Two possibilities exist. Either we are alone in the universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.
Arthur C. Clarke
With that quote flashing on a screen above them, a team of experts from Arizona State University began a discussion of the search to find out if we are alone — or not.
“There is a concerted hunt for life in the universe,” moderator and science journalist David Baron began.
Some on the panel — composed of an astrophysicist, astrobiologist, planetary scientist, lawyer and psychologist — are part of that hunt.
“We’re looking for Earths,” astrophysicist Steve Desch said. Astronomers measure gases blocking wavelengths of light. The right combination of gases indicate planets with potential for life.
Where might we find life in our solar system? There are three likely places, said planetary scientist David Williams: Mars, the Jovian moon Europa, and Enceladus, one of Saturn’s moons.
“Each has the ingredients of life,” Williams said.
"(On Mars), it’s going to be microbial and it’s going to be underground,” he said. Thermal vents beneath the surface may harbor life.
Europa is mostly covered in ice, with a liquid ocean beneath. Vents from geysers at the moon’s south pole spout material into space. A NASA mission to take a closer look launches in 2025.
“If we find life on any of these worlds, it’s going to be microbial,” Baron said. “It’s not going to be building cities.”
Astrobiologist Sara Walker spends her career hunting aliens. What she looks for are “technosignatures,” things that can be produced with technology, like radio signals.
“A lot of the new thinking about technosignatures is that they are related to biosignatures,” Walker said.
Would the discovery of other civilizations bring humans together? Psychologist Yul Kwon is working on his doctorate. He was co-author of an international study assessing how people would react to the news we’re not alone.
The verdict? Mostly positive. “People tend to use positive words when describing their reactions,” Kwon said.
Walker once had a ride with an Uber driver who thought life had already been discovered beyond Earth. “For some people, it’s so not on their radar they’re surprised it’s not out there,” she said.
One respondent to Kwon’s survey asked, “Will we finally learn our purpose?”
Another had a Hollywood-conditioned response: "What if they are smarter than us and have the ability to attack us or use our planet for its resources?"
That’s unlikely, Desch said.
“The very fact they had the ability to come to our planet would require more resources than our planet has,” he said. “Why would they bother?”
People want to believe, Desch said. He cited the reaction to ʻOumuamua, the cylindrical interstellar object that passed through the solar system three years ago. In July 2019, astronomers finally reported that ʻOumuamua was an object of a "purely natural origin.”
“It reminded everyone of 'Rendezvous With Rama,'” he said.
"Rama" is a science fiction novel about a cylindrical alien starship that enters our solar system — written by Arthur C. Clarke.
More Science and technology
ASU microscopes help solve decades-old asteroid-impact deposit mystery
Axel Wittmann had always had “a fondness for exotic rocks,” as he puts it, his favorite being suevite, formed from intense meteorite collisions. But in 2009, when he met fellow geologist Philippe…
Major in motion
Inside a dimly lit computer lab at Arizona State University, U.S. Space Force Maj. Tyler Williams leans over a glowing monitor, lines of simulated network traffic scrolling by faster than most eyes…
New study uncovers another role for the cerebellum, offering clues about autism
There is a window of time, a critical period, during infancy and early childhood when the brain learns how to process information — what different objects look like, parsing sounds that make up…