Are we alone in the universe? It's a question that has always fired the human imagination. The more we learn, the more unlikely it seems that Earth is a lone miracle inhabiting life amid galaxies of lifeless planets. Many eminent scientists are positive that it is just a matter of time before we find other life in the universe . But exactly how we'll encounter our inter-galactic neighbours, and whether they'll be just a few cells or full-blown ET lookalikes, they are less sure.
'We are going to find life in space in this
century,' Dr. Seth Shostak, Senior Astronomer at the Search for
Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence Institute (SETI) said emphatically at
last week's European Commission Innovation Convention. 'There are 150
billion galaxies other than our own, each with a few tens of billions of
earth-like planets. If this is the only place in the universe where
anything interesting happening then this is a miracle. And 500 years of
astronomy has taught us that whenever you believe in a miracle, you're
probably wrong.'
How will discover life in space? Dr Shostak sees it as a
'three-horse race' which will probably be won over the next 25 years. We
will either find it nearby, in microbial form, on Mars or one of the
moons of Jupiter; we will find evidence for gases produced by living
processes (for example photosynthesis) in the atmospheres of planets
around other stars; or Dr Shostak and his team at SETI will pick up
signals from intelligent life via huge antennas.
Dr. Suzanne Aigrain, Lecturer in Astrophysics at Oxford University,
who studies extrasolar planets or exoplanets (planets around other stars
than the sun), represents horse number two in the race. Speaking at the
Convention, Dr Aigrain noted that, based on her studies, she would also
bet that we are not alone. 'We are very close to being able to say with
a good degree of certainty that planets like the Earth, what we call
habitable planets, are quite common [in the universe] ... That's why
when asked if I believe there's life on other planets, I raise my hand
and I do so as a scientist because the balance of probability is
overwhelmingly high.'
Dr. Aigrain, and the groups that she works with, have so far been
using light - electromagnetic radiation - as their primary tool to look
for planets around stars other than the sun. Habitable planets are
defined as those that are roughly the size of the earth where the
surface temperature is suitable for liquid water to exist on the
surface. The life 'biomarkers' that Dr. Aigrain and her colleagues look
for are trace gases in the atmospheres of the exoplanets that they think
can only be there if they are being produced by a biological source
like photosynthesis.
Dr Shostak and SETI, meanwhile, seek evidence of life in the
universe by looking for some signature of its technology. If his team
does discover radio transmissions from space, Dr Shostak is quite
certain that they will be coming from a civilisation more advanced than
our own. 'Why do I insist that if we find ET, he/she/it will be more
advanced than we are? The answer is that you're not going to hear the
Neanderthals. The Neanderthal Klingons are not building radio
transmitters that will allow you to get in touch.'
If we do find life on other planets or intercept a radio signal,
what are the consequences? Finding a microbe that isn't an earthly
microbe will tell us a lot about biology, but there will also be huge
philosophical consequences. In Dr Shostak's words, 'It literally changes
everything'.
Source: Komisja Europejska
Reference documents: Based on coverage of the European Innovation Convention