What's new

Scientists to US Congress: We Have the Technology to Find Alien Life

thesolar65

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jul 3, 2012
Messages
4,922
Reaction score
-12
Country
India
Location
India
For thousands of years, humans have been wondering whether there's life elsewhere in the universe. Now, the technology finally exists to search for it.

To find extraterrestrial life, be it microbes or intelligent life, scientists need telescopes capable of detecting Earth-like planets in Earth's neighborhood and ways to detect biological signatures of life or signs of alien technology. While some of these tools already exist, astrobiologists asked the U.S. Congress Dec. 4 to invest in the next chapter of the search for life beyond Earth.

"This is the first time in human history we have the technological reach to find life on other planets," Sara Seager, a planetary scientist at MIT, said at a House Committee on Science, Space and Technology hearing today. "People will look back at us as the [generation] who found Earth-like worlds."

Are we alone?

Astrobiology — the study of the origin, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe — has taken a leap forward over the past few years. Members of the science committee expressed enthusiasm for the field's progress.

"Astrobiology has become a crosscutting theme of all NASA space science endeavors," and continued funding is important, said Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson (D., Texas).

The Kepler mission has identified more than 3,500 potential planets outside Earth's solar system, including 10 that are Earth-size and lie within their star's habitable zone. And the space-based Hubble and Spitzer telescopes recently imaged the atmospheres of an exoplanet directly.

Meanwhile, the Mars rover Curiosity has found evidence that past conditions on the Red Planet could have supported life. Here on Earth, scientists have found examples of microbes living in the most extreme environments imaginable, from volcanic lakes to glaciers. Find life in such unlikely places suggests it could exist in harsh environments on other planets,

After 50 years, humanity is now in an era when it can provide data for whether life exists elsewhere in the universe, Mary Voytek, NASA's head of astrobiology, told members of Congress.

The search ramps up
A key part of these efforts will be to look for biological signatures in the atmospheres of other planets. For example, oxygen doesn't last long by itself, so the presence of oxygen would indicate living organisms were producing it. Another necessity for life on Earth is water, and scientists just announced they have found signatures of water in the atmospheres of five planets (although they are superhot, Jupiter-size planets).

NASA's TESS (Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite) telescope, set to launch in 2017, will search for exoplanets using the transiting method the Kepler mission used to detect planets crossing in front of their host star. The James Webb Space Telescope, scheduled to launch in 2018, will be able to peer more closely at some of the planets detected by TESS.

Ultimately, scientists want to image planets directly, but this requires blocking out light from a star so that a planet would be visible. Using a telescope attachment called an internal coronagraph is one way to do this; another way is to build a star shade, a large object shaped like a flower that could be moved independently in space. Scientists need to try both methods to find one that works, Seager said.

The most optimistic estimate for finding life would be within a decade, using the James Webb telescope, Seager said. But she said that a more realistic approach is needed, including a next-generation telescope to succeed the James Webb telescope.

Then there's the prospect of intelligent life. Space historian Stephen Dick, currently an astrobiology scholar at the Library of Congress, called for renewing efforts to look for intelligent life via the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI).

"No bio-signatures would be more important than a radio signal — especially if they have something to say," Dick said.

And if scientists find life out there, then what?

"The plan is to confirm it first, then tell everybody," Dick said.
Scientists to Congress: We Have the Technology to Find Alien Life | Space.com
 
SETI has been operational for quite a long time.
 
Why are these guys banging their heads to find and prove that alien life exists? It does. Proof? Here are some images captured by STS missions which NASA can't find any explanations for. These aren't satellite or booster debris. Nicknamed Black Night, what is it?

STS088-724-66-1024x1020.jpg


AS1.png


CloseupBlackKnight.jpg


Yep! ET is already here!
 
Would love to see human and alien baby.....lol
 
We don't have technology to go to Mars let alone a plant 40,000 Years away by Rocket power
 
We don't have technology to go to Mars let alone a plant 40,000 Years away by Rocket power

we do have the technology to go to Mars and by we I mean ofc NASA not India/Pakistan. But we do not have the technology to bring the astronauts back to earth yet.
 
All Talk , can't land on Mars
Can't lift off from Mars
Can't live on Mars for extended period
No runways on Mars
We can't even live on moon right around corner

As for travel to these new planets , closest star is 40,000 rocket years from us !!!

So no chance of anyone visiting these "other" planets anytime soon

Our known Civilization history is 2,000 years old (Written history) may be , 5,000 BC after that is ??? no one knows how people lived

We are what ANTS are to our planet , they live in 300 meter zone , and that is all their lives are about that 300 meter zone they don't have capacity to " envision " or plan a trip we humans take to lets say in airplane from LA to Tokyo in hours

Also our Bone loses "density" we can't live for long time in space !!!

From all logical stand points our life spans of mere 60 Years is not enough ...

We are reaching our Max capacity
 
We had technologies from the early 80s, but never had the kind of political stimulus. And in one way, finding alien life will force us to rewrite all basic understanding of life. And religion will be highly impacted by it.
 
Reminds me of the movie Contact.

As much as I admired Carl Sagan, the movie showcased the character of the arrogant scientist. Jodie Foster's self-righteous blabbering about being entitled to spend tax payer money was very realistic and right on ... the money.

The fact is that, even if they detect oxygen in the atmosphere of distant planets, it will prove diddley. All it will suggest is that there may be life on those planets -- or there may not -- nothing definitive.
 
Not a pro in astrophysics, but there are many wonders out there.

By large, the biggest myth of, God made human being on it's image will be busted. Why'd God be generous enough to give it's image to a inferior being like humans?

So you do believe that there's a God out there who created this universe??

But i cant believe in those Adam and Eve stories.I believe in the ET theory...sounds crazy I know.
 
So you do believe that there's a God out there who created this universe??

But i cant believe in those Adam and Eve stories.I believe in the ET theory...sounds crazy I know.

There is no place of God in the grand design of the universe. It only had been a tool to control over the masses, or there wouldn't have been different versions of God in different cultures and at the same time, they wouldn't have gone extinct with the civilization. How many people worship the all powerful Zeus or Apollo now?
 
Back
Top Bottom