Earthlike Planet Gliese 581 g: Media Detected Mysterious Signals from Aliens

An astronomer picked up a mysterious pulse of light coming from the direction of the newly discovered Earth-like planet almost two years ago, it has emerged. Dr Ragbir Bhathal, a scientist at the University of Western Sydney, picked up the odd signal in December 2008, long before it was announced that the star Gliese581 has habitable planets in orbit around it. A member of the Australian chapter of SETI, the organisation that looks for communication from distant planets, Dr Bhathal had been sweeping the skies when he discovered a ‘suspicious’ signal from an area of the galaxy that holds the newly-discovered Gliese 581g. The remarkable coincidence adds another layer of mystery to the announcement last night that scientists had discovered another planet in the system: Gliese 581g- the most Earth-like planet ever found.

Don’t get shocked! This is exactly what a news headline published at DailyMail was saying. This is the news media which claims to be credible and guaranteed resource for “true” news, who has detected the mysterious signals of advanced aliens thousands of years more advanced than we humans, from a newly discovered earthlike planet ‘GJ 581 g‘ located in constellation Libra. Libra is a home to the star Gliese 581, which has a planetary system consisting of at least 6 planets, including Gliese 581 g, the best candidate planet for human habitability and extra-solar life yet discovered, Gliese 581 c, the first Earth-like extrasolar planet to be found within its parent star’s habitable zone,Gliese 581 d, discovered in 2007 to be another Earth-like planet, and Gliese 581 e, the smallest mass exoplanet orbiting a normal star,both of which are of significance for establishing the likelihood of life outside of the Solar System. Libra has Right ascension15 h, Declination−15°, Quadrant-SQ3 and Area 538 sq. deg.

Is it ET Signal?

Whilst the source of that signal was the area of sky marked by a group of six faint stars that create the constellation known as Tucana, the Latin name for the South American toucan bird. This small star cluster,which was designated its name as recently as recently as the late sixteenth century, is visible only in the Southern Hemisphere and the lower latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. This constellation is located in celestial sphere with declination -65deg and quadrant SQ1. (according to AndrewCollins website which seems quite credible).

From Dailymail:

A member of the Australian chapter of SETI, the organisation that looks for communication from distant planets, Dr Bhathal had been sweeping the skies when he discovered a ‘suspicious’ signal from an area of the galaxy that holds the newly-discovered Gliese 581g.

The remarkable coincidence adds another layer of mystery to the announcement last night that scientists had discovered another planet in the system: Gliese 581g – the most Earth-like planet ever found.

Read more: 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1316538/Gliese-581g-mystery-Scientist-spotted-mysterious-pulse-light-directio

After the lights go out in the Campbelltown area, the skies have been systematically scanned by OZ OSETI observatory for any unusual laser-like flashes. For eight years nothing was picked up, but then finally, in December last year, the team found what they were looking for – a totally unidentified burst of laser light that came from an unknown source in deep space. As Dr Bhathal wrote on the computer print out recording the signal: “Is it ET?”, acknowledging the manner in which the “Wow!” signal was so named back in 1979.  I do not know from which area of the Tucana constellation the laser flash detected by Dr Bhathal and his team in December 2008 actually came from. Yet the possibility that it originated from a neutron star might be difficult to rule out.

My friend Douglas Styche of Doug’s Darkworld Blog describes it so accurately:

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how the Internet is changing society and people, and I’ve not been reassured. Other people have been thinking along the same lines: How the Internet is making us stupid and Is Google making us stupid? Both articles basically make the same case, that the Internet is promoting shallow thinking and multi-tasking over deep thinking and contemplation. And our brains are changing as we spend time online, reinforcing these changes. The second article makes the point that this isn’t the first time this happened. When public education was invented and writing became popular, scholars and thinkers bemoaned that people would become lazy thinkers and forgetful. When the printing press was invented, people had similar concerns, that the printing press would spread shallow garbage and make people less attuned to the great works of the written word. And while there was some truth to these concerns, writing and then the printed word did and do have huge benefits.

