on out there. We also have a tendency as a species to project out imagination onto the sky, and should be wary of that if we want to adopt a rational approach towards the prospect of intelligent life in the Galaxy. There are lots of fairly obvious things I haven’t considered, such as the idea that biological life is replaced by robots, that aliens and humans might prefer orbiting space stations to planets, or that there’s loads of intelligent life but it spends all its time on the local internet, but this is a fair sample of the ways things might go if we ever get our act together enough to go “out there”.