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7 Oct 2008

Are we Alone In The Universe?

- 10 Aug 2004
By Sir Martin Rees, Astronomer Royal   
Page 1 of 7

More than 400 years ago, Giordano Bruno, an Italian monk, wrote that "In space there are numberless earths circling around other suns, which may bear upon them creatures similar or even superior to those upon our human Earth." Bruno deserves to be remembered in the millennium year -- he was burnt at the stake, in Rome, in the year 1600.

In the late 19th century, the science fiction of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells popularised the idea of alien life. Percival Lowell, a wealthy American, built his own observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona primarily to study Mars. He believed that its surface was criss-crossed by 'canals', dug by an advanced civilisation to channel water from the frozen polar caps to the 'deserts' near the Red Planet's equator.

In 1900, a French foundation offered the Guzman Prize of 100,000 francs for the first contact with an extra-terrestrial species; but prudence led them to exclude Mars -- detecting Martians was then thought to be too easy!

the Red planet
NASA

Is there life on Mars - the idea has always fascinated us.

How life began, and whether it exists elsewhere remains one of the most fascinating questions in the whole of science -- indeed, you don't need to be a scientist to wonder about this. But we still don't know the answer. We're less optimistic about Mars than our forbears were a hundred years ago. Even if there is life there, it would be nothing more than microscopic 'bugs' of the kind that existed on Earth early in its history--- there is certainly nothing on Mars like the 'Martians' of popular fictions.

Indeed, nobody now expects 'advanced life' on any of the planets or moons in our Solar System. But our Sun is just one star among billions. And in the vastness of space far beyond our own Solar System we can rule out nothing. Astronomers have discovered, just within the last five years, that many stars have their own retinue of planets. There are millions of other Solar Systems. And there would surely, among this vast number, be many planets resembling our Earth.

Cancri b and c
Lynette Cook

Life could be everywhere - over 31 planetary systems have been discovered around other suns


Could some of these planets, orbiting other stars, harbour life-forms far more interesting and exotic than anything we might find on Mars? Could they even be inhabited by beings that we could recognise as intelligent?

 
Have your say
 
Well, I do think that there is no other intelligent life in the vast Universe. My reason for this is quite simple. We are the begining and not the end.
You see, I think that our early ancestors must have had the very same questions we have now: we are the future aliens to them, and so we would evolve into the future aliens we imagine exist now in time. We would occupy other planets as we explore the Universe, we would spread humankind over the Universe. When we occupy other planets the atmosphere - although habitable - would be different and would bring about in time a slightly different species of human from what we have today...
Well this is how I see it. Let's not waste money on finding aliens, and spend money on us moving away from Earth and start the real creation of the Universe. Maybe it is the ultimate reason we exist..

Posted by: kuganpillay - 2008-10-07 - 11:06 GMT

There must be something else out there
Posted by: guest - 2008-10-03 - 11:29 GMT

Hello, it's Luke, I eat aliens
Posted by: thecool1 - 2008-09-12 - 11:50 GMT

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