Aliens - the facts
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Extraterrestrial life is life that exists and originates outside the planet Earth, the only place in the universe currently acknowledged by the people of the world to support life. Its existence is still hypothetical as there is currently little evidence to indicate that other known planets can support life, and there is no evidence of extraterrestrial life that has been widely accepted by the scientific community. Some, however, point to moons of Jupiter or other celestial bodies that might conceivably have some forms of life (bacterial or otherwise).
Most scientists believe that if extraterrestrial life exists, its evolution occurred independently, in different places. An alternative hypothesis, held by a minority, is panspermia. This suggests that life could have been created elsewhere and spread across the universe, between habitable planets. These two hypotheses are not mutually exclusive.
The
putative study and theorisation of extraterrestrial life is known as astrobiology
or xenobiology. Speculative forms of extraterrestrial life range from sapient
beings to life at the scale of bacteria. Since no examples of confirmed extraterrestrial
life are available for examination, these studies presently remain within the
realm of speculation.
All life on Earth is based on the building block
element carbon with water as the solvent in which biochemical reactions take place.
The combination of carbon and water in the chemical form (CH2O)n, is the chemical
form of the sugars, which as well as providing the energy on which life depends
(largely through the oxidation of glucose, a six carbon sugar), also provides
structural elements for life (such as the sugar ribose, a five carbon sugar, in
the molecules DNA and RNA). Life requires carbon in both reduced (methane derivatives)
and partially-oxidized (carbon oxides) states. It also requires nitrogen as a
reduced ammonia derivative in all proteins, sulfur as a derivative of hydrogen
sulfide in some necessary proteins, and phosphorus oxidized to phosphates in genetic
material and in energy transfer. Adequate water as a solvent supplies adequate
oxygen as constituents of biochemical substances.
Pure water is useful because it has a neutral pH, due to its continued dissociation between hydroxide and hydronium ions.
As a result, it can dissolve both positive metallic ions and negative
non-metallic ions with equal ability. Furthermore, the fact that organic molecules
can be either hydrophobic (repelled by water) or hydrophilic (soluble in water)
creates the ability of organic compounds to orient themselves to form water-enclosing
membranes. The fact that solid water (ice) is less dense than liquid water also
means that ice floats, thereby preventing Earth's oceans from slowly freezing
solid. Additionally, the Van der Waals forces between water molecules give it
an ability to store energy with evaporation, which upon condensation is released.
This helps moderate climate, cooling the tropics and warming the poles, helping
to maintain a thermodynamic stability needed for life.
Carbon is fundamental
to terrestrial life for its immense flexibility in creating covalent chemical
bonds with a variety of non-metallic elements, principally nitrogen, oxygen and
hydrogen. Carbon dioxide and water together enable the storage of solar energy
in sugars, such as glucose. The oxidation of glucose releases biochemical energy
needed to fuel all other biochemical reactions
The ability to form organic
acids (-COOH) and amine bases (NH2-) gives it the possibility of neutralisation
dehydrating reactions to build long polymer peptides and catalytic proteins from
monomer amino acids, and with phosphates to build not only DNA, the information
storing molecule of inheritance, but also adenosine triphosphate (ATP) the principle
energy "currency" of cellular life.
Given their relative abundance
and usefulness in sustaining life it has long been assumed that life forms elsewhere
in the universe will also utilize these basic components. However, other elements
and solvents might be capable of providing a basis for life. Silicon is usually
considered the most likely alternative to carbon, though this remains improbable.
Silicon life forms are proposed to have a crystalline morphology, and are theorized
to be able to exist in high temperatures, such as planets closer to the sun. Life
forms based in ammonia rather than water are also considered, though this solution
appears less optimal than water.
Indeed, technically life is little more
than any self-replicating reaction, which could arise in a great many conditions
and with various ingredients, though carbon-oxygen within the liquid temperature
range of water seems most conducive. Suggestions have even been made that self-replicating
reactions of some sort could ocur within the plasma of a star, though it would
be highly unconventional, since plasma is essentially the fourth state of matter,
where electrons are not bound in their orbits around atomic nuclei.