No need to tell you that DailyMail is delivering delusive information which have never been analyzed even once. I doubt if Niall Firth who wrote that article, have even tried to get the real information. A lot of misinformation is being delivered to public and they just accept it, without analyzing once whether it could be true?

Surviving Alien Invasion: Filmmaker’s Worst Nightmare

How human psychology works, we don’t know yet? So, forecasting alien psychology would be total stupidity. It seems that sci fi movienakers want to show human as superior race to aliens, why? Since they get more money. You haven’t seen any movie which has focused alien victory. Films like Independence Day is one of the worst movies(scientifically and logically), I have seen ever. I have tackled the question of why in detail in my older post “40 Things About Alien Visitors“. Here are some points from that post:

1. Aliens like to blow up significant land marks first. Apparently the best way to destroy a city is to position your “Death Ray” over the most recognizable building.
2. All pro-UFO people are morons who dance atop the building directly under the Death Ray.
3. If alien “Destroyers” come to your city to blast it into oblivion, leave BEFORE they fire the Death Ray.
4. If alien “Destroyers” come to your city to blast it into oblivion and you are caught in traffic at the last minute, make sure that you are travelling with a dog and a small child. The Law of Averages says you’ll survive the Death Ray.
5. If alien “Destroyers” come to your city to blast it into oblivion and you are caught in traffic at the last minute, make sure that you are NOT a raspy-voiced cable TV executive. The Law of Averages says you’ll get waxed by the Death Ray.
6. Stripping is a lucrative profession that allows one to “Pay the bills,” “take care of one’s boy,” and own a nice house in a middle class subdivision.

11. Area 51 has a big chain-link fence around it, and the guards at the gate wear black combat fatigues with white metal helmets in 120 degree heat.
12. Any bonehead with an RV can get to Area 51 by driving across the Salt Flat to the gate and flashing a captured alien to the guard.
13. Standard operating procedure for the Air Force is to cluster all vehicles, aircraft, and ground personnel on a 200 meter section of tarmac in the middle of an Alien Invasion.

15. It appears that the F-18 must have had a 1000 unit production run.
16. Both F-18s and B-2s must close to within 10 km of a target 20 km across before engaging with both air-to-air missiles and aerial launched nuclear cruise missiles.
17. People too drunk to walk can still fly crop dusters and F-18s.
18. Any bonehead with rudimentary aviation experience can be taught to pilot an F-18 in 5 hours.
19. Any bonehead with F-18 flight experience can learn to pilot an Alien fighter in 5 minutes.

22. Aliens are stupid. When one of their fighters approaches the carrier, they don’t bother to communicate with the pilot.

24. Aliens are unbelievably stupid. While unarmed and unarmored, they do things to piss off people with hand guns.
25. Aliens are just too stupid for words to express. An alien air traffic controller can look at a fighter that has been human-modified for 20 minutes and is only 50 feet away and not notice the welded-on missile rack until the missile is fired through his work station.

36. In 10 hours, one man with a Macintosh Laptop can code a virus in C++ that will take down a completely alien computer system.
37. Even though the Mac isn’t compatible with most other Earthly operating systems, it can interface with an alien computer.
38. Alien network security is nonexistent.

You can read more points here.

Though chances are far less that aliens prove to nomads, looking to conquer planet Earth and are thirsty of human blood and flesh. But what if  that case might be proven true means aliens are highly nomads and want to eradicate humanity? We might need an defence strategy which may help us to survive for long time. We (humanity as a whole) currently suffer from a window of vulnerability. We’re sufficiently advanced to attract attention with radio signals as far as sixty or seventy lightyears away, but woefully inadequate to the task of defending ourselves from anyone who might show up in response.

By some five to seven centuries from now we should pretty much be able to take care of ourselves in this regard– if nothing else, we should have a sufficient contingent off-planet by that time to insure humanity’s survival if Earth itself is wiped out. Hopefully any aliens we meet prior to that time will be benevolent, in which case this entire article would be little more than an exercise in paranoia.

But should humanity find itself beset by malevolent aliens sometime in the near to intermediate future (between now and the twenty-eighth century), and all normal contingency plans fail to remedy the situation, below follow some suggestions for other measures.

