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Plenty of Earths await discovery
BBC ^ | 4/5/05 | Jonathan Amos

Posted on 04/05/2005 9:36:50 AM PDT by LibWhacker

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Comment #81 Removed by Moderator

To: Koblenz
One "why no contact" theory is that developing scientific cultures tend to go thru the same process of discovery and engineering ... eventually reaching a point where they invent something that wipes out the whole dang planet.

When the first atomic bomb was detonated on Earth, scientists gave it a non-trivial probability that, considering they knew they didn't fully understand what would happen, the detonation's chain reaction might just continue until the whole planet was consumed.

Recently there was news that a black hole (just a little one) may have been created in a lab. Had it been of self-sustaining size (and not promptly evaporate due to Hawking radiation), it could have plummeted thru the floor, began an oscillating path thru the Earth's core, and increasingly hoovered up the planet.

Other doomsday technologies are conceivable: cobalt-caked nukes (radiation & distribution balanced to give _everyone_ terminal radiation poisoning), genetically engineered ultrabugs (stabilized Ebola turns everyone to goo), physics experiments gone haywire (quark-level chain reaction breaks down all Earth matter), MAD nuclear war (nuclear winter starves all), and so on.

Obviously we haven't gotten there yet ... but technology advances mean smaller packages can adversely affect more people. One good solid technological mistake, statsitically inevitable, could mean every intelligent species in the universe invariably wipes itself out before contacting anyone else. Those first interstellar warp drive tests just _never_ go right...

Or maybe they just have a habit of creating the "history eraser button" and there's always some bozo who actually pushes it:


82 posted on 04/06/2005 9:20:51 AM PDT by ctdonath2
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To: doc30
can't we do a survey scan the sky for bright radio objects, similar in intensity to Earth, in our own galaxy, then try to see if there is signal in them?

The SETI project has been doing exactly that for quite some time now.

83 posted on 04/06/2005 9:23:15 AM PDT by ctdonath2
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To: LibWhacker

Ohura - Captain! I'm picking up a signal from plant Genesis.
Shall I attempt to make contact?

Kirk - No no, Turn off the monitors and keep quite.
It's just Spock trying to hitch a ride.
84 posted on 04/06/2005 11:29:56 AM PDT by TheForceOfOne
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To: Squawk 8888
I read all the other posts, only after I had already responded.. I wouldn't have bothered if I had seen them first..
No sense "piling on".. LOL..

In my own defense, it was not so much the failure to attribute it to Clark, as it was attributing it to (ech!) Pickard.. ( what an insufferable ass.. )
I am a long-time SF-Fantasy reader and die-hard fan, and while I enjoyed STTNG, it was often disappointing, as were the other "spin-offs".. ( even more so )

85 posted on 04/06/2005 12:36:00 PM PDT by Drammach (Freedom; not just a job, it's an adventure..)
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