Along with
the biochemical basis of extraterrestrial life, there remains a broader consideration
of evolution and morphology. Science fiction has long shown a bias towards humanoid
and/or reptilian forms. The classical alien is light green or grey skinned, with
a large head, and the typical four limb and two to five digit structurei.e.,
it is fundamentally humanoid with a large brain to indicate great intelligence.
Other subjects from animal mythos such as felines and insects have also featured
strongly in fictional representations of aliens.
A division has been suggested between universal and parochial (narrowly restricted) characteristics. Universals are features which have evolved independently more than once on Earth (and thus presumably are not difficult to develop) and are so intrinsically useful that species will inevitably tend towards them. These include flight, sight, photosynthesis and limbs, all of which have evolved several times here on Earth with differing materialization. There are a huge variety of eyes, for example, many of which have radically different working schematics as well as different visual foci: the visual spectrum, infrared, polarity and echolocation. Parochials, by contrast, are essentially arbitrary evolutionary forms which often serve little inherent utility (or at least have a function which can be equally served by dissimilar morphology) and probably will not be replicated. Parochials include the five digits of mammals and the curious and often fatal conjunction of the feeding and breathing passages found within many animals, although it is possible this conjunction allowed for the evolution of human speech.[citation needed]
A consideration of which features are ultimately parochial, challenges many taken-for-granted notions about morphological necessity. Skeletons, which are essential to large terrestrial organisms according to the experts of the field of Gravitational biology, are almost assuredly to be replicated elsewhere in one form or another, yet the vertebrate spinewhile a profound development on Earthis just as likely to be unique. Similarly, it is reasonable to expect some type of egg laying amongst off-Earth creatures but the mammary glands which set apart mammals might be a singular case.
The
assumption of radical diversity amongst putative extraterrestrials is by no means
settled. While many exobiologists do stress that the enormously heterogeneous
nature of Earth life foregrounds even greater variety in space, others point out
that convergent evolution may dictate substantial similarities between Earth and
off-Earth life. These two schools of thought are called "divergionism"
and "convergionism", respectively.
Belief in extraterrestrial life
may have been present in ancient Egypt, China, Babylon, India and Sumer, although
in these societies, cosmology was fundamentally supernatural and the notion of
alien life is difficult to distinguish from that of gods, demons, and such. The
first important Western thinkers to argue systematically for a universe full of
other planets and, therefore, possible extraterrestrial life were the ancient
Greek writers Thales and his student Anaximander in the 7th and 6th centuries
B.C. The atomists of Greece took up the idea, arguing that an infinite universe
ought to have an infinity of populated worlds. Ancient Greek cosmology worked
against the idea of extraterrestrial life in one critical respect, however: the
geocentric universe, championed by Aristotle and codified by Ptolemy, favored
the Earth and Earth-life (Aristotle denied there could be a plurality of worlds)
and seemingly rendered extraterrestrial life philiosophically untenable. Lucian
in his novels described inhabitants of the Moon and other celestial bodies as
humanoids, but with significant differences from humans.
Giordano Bruno,
De l'Infinito, Universo e Mondi, 1584 Photo courtesy of P.C.Authors of ancient
Jewish sources also considered extraterrestrial life. The Talmud states that there
are at least 18,000 other worlds, but provides little elaboration on the nature
of the worlds and on whether they are physical or spiritual. Based on this, however,
the medieval exposition "Sefer HaB'rit" posits that extraterrestrial
creatures exist but that they have no free will (and are thus equivalent to animal
life). It adds that human beings should not expect creatures from another world
to resemble earthly life, any more than sea creatures resemble land animals.
Hindu beliefs of endlessly repeated cycles of life have lead to descriptions of multiple worlds in existence and their mutual contacts ( Sanskrit word Sampark means 'contact' as in Mahasamparka = the great contact). However the relevance of such descriptions have to be evaluated in the context of understanding of geography and science at those times.