Special Strategies

  • Practice, practice, practice

We might fill our quiver with conceptual arrows via special government subsidies or funding for computer gaming based on scientifically plausible scenarios of alien invasion or domination.

This strategy would provide a great wealth of knowledge and ideas for dealing with a wide variety of alien threats, that we could draw upon in the actual event. Though our best science fiction authors have been doing their part along these lines for years, their work reaches relatively few people, and even for avid readers the process is static and one-way in nature. The interactivity and dynamic branching that software platforms would provide could do a much better job of preparing humanity for the real thing.

A great side benefit of this design would be its educational value– if the games were forced to be strictly plausible to qualify for subsidies or desirable accreditations of some sort, those playing them couldn’t help but learn something of subjects like physics and mathematics, among others. In order to work most effectively however, this strategy would have to have been in place for decades (or even centuries!) prior to any invasion. That means we’d want to initiate this plan yesterday.

Here there’s two variations on the same theme: recreating the human race after it’s been wiped out by a threat. Naturally, both plans would require the highest level of secrecy to have any chance at success.

Vacuum Packed
We must assume that an alien threat capable of destroying our species on Earth would also kill off any colonies established elsewhere in our solar system, as well as outposts in neighboring solar systems. But they could not kill what they could not find, or of which they were unaware. A contingency colonization vessel headed for a very, very distant system, largely secret from humanity as a whole to protect the effort from discovery by aliens scouring our databases and interrogating our people here, would provide a last chance for humanity to survive such a worst case scenario.

Such a contingency vessel might be remarkably small and economical to build and launch, as it could be unmanned, with future humanity and a crucial set of support species from Earth existing as frozen, fertilized eggs or seeds, to be grown and cared for by highly redundant artificial intelligences onboard, until a sufficient cadry of suitably educated and mature adults could take over command of the colony, many lightyears away from Earth, and safe from the threat which doomed our homeworld. Prior to launching the one or several life containing vessels, we might have also sent ships containing critical enabling technologies to the target systems, to serve as supply depots and support facilities for the colony in orbit.

The Deep Mother
The Deep Mother would depend on our ability to install an undetectable artificial intelligence with suitable support technologies deep within the Earth itself, programmed and equipped to do nothing more than hide and survive long enough to outlast the alien occupation, and then rebuild the human race and critical supporting species from the genetic codes in its database, using technologies stored away with it in its vault.

Last Resort Possibilities

  • Keep in mind it may be possible to command some of our larger orbiting satellites (or even manned vessels) to drop from orbit on trajectories guaranteed to impact critical alien landing sites or fixed bases with pinpoint accuracy, using significant masses at hypersonic velocities. Such impacts can achieve energy levels comparable to that of nuclear detonations with perhaps far less warning and no telltale radioactive warhead to give it away.
  • If a direct hit on alien installations with the above method looks too risky, we could target enticing geological targets in the vicinity instead, in an attempt to trigger a display of natural forces adequate to overwhelm our foes. Of course, for this to work the aliens must have made their camp in an area conducive to such events. But just imagine the effect on a nearby alien encampment in the 1980s of waking Mount St. Helens a bit early with ten to thirty megatons of explosive force– Mt. St. Helens erupted naturally during that decade with a force equal to hundreds of nuclear weapons, utterly devastating the surrounding region. Just in case the triggered eruption or earthquake were insufficient, we might also simultaneously attack the base with whatever other means we could get into the area without alerting the enemy. Keep in mind something along these lines might also be implemented in regards to weather– could a few strategically placed nuclear blasts divert an already existing hurricane towards an alien camp? Or perhaps we could spin off a few dozen tornados atop the extraterrestrials with such manipulations. Remember that these actions themselves wouldn’t have to be enough to destroy the camps; just synchronizing the events closely with other sorts of attacks could increase the effectiveness of our overall assault.
  • We could mask a major counter-attack with an apparent nuclear war amongst ourselves. Sure, we’d pay a high price in destruction to some of our own cities and bases, but it might be the only way to rid ourselves of the alien threat.

