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ASTR368 Exoplanet Detections Kepler Extra-Solar Life Life in the Universe (Chapter 24) http://grooveshark.com/s/Is+There+Anybo Out+There/541wYk?src=5 Other Possible Necessities for Life A large planet like Jupiter to clear out asteroids? A large moon? A magnetosphere? The right location in a Galaxy? Impacts and Habitability Some scientists argue that Jupiter-like planets are necessary to reduce rate of impacts If so, then Earth-like planets are restricted to star systems with Jupiter-like planets Climate and the Moon The planet should spin relatively quickly so day/night temperatures aren’t too dramatically different The Earth has an unusually large Moon Tidal pools are ultimately caused by the Moon and may be necessary for life Magnetospheres Magnetosphere protects a planet from a stellar wind, which may disrupt formation of life Constraints on Galaxy Location Some scientists argue that proportions of heavy elements need to be just right for formation of habitable planets If so, then Earth-like planets are restricted to a Galactic habitable zone The Drake Equation How likely is this process? How special is the Earth? Frank Drake The Drake Equation How likely is this process? How special is the Earth? R* is the average rate of star formation in our Galaxy fp is the fraction of those stars that have planets ne is the average number of planets that can support life fℓ is the fraction of the above that develop life at some point fi is the fraction of the above that develop intelligent life fc is the fraction of civilizations that develop a technology that releases detectable signs of their existence into space L is the length of time such civilizations release detectable signals into space. The Drake Equation (simplified) Number of civilizations with whom we could potentially communicate N = NHP flife fciv fnow NHP = total # of habitable planets in galaxy flife = fraction of habitable planets with life fciv = fraction of life-bearing planets w/ civilization at some time fnow = fraction of civilizations around now. We do not know the values for the Drake Equation NHP : probably billions. flife : ??? Hard to say (is it near 0 or near 1?) fciv : ?????? It took 4 billion years on Earth fnow : ?????? Can civilizations survive long-term? What are we Doing to Find E.T.? 1) Space probes! 2) SETI searches 3) Locating extrasolar planets But we’re not really trying too hard, all things considered Space Probes Voyager 1+2, Pioneer 10+11 launched in the 1970s and still going Spacecraft take about 100,000 years to reach the nearest stars. http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/spacecraft/goldenrec.html Pioneer plaque Voyager record New Horizons To infinity and beyond! The Search for ExtraTerrestrial Life (SETI) SETI searches the sky at radio frequencies for strong, repeating signals IN OUR GALAXY Nothing plausible so far…. SETI @ Home We have even Sent a few Signals Sent from Arecibo Telescope in 1974 to globular cluster M13 by Frank Drake, Carl Sagan and others Fermi’s Paradox Plausible arguments suggest that civilizations should be common, for example: Even if only 1 in 1 million stars gets a civilization at some time 100,000 civilizations So why we haven’t we detected them? Solutions to Fermi’s Paradox 1) We are alone: life/civilizations much rarer than we might have guessed. Our own planet/civilization looks all the more precious… 2) There are lots of other civilizations but lots of stars. Someday we’ll meet them. Anthropic Principle The Universe appears to be fine-tuned for life (us). If the parameters of the Universe (e.g., the force of gravity) were only slightly different, stars and galaxies would not form, and we would not be here. The Anthropic Principle states that the Universe appears fine-tuned to us, because we are here to observe it. If we were not here, there would be no one to report on whether the Universe is fine-tuned or not. Anthropic Principle Modified anthropic principle (Schmidhuber): The 'problem' of existence is only relevant to a species capable of formulating the question. Prior to Homo sapiens' intellectual evolution to the point where the nature of the observed universe - and humans' place within same spawned deep inquiry into its origins, the 'problem' simply did not exist.