Within Islam, the statement of the Qur'an "All praise belongs to God, Lord of all the worlds" indicates multiple universal bodies and maybe even multiple universes that may indicate extraterrestrial and even extradimensional life. Surat Al-Jinn also mentioned a statement from a Jinn regarding the current status and ability of his group in the heavens. A more direct reference from Quran is presented by Mirza Tahir Ahmad as a proof that life on other planets may exisit according to Quran. In his book, Revelation, Rationality, Knowledge & Truth, he quotes verse 42:30 "And among His Signs is the creation of the heavens and the earth, and of whatever living creatures (da'bbah) He has spread forth in both..."; according to this verse there is a possibility of life in heavens. According to the same verse "And He has the power to gather them together (jam-'i-him) when He will so please"; there is a chance of close encounter in the future.
When Christianity spread throughout the West, the Ptolemaic system became very widely accepted, and although the Church never issued any formal pronouncement on the question of alien life at least tacitly the idea was aberrant. In 1277 the Bishop of Paris, Étienne Tempier, did overturn Aristotle on one point: God could have created more than one world (given His omnipotence) yet we know by revelation He only made one. Taking a further step and arguing that aliens actually existed remained rare. Notably, Cardinal Nicholas of Cusa speculated about aliens on the moon and sun.
This situation changed, however, with the dramatic shift in thinking initiated by the invention of the telescope and the Copernican assault on geocentric cosmology. Once it became clear that the Earth was merely one planet amongst countless bodies in the universe the extraterrestrial idea moved towards the scientific mainstream. God's omnipotence, it could be argued, not only allowed for other worlds and other life, on some level it necessitated them. The best known early-modern proponent of such ideas was Giordano Bruno, who argued in the 16th century for an infinite universe in which every star is surrounded by its own solar system; he was eventually burned at the stake by the Catholic church for his heretical ideas. In the early 17th century the Czech astronomer Anton Maria Schyrleus of Rheita mused that "if Jupiter has inhabitants they must be larger and more beautiful than the inhabitants of the Earth, in proportion to the [characteristics] of the two spheres." Dominican monk Tommaso Campanella wrote about a Solarian alien race in his Civitas Solis.
Such comparisons also appeared in poetry of the era. In "The Creation: a Philosophical Poem in Seven Books" (1712) Sir Richard Blackmore observed: "We may pronounce each orb sustains a race / Of living things adapted to the place". The didactic poet Henry More took up the classical theme of the Greek Democritus in "Democritus Platonissans, or an Essay Upon the Infinity of Worlds" (1647). With the new relative viewpoint that the Copernican revolution had wrought, he suggested "our world's sunne / Becomes a starre elsewhere." Fontanelle's "Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds" (translated into English in 1686) offered similar excursions on the possibility of extraterrestrial life, expanding rather than denying the creative sphere of a Maker.
The possibility of extraterrestrials remained a widespread
speculation as scientific discovery accelerated. William Herschel, the discoverer
of Uranus, was one of many 18th-19th century astronomers convinced that our Solar
System, and perhaps others, would be well populated by alien life. Other luminaries
of the period who championed "cosmic pluralism" included Immanuel Kant
and Benjamin Franklin. At the height of the Enlightenment even the Sun and Moon
were considered candidates for hosting aliens.
This enthusiasm towards the
possibility of alien life continued well into the 20th century. Indeed, the roughly
three centuries from the Scientific Revolution through the beginning of the modern
era of solar system probes were essentially the zenith for belief in extraterrestrials
in the West: many astronomers and other secular thinkers, at least some religious
thinkers, and much of the general public were largely satisfied that aliens were
a reality. This trend was finally tempered as actual probes visited potential
alien abodes in the solar system. The moon was decisively ruled out as a possibility,
while Venus and Mars, long the two main candidates for extraterrestrials, showed
no obvious evidence of current life. The other large moons of our system which
have been visited appear similarly lifeless, though the interesting geothermic
forces observed (Io's volcanism, Europa's ocean, Titan's thick atmosphere) have
underscored how broad the range of potentially habitable environments may be.