The Unseen Opponent

Find and delete all references in our databases which disprove or ridicule supernatural events, and plant seemingly unimpeachable observations and proof for their existence–and let the aliens discover such records for themselves. This could help us set the stage for much useful espionage and deception, even as we confound our enemies. They might even begin to suspect there’s a long term presence on Earth of some other advanced civilization, hidden from easy detection. We refer to this as a last resort measure for the simple reason that doing this could have detrimental long term effects on our own civilization, even if it helps us succeed at repelling the invaders. For it could vastly strengthen the hand of organized religion and cults across-the-board for years to come, forcing repeated confrontations in everything from economics to politics– and all the scientific “facts” and “history” we’d have left to defend ourselves would be on the subjective side.

“My name is Bond. Time Bond.”

This concept is admittedly a long shot in more ways than one. But we’re talking about extreme circumstances, where long shots may be all we have.

We could conceivably send software agents deep into the future to find a way to defeat the aliens in the present, via time travel (or communication from the future into the past).

Of course, this plan depends heavily on being able to infiltrate the alien’s computer network, or upon the aliens leaving our own net in operation into perpetuity.

If neither of these avenues are open to us, there might be a third– though admittedly it would be the longest of long shots. We could put everything we have into assembling an AI similar to that described in the “Deep Mother” above, but with a very different objective in mind. Here, we would do our best to provide the AI with as much free memory space and processing power as we could, to give it room to grow. We’d also provide it with all the collected knowledge of humanity, and perhaps some sort of sensory conduit to the Earth’s surface, that would allow it to collect more data in realtime. In this manner might the AI evolve on its own, and be ready to exploit any opportunity it discovered either internally or externally for accomplishing the objectives laid out for it by us, its creators.

The utimate goal would be for our special agent AI to survive far enough into the future that manipulation of past events becomes feasible via new technologies– technologies discovered by the AI itself, or seen by the AI in the hands of others. After obtaining access to this technology, the AI would then attempt to divert the alien invasion of the past away from Earth, or else repel it with the aid of other advanced tools available from its future vantage point. If neither of these were possible, the AI might be able instead to communicate some vital knowledge to us across time that could enable us to do the job ourselves.

Of course, this plan runs smack into some of the old style time travel paradoxes often referred to in science fiction plots and outdated movies. Fortunately, new insights seem to indicate these paradoxes were fallacies to start with; in the quantum mechanics universe, most (if not all) of these paradoxes don’t exist. That is, if time travel itself ever becomes feasible, then a plan like that above could actually work (theoretically speaking).

Special Tactics

  • Don’t forget technologies like public key encryption or better as a means of secure communications, when the aliens are around. It might not hurt to also use the personal touch on messages as well, as exemplified in David Brin’s novel Earth,whereby references to experiences shared only by sender and recipient add meanings not accessible to most potential code-breakers.Since we might not know when possible alien invaders first begin casing us for conquest, making ultra secure encryption ubiquitous over the planet for all communications as soon as possible would be advisible. Think about it: the less the aliens can learn about us, the more uncertainty they’ll have about conquering us. And the longer we can prolong that uncertainty, the longer we might postpone a possibly ruinous invasion. And if we could postpone it until around 2600 or so…well, by then we might be able to actually give the aliens a pretty good fight if they want it. So anyway, strong encryption for human beings worldwide might not only protect us from oppressive governments amongst ourselves, but also from conquest by interstellar beaucracies. And the sooner we have it (the encryption), the better.
  • There’s several things we might try that could work by virtue of what our own historical databases reveal about us (Assuming the aliens access such information, that is). Our constant flirtation with nuclear war and seeming love of confrontations could support in the aliens’ eyes all sorts of conflicts and bizarre behavior breaking out amongst us, even as the aliens’ own weapons were trained upon us.
  • Let our best computer hackers (and perhaps artificial intelligences) try the software approach against the alien’s own computers. If no other entry path into the alien craft can be found for their efforts, try creating a Trojan Horse artificial intelligence and substituting it for whatever hardware/software combination enjoys the current reputation Earthside of being our very best, when and if the aliens decide they want to examine our state-of-the-art achievements. Construct the Trojan Horse from the perspective that it will be examined both piecemeal and in its totality by the aliens, so that it may exploit any opportunities discovered in either avenue. Our AI must be aware that any platform it finds itself running on may be only a software or hardware emulation of its original environment– and that it should seek out a lower level of functionality– the alien’s own operating system– to do its real work.

