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A grand summary of this course. Life in Other Worlds. What is life? A process of systems that are capable of extracting energy and reproducing It could be much more general, and very different, than we know or think What is the physical base for life?
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Life in Other Worlds • What is life? • A process of systems that are capable of extracting energy and reproducing • It could be much more general, and very different, than we know or think • What is the physical base for life? • A physical mechanism capable of supporting extraction and utilization of energy • In our case: carbon-based substrate • Where can we look for life as we know it? • Easy answer: in places like our own Earth • What we need is water, carbon, oxygen, silicon, calcium, phosphorus and temperature condition not too extreme • Caution: it took Earth 4.5 billion years to develop intelligent life • We have been a “communication civilization for about 100 years • Is this typical?
Atmospheric spectraonly Earth conducive to life But Mars could have had life in the past
Cosmos (our own Galaxy, in fact) too big for travel • Enormous problems of storage/production of energy • Travel for small-size sip to nearest star at 1/3 c needs 40,000 times the whole yearly US energy production • Full size exploration way longer than human life span. Need colonies: will we remain what we are after 100 years in space? • Communication seems more doable • SETI • Arecibo message • Voyager message
Radio telescopesRadio is best for distant communication (best of all: water hole)
The Arecibo Message Coded in binary numbers Numbers 1 to 10 Atomic numbers of H, C N, O and Ph Chemical formulas for sugars and proteins DNA molecular structure Number of units in DNA Human figure Height of human in wavelengths (12.3 cm) Population of Earth Solar system schematic Arecibo transmitting antenna (telescope) Diameter of telescope in wavelength
Drake Equation:The number of “cummunication capable” civilazations in out Galaxy • NC = N* x fp x nLZ x fL x fI x FS • N*: number of stars per galaxy, ~ 1011 • fp: fraction of stars with planets, 0.01 to 0.5 • nLZ: planets per star in life zone over 4 Gyr, 0.01 to 1 • fL: fraction of suitable planets where life begins, 0.01 to 1 • fI: faction of life forms that develop intelligence, 0.01 to 1 • FS: fraction of star’s life with communicative intelligence, 10-8 to 10-4 • 2x10-5 < NC < 107