Although the hypothesis of a deliberate cosmic silence of advanced extraterrestrials
is also a possibility,the failure of the SETI program to detect anything resembling
an intelligent radio signal after four decades of effort has partially dimmed
the optimism that prevailed at the beginning of the space age. Emboldened critics
view the search for extraterrestrials as unscientific, despite the fact the SETI
program is not the result of a continuous, dedicated search but instead utilizes
what resources and manpower it can, when it can.
This planetary habitability
chart shows where life might exist on extrasolar planets based on our own Solar
System and life on Earth.Thus, the three decades preceding the turn of the second
millennium saw a crossroads reached in beliefs in alien life. The prospect of
ubiquitous, intelligent, space-faring civilizations in our solar system appears
increasingly dubious to many scientists. Still, in the words of SETI's Frank Drake,
"All we know for sure is that the sky is not littered with powerful microwave
transmitters." Drake has also noted that it is entirely possible advanced
technology results in communication being carried out in some way other than conventional
radio transmission. At the same time, the data returned by space probes and giant
strides in detection methods have allowed science to begin delineating habitability
criteria on other worlds and to confirm that, at least, other planets are plentiful
though aliens remain a question mark.
The possible existence of primitive (microbial) life outside of Earth is much less controversial to mainstream scientists although at present no direct evidence of such life has been found. Indirect evidence has been offered for the current existence of primitive life on the planet Mars; however, the conclusions that should be drawn from such evidence remain in debate.
The
funding and financing for research involving extraterrestrial life has generally
been supported. However, in many instances, it has not. For example, in the United
States, President George W. Bush's Fiscal Year 2007 NASA Budget cut funding for
astrobiological research by 50 percent.
Terrestrial Planet Finder - A planned
Infrared interferometer for finding Earth-like extrasolar planets (as of 2007,
it has not received the funding from NASA it needs that funding is going
towards the Kepler mission)At present, there seems to be massive controversy over
the existence of aliens that have visited the earth and technology has been acquired
by the U.S. military. On Wednesday, May 9th 2001, over twenty military, intelligence,
government, corporate and scientific witnesses came forward at the National Press
Club in Washington, DC to establish the reality of UFOs or extraterrestrial vehicles,
extraterrestrial life forms, and resulting advanced energy and propulsion technologies.
The weight of this first-hand testimony, along with supporting government documentation
and other evidence, will establish without any doubt the reality of these phenomena,
according to Dr. Steven M. Greer, director of the Disclosure Projectwhich hosted
the event. It is said that 57 catalogued varieties of alien life forms have visited
the earth since the start of the research into this phenomenon.
The Disclosure
Project is a nonprofit research project working to fully disclose the facts about
UFOs, extraterrestrial intelligence, and classified advanced energy and propulsion
systems. The Disclosure Project have over 400 government, military, and intelligence
community witnesses testifying to their direct, personal, first hand experience
with UFOs, ETs, ET technology, and the cover-up that keeps this information secret.
The
scientific search for extraterrestrial life is being carried out in two different
ways, directly and indirectly.
The Arecibo message is a digital message
sent to globular star cluster M13, and is a well-known symbol of human attempts
to contact extraterrestrials.
Scientists are directly searching for evidence
of unicellular life within the solar system, carrying out studies on the surface
of Mars and examining meteors that have fallen to Earth. A mission is also proposed
to Europa, one of Jupiter's moons with a possible liquid water layer under its
surface, which might contain life.
There is some limited evidence that microbial life might possibly exist or have existed on Mars. An experiment on the Viking Mars lander reported gas emissions from heated Martian soil that some argue are consistent with the presence of microbes. However, the lack of corroborating evidence from other experiments on the Viking indicates that a non-biological reaction is a more likely hypothesis. Recently, Circadian rhythms have been allegedly discovered in Viking data. The interpretation is controversial. Independently in 1996 structures resembling bacteria were reportedly discovered in a meteorite, ALH84001, thought to be formed of rock ejected from Mars. This report is also controversial and scientific debate continues. (See Viking biological experiments.)