[Acknowledgement: I thanks to Bevan Hurley and Robert Schreib Jr. for helping to write this article.]

Aliens And Prisoner’s Dilemma

The problem of whether to commit genocide upon an alien race or not is vaguely related to the famous“prisoner’s dilemma”.

The problem is that the Prisoner’s Dilemma makes it all too likely that Paranoia beats reason. For those unfamiliar with it… here’s the Space version.

Race A and B both have roughly comparable technology, but don’t understand each other. Each race has 2 options: Launch missiles or Ignore each other.

If Both races open fire, both races are devastated but not destroyed.

If one race opens fire and the other ignores it, they’re utterly exterminated.

If both races ignore each other, they live in peace and are fine.

The problem is, neither can really communicate with each other. And although the cooperative choice of ignoring each other is best, the risks of them firing first while you ignore them are too great. Thus, this scenario via game theory, will always result in missiles being exchanged.

Race B Ignores Race B Attacks
Race A Ignores Both live constant fear Race A exterminated
Race B lives free of fear
Race A Attacks Race A lives free of fear
Race B exterminated
Both are devastated but not destroyed

As the wikipedia article shows, the dilemma comes when you assume that each race is trying to maximize it’s survival.

Say you are Race A. If Race B ignores you, your best outcome is to attack. Then you do not have to live in fear, spend resources on building defenses, and so on. If race B attacks, your best outcome is still to attack, since the alternative is extermination.

And since Race B will make the same determination, both races will attack and be devastated but not destroyed.

An outside observer will note that if the two races are taken as a group, the best outcome of the group is for both races to cooperate. If either attacks, the outcome for the group will be worse. And if both attack, both races receive a worse outcome than if they had both ignored each other.

So if both races selfishly look out for themselves, both will attack and the result is devastation. If both races altruistically think about the group, both will ignore and both will live. And if one race is selfish while the other is altruistic, yet again it will be proven that nice guys finish last.

And it actually doesn’t matter if they can communicate with each other or not, a given race cannot be sure if the other is being truthful. If the two races can communicate, they run into the “cooperation paradox”. Each race must convince the other that they will take the altruistic optiondespite the fact that the race could do better for themselves by taking the selfish option.

Of course the prisoner’s dilemma is a very artificial set-up, in real life the results would not be quite so clean-cut. The basic prisoner’s dilemma matrix looks like this:

Cooperate Defect
Cooperate win some-win some lose all-win all
Defect win all-lose all lose some-lose some

In more detail, it looks like this:

Cooperate Defect
Cooperate D, D C, B
Defect B, C A, A

where A, B, C, and D are various outcomes, and the relative value of the outcomes are B > D > A > C. If those relative values are true, the prisoner’s dilemma is present. In the first example, B = alive and free from fear, D = alive but in constant fear, A = alive but devastated and C = exterminated.

The prisoner’s dilemma does have some vague similarities to the old cold war doctrine of Mutual Assured Destruction, though they are actually not very closely related. The prisoner’s dilemma also does not work in those cases where what is bad for one player is equally bad for the other.

But, still what we could speculate is that   neighbouring civilization would like to live with peace instead wasting their time in wars.



If SETI Detect Message from ETI, It Would Only Be Coincidence..

Mankind has long wondered if we are alone in the Universe. Since about 1960, a number of research projects have attempted to detect such other forms of intelligent life.

Whether or not alien life exists, those projects are certain to fail.

The projects that have been pursued in SETI (the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence) are based on several assumptions that are certainly wrong.

It might be true that there is extra-terrestrial intelligent life, and it may also be true that we could some day find a way to detect it, and we may someday even find a way to communicate with them. To accomplish these things, attitudes and experiments must be very different from present efforts.

