Can Someone Help Please, Light Bulbs.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No einstein but if you take 100bn stars some of then will be of a longevity similar to our own. Our star is quite common but lets be pessimitic and say thay only 1% of stars are like our own. We now have 1bn stars to play with. Now lets be pessimistic again and assume that on 1% of them have planets so now we have 10m stars. Let assume rather pessimistically that of those 1% have planets capable of supporting life as we know it. We still have 100,000 stars left. Ok let's assume that only 1% of those have had whatever the spark for life is. So you see even in our own galaxy and with the most pessimistic arithmetic there are 1000 stars capable of life like our own. If we disgard human arrogance and say that life may also exist in more extreme conditions then potentially the galaxy is teeming with life. That's just one galaxy.
your example of 100 einstein is a little wide of the mark, but if you make up 1000000 stories a couple of them should be true!
I am certain that there is life elsewhere in the universe. For some reason, we comfort ourselves by hoping that life will come from a planet that supports life in a similar way to earth, which is not only unlikely, it is illogical.
There are doubtless superior life forms out there with no physical form what so ever, they may think in colours, and communicate by smells - that's just an off-the-top-of-my-head example, but the idea that they have to physically fly through space is not valid.
On the basis of my theory, they are already here, they just haven't troubled themselves to tell us - perhaps worrying that we lack the intelligence to appreciate their input into our lives. Checkng out the presentation of our world leaders, I guess they have a point!
Greetings Earthlings, can you direct me to Rigel Kentaurus please? :)
Seriously, there must be some form of life out there since it would be rather arrogant to think otherwise. Of course we can't prove a thing but maybe one day we'll find out. Remember that some believed that the Earth was flat; that the sun rotated around the Earth; that God created everything...
I'm not too convinced by the "rare earth" argument.
One of the factors quoted in this is the distance of a planet from a star for surface water. and an estimatey of a 5-15% margin of error for a planet to orbit in.
Yet we are now getting stronger and stronger evidence for surface water having once flowed on the surface of mars.
Many of the other factors seem to assume that there is no other solution - for example Jupiter mopping up asteroids.
I suspect that this indicates that it is highly unlikely for intelligent life to evolve that is like us.
Thing is we just really don't have enough data to be sure yet, if somebody finds a way to detect eath sized planets at stellar distances that'd help - but that's a big ask.
In the mean time we'll get a better idea the more we look at mars and venus