In February 2005, NASA scientists reported that they had found strong evidence of present life on Mars. The two scientists, Carol Stoker and Larry Lemke of NASA's Ames Research Center, based their claims on methane signatures found in Mars' atmosphere that resemble the methane production of some forms of primitive life on Earth, as well as their own study of primitive life near the Rio Tinto river in Spain. NASA officials soon denied the scientists' claims, and Stoker herself backed off from her initial assertions.
Though such findings are still very much in
debate, support among scientists for the belief in the existence of life on Mars
seems to be growing. In an informal survey conducted at the conference in which
the European Space Agency presented its findings, 75 percent of the scientists
in attendance reported to believe that life once existed on Mars; 25 percent reported
a belief that life currently exists there.
It is theorised that any technological
society in space will be transmitting information. Projects such as SETI are conducting
an astronomical search for radio activity that would confirm the presence of intelligent
life. A related suggestion is that aliens might broadcast pulsed and continuous
laser signals in the optical as well as infrared spectrum; laser signals have
the advantage of not "smearing" in the interstellar medium and may prove
more conducive to communication between the stars. And while other communication
techniques including laser transmission and interstellar spaceflight have been
discussed seriously and may not be infeasible, the measure of effectiveness is
the amount of information communicated per unit cost, resulting with the radio
as method of choice.
Astronomers also search for extrasolar planets
that would be conducive to life, especially those like OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb which
have been found to have Earth-like qualities. Current radiodetection methods have
been inadequate for such a search, as the resolution afforded by recent technology
is inadequate for detailed study of extrasolar planetary objects. Future telescopes
should be able to image planets around nearby stars, which may reveal the presence
of life (either directly or through spectrography which would reveal key information
such as the presence of free oxygen in a planet's atmosphere). Darwin is an ESA
mission designed to find Earth-like planets, and analyse their atmosphere. It
has been argued that one of the best candidates for the discovery of life-supporting
planets may be Alpha Centauri, the closest star system to Earth, given that two
of the three stars in the system are broadly sun-like.
Many bodies in the Solar
System have been suggested as being capable of containing conventional organic
life. The most commonly suggested ones are listed below; of these, four of the
seven are moons, and are thought to have large bodies of underground liquid (streams),
where life may have evolved in a similar fashion to deep sea vents.
Europa,
due to its underground ocean, might host some form of microbial lifeMars - Liquid
water is widely thought to have existed on Mars in the past and there may still
be liquid water beneath the surface. Methane was found in the atmosphere of Mars.
Recent photographs from Mars Global Surveyor show evidence of recent (within 10
years) flows of a liquid on the Red Planet's frigid surface. There is however
uncertainty as to whether this was liquid water or CO2 Main article: Life on Mars
Europa - Europa may contain liquid water beneath its 100-mile ice layer, vents
on the bottom of the ocean warm the ice so that 60 miles of liquid could exist
beneath the ice layer, perhaps capable of supporting microbes and simple plants
Jupiter - Possible supporter of floating animals, as hypothesized by Carl
Sagan. This point of view is somewhat controversial due to the fact that these
creatures would not be water-based, but ammonia-based.
Ganymede - Possible
underground ocean (see Europa).
Callisto - Possible underground ocean (see
Europa).
Saturn - Possible floating creatures (see Jupiter).
Titan (Saturn's
largest moon) - The only known moon with a significant atmosphere was recently
visited by the Huygens probe. Latest discoveries indicate that there is no global
or widespread ocean, but small and/or seasonal liquid hydrocarbon lakes are almost
surely present on the surface
Numerous other bodies have been suggested as
potential hosts for microbial life. Fred Hoyle has proposed that life might exist
on comets, as some Earth microbes managed to survive on a lunar probe for many
years. However, it is considered highly unlikely that complex multicellular organisms
of the conventional chemistry of terrestrial life (animals, plants) could exist
under these living conditions.
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