Monday, 28 September 2015

Alien Travels


Forget little green men...it's all about cold metal. Interesting article on how alien explorers could travel across the vastness of space, where flight time may potentially be measured in centuries. 


Researchers from Edinburgh University have said 'self replicating' robotic space probes from alien civilisations could already have arrived in our solar system.

The probes, which mathematicians Duncan Forgan and Arwen Nicholson referred to in their paper 'Slingshot Dynamics for Self Replicating Probes and the Effect on Exploration Timescales', could be so hi-tech that they're invisible to human beings, the researchers said.

The two mathematicians analysed the possibility that probes could travel through space in a study published in the Journal of Astrobiology.

The paper raises the question of whether alien races could have used the gravity of stars to “slingshot” probes in order to gain speed: a technique humans already use for probes, such as the Voyager. The Voyager space probe uses a 'slingshot' technique but uses planets rather than stars as the Scotland-based mathematicians suggest.

The researchers also analysed how a fleet of probes could 'self replicate' and build new versions of themselves from dust and gas while traveling through space.

Dr Forgan said: "The fact we haven't seen probes of this type makes it difficult to believe that probe building civilisations have existed in the Milky Way in the last few million years."

According to the researchers' calculations alien probes would only need to travel at one tenth of the speed of light in order to explore every part of our galaxy within 10 million years.

The scientists said: 'We can conclude that a fleet of self-replicating probes can indeed explore the Galaxy in a sufficiently short time...orders of magnitude less than the age of the Earth.'

The research chimes with that Jacob Haqq-Misra who in 2011 suggested that alien objects could already exist in our solar system without us knowing - because we haven't looked hard enough for them.

The new piece of research once again raises the so-called 'Fermi Paradox' about the search for alien life.

The paradox, suggested by physicists Enrico Fermi and Michael H. Hart, is the apparent contradiction between the high probability extraterrestrial civilizations' existence and the lack of contact with such civilizations.

Wednesday, 23 September 2015

What's your time horizon ?

I guess as one gets older, you have more time for reflection to dwell on both the past and a potential future. On a latter, given our finite existence, I often wonder how I would react or behave according to different timelines ?

For example, I ask myself sometimes what would I do if I had one month, one year or 5 years respectively to live ? How much of a different person would I become according to each time horizon option ?  Would I travel the world, seek out past friends and family, write my memoirs, start a new hobby ? The possibilities, though endless, would need to be realistic according to time. And that my friends is the conundrum....how do you know what to do if you don't know what timeline you're on ? It is a well-worn cliche to say you "live life like there is no tomorrow". But suppose there is a tomorrow, in fact several years or decades, then what ? Questions, questions...