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Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe Intelligent Life in the Universe APoD: Easter Island Eclipse Lecture 33 In-Class Question 1) Do you think life exists elsewhere in the Universe? a) Yes b) No c) Don’t know d) Don’t care Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 2 33 - 1 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe Lecture Topics Probabilities Rates and totals The Drake equation Computes the expected number of technical civilizations in the galaxy Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 3 Are we alone? Do other civilizations exist in the galaxy or elsewhere? How might we estimate this statistically and what are the uncertainties? We would like to quantify whether life and, in particular, other civilizations might exist in the galaxy. 33 - 2 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe Probabilities How many dates might a guy get in this class? N D N W f ask f accept f show _ up ND = number of dates NW = number of women in the class fask = fraction he asks out faccept = fraction that accept fshow_up = fraction that show up Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 5 Suppose Nw = 100 Shy guy: fask = 0.02 (2%) faccept = 0.50 (50%) fshow_up = 1.00 (100%) ND = 100 x 0.02 x 0.5 x 1.0 = 1 date Outgoing guy: fask = 0.20 (20%) faccept = 0.10 (10%) fshow_up = 0.50 (50%) ND = 100 x 0.2 x 0.1 x 0.5 = 1 date Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 6 33 - 3 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe Rates and Totals Suppose R* = Rate at which stars are born tl = Average lifetime of a star How many stars are alive at a given time? The number of stars is: N = R* x tl ( Rate times time ) 7 Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe Total number of stars alive Now Death line 10 yrs Stars not yet born Stars dead Time Suppose: R* = 1 star/year (represented by spikes above). And stars live only 10 years. 10 stars would be alive at any given time. Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 8 33 - 4 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe Number of civilizations Suppose that each star developed a civilization. If the lifetime of the civilization is tl then the total number of civilizations alive is: N T R tl But this isn’t the whole story .... Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 9 The Drake Equation Attempts to quantify the number of civilizations that might exist in the galaxy. Named after, Frank Drake pioneered this analysis while at Cornell Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 10 33 - 5 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe N T R f p f h f s f i f t t l NT = Number of technological civilizations in the galaxy. R* = Rate at which stars are born, averaged over the lifetime of the galaxy. (Stars/year) fp = Fraction having planetary systems. fh = Average number of life-suitable (habitable) planets within those systems having planets. Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 11 N T R f p f h f s f i f t t l fs = Fraction of habitable planets on which at least simple life arises. fi = Fraction of life-bearing planets on which intelligence evolves. ft = Fraction of those intelligent life planets that develop a technological society. tl = Average lifetime of a technological civilization. (years) Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 12 33 - 6 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe N T 10 R stars f p ffph ffh s f fs i ffi t ftt l tl year R* = Rate at which stars are born, averaged over the lifetime of the galaxy. (Stars/year) There are ~100 billion stars in the galaxy today. And the galaxy is about 10 billion years old. R* ~ 10 stars/year Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 13 N T 10 stars 1f p fhfh f s fs fi fi ft fttl tl year fp = Fraction having planetary systems. If our understanding of star formation is correct, then planets are a natural consequence. All stars could have planets, so we take fp ~ 1 However, only ~5% of nearby sun-like stars have giant planets (depends highly on metallicity). Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 14 33 - 7 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe f1 f f f t N T 10 stars year 1 10h f ss f i i f t t t l l fh = Average number of life-suitable (habitable) planets within those systems having planets. The ecosphere size varies with stellar type, but we might expect the odds to be similar to our solar system, so we choose fh ~ 1/10 Accept only F, G and K stars. Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 15 Caveats: Galactic Habitable Zone Region in the Galaxy over which life and life bearing worlds are likely to exist Requirements Available material to build planets High enough metallicity to produce terrestrial planets Right mix of “heavy elements” to radioactively heat core of planet (drives plate tectonics which regulate CO2 in the atmosphere) Seclusion from cosmic threats Impacts by asteroids (depends on Jupiter) and comets (affected by galactic tides, GMCs, and passing stars) Blasts of radiation (active galactic nucleus outbursts, supernovae, and gamma ray bursts) Orbit near “co-rotation” circle – place where orbital period of star equals rotation period of spiral arm pattern. Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 16 33 - 8 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe Metallicity In the outer parts of the galaxy, the metallicity will be too low for giant planet formation Galactic Hazards Supernovae and stellar encounters are much more frequent in the interior of the galaxy Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 17 Galactic Habitable Zone Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 18 33 - 9 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe N T 10 stars 1 101 f s f i f t tl year fs = Fraction of habitable planets on which at least simple life arises. How likely is it life will form? Is life rare? It is certainly complex! Laboratory experiments show that complex organic molecules can be formed in an atmosphere similar to that expected on the early earth. Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 19 The Urey-Miller Experiment Harold Urey and Stanley Miller (1953) Made “primordial soup” mixture water, methane, carbon dioxide, ammonia Passed simulated lightning through it. Produced “gunk” containing many of the amino acids found in life today. Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 20 33 - 10 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe Cyril Ponnamperuma About a decade later constructed nucleotide bases in a similar manner. Both experiments did not closely resemble the early atmosphere. But showed biological molecules can be synthesized by nonbiological means. Astrobiology Studies the origin, evolution, and possible future of life in the Universe This is an area of active research Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 21 Primordial Soup 33 - 11 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe Creating Organics is easy Using better knowledge of the primordial ocean and atmosphere. Various energy sources can produce amino acids and nucleotide bases. Energy sources such as: solar UV radiation, lightning, volcanic heat, natural radioactivity, and atmospheric shock waves produced by meteorites. Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 23 1 N T 10 stars 1 1f s f ifi f tft tl tl year 10 fs = Fraction of habitable planets on which at least simple life arises. Making organics is easy, but creating life may not be. Some might argue that under the right conditions life has to happen. Most optimistic case: fs ~ 1 Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 24 33 - 12 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe In-Class Question 1) What is the galactic habitable zone of the Milky Way? a) Sufficient metals the build planets b) Seclusion from cosmic threats c) Inner regions of the galaxy d) a and b e) b and c Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 25 N T 10 stars 1 101 1 1f i f tf t tltl year fi = Fraction of life-bearing planets on which intelligence evolves. The appearance of a well-developed brain might not happen if left to random chance. But natural selection tends to single out the more adaptable, more intelligent species. The optimistic view takes intelligence as inevitable: fi ~ 1 Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 26 33 - 13 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe Dinosaurs and extinction Dinosaurs “ruled” the world for ~ 100 million years, but were pretty stupid (technically). Was the mass extinction (due to an asteroid impact) of the dinosaurs necessary for Homo Sapiens to evolve? Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 27 Other influences? What role did Jupiter and Saturn have in allowing life to form on Earth. Cleared out cometary objects! But also deflects them too The Moon Stabilizes the orientation of the Earth’s spin axis Otherwise we could have “days” that last a whole year! Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 28 33 - 14 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 1 N T 10 stars 1 1 1 1ft tltl year 10 ft = Fraction of those intelligent life planets that develop a technological society. It is hard to imagine an intelligent species avoiding technology. Technical civilizations arose independently in many areas of the world. Taking technological development as inevitable: ft ~ 1 Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 29 1 N T 10 stars 1 1 1 1 tl year 10 tl = Average lifetime of a technological civilization. (years) How long does a technical civilization last? We’ve had one for ~100 years. There are many unknowns to our own future, let alone predicting how long another civilization might last. Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 30 33 - 15 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 6 1 1 1 1 1 t years N T 10 stars 10 l year 10 tl = Average lifetime of a technological civilization. (years) Suppose the average lifetime of a technical civilization is 1 millions years 1% of the reign of the dinosaurs 100 times longer than human civilization has existed! 1 million civilizations in our galaxy. Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 31 Uncertainties! Important - each term in the Drake equation (probably) gets more uncertain when proceeding from left to right. For lack of a better example we have adopted an Earth/human bias when estimating various terms. We do not know the uncertainties. Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 32 33 - 16 Lec. 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe How far to our neighbors? For 1,000,000 civilizations in the galaxy the average distance between them will be ~ 150 ly!!! two-way communication will take at least 300 years! But this is a large over prediction since the Galactic Habitable Zone has much, much less than 1011 stars Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 33 How far? (cont’d) If the lifetime of a technical civilization is less than 3000 years Average distance is so large that civilizations will die, on average, before two-way communications can be established! Lec 33: Intelligent Life in the Universe 34 33 - 17