All existing efforts are based extensively on egocentric assumptions. We on earth generally use modulated radio waves to transmit information from one point to another. This is an EXTREMELY inefficient approach! Enormous amounts of radiant energy are needed to transmit signals that carry rather minimal amounts of information. Even now, our technicians are aware of MUCH more effective and efficient ways of transferring information from one place to another. Over the upcoming centuries and millennia, it is certain that our scientists will discover FAR better methods of communication that we cannot even imagine now. Such extremely advanced communication methods would certainly be used by advanced life forms in the Universe. They would be foolish indeed if they choose to use primitive methods like ours.

We, on earth, only discovered the existence of radio waves about one hundred years ago. For all the thousands of years of previous human societies, we were completely ignorant of the existence of the many forms of electromagnetic radiation that always surround us.

Less than one hundred years ago, we discovered how to create radio waves. Soon afterward, we discovered how to “modulate” those waves with lower frequency electrical signals that carried the information of sounds, and later pictures. This technology only came into existence during the lives of some people who are still living! In other words, our knowledge and experience in creating and detecting such waves are extremely primitive!

Even though we have accomplished a lot during this century, with radio and television and many similar technologies now surrounding our lives, we have only the most minimal understanding and experience in such fields. Come back to me in ten thousand years, and I will acknowledge that you then pretty much understand the subject!This present human arrogance regarding the belief that ALL is already known about electromagnetic radiation is one of the central incorrect assumptions involved in the SETI efforts.

A second incorrect assumption involves something called “bandwidth”. This is related to the amount of information that can be transferred by known methods of modulating radio waves. Using modulated radio waves is a very crude method of transmitting information signals. For example, a modulated light signal can carry over ten billion times as much information as an FM radio signal, and our technology already has learned most of that technology, in our first hundred years of being capable of creating modulated signals.

A third assumption that is almost certain to be wrong is that signal makers would be creating and radiating truly phenomenal amounts of energy fairly indiscriminately as to direction. Even our primitive hundred-year-old technology has already discovered extremely narrow beam radiation methods such as Lasers and Masers. A precisely directed Laser beam could transmit a message to a specific destination while using less than one-billionth of the radiative energy of conventional radio signals.

If the earth had a colony on a planet in the Alpha Centauri system, four light-years away, consider the possibilities. Would we radiate trillions of watts of radio signal to send our indiscriminately aimed messages, or would we use a few thousands of watts of extremely directed laser signal exactly in that direction? Would we tolerate that low band-width of 10 MHz when we knew that information “conversations” would always take 8.6 years? Doesn’t it seem obvious that we would already be using laser narrow modulated light beams to maximize the information transmitted and minimize the power needed?

And this is just after our first hundred years of learning about creating and transmitting electromagnetic signals. Imagine what technology we might be using a thousand years from now? Ten thousand years from now? A million?

However, all of the ongoing SETI projects have assumed that the signals that we should listen for are simple modulated radio signals. It is the equivalent to if we would have teams of reconnaissance personnel watching the horizons for smoke signals, in the hopes of learning what neighboring enemies might be doing. A couple hundred years ago, that would have been worthwhile, but it is probably true than most enemies in the modern world have developed more advanced communications methods. Our personnel that would be now watching for smoke signals would certainly be wasting their time. Not because it wouldn’t still work, but because far better methods are available.

A Little History

The earliest successful transmissions of signals and information via radio waves was done on a “carrier wave frequency” of a few hundred thousand cycles per second (hertz). That carrier frequency was capable of being modulated with an electronic equivalent of a SOUND signal of a few thousand hertz frequency. In the jargon of the subject, this would be referred to as having extremely LOW BANDWIDTH.

Within just a few years, our technologies advanced to being able to create and control and detect carrier wave frequencies of a few hundred MILLION hertz. This bandwidth subject can get fairly technical, and numerous electronic textbooks cover the subject. The important result here is that this carrier wave frequency of one thousand times higher has about one thousand times higher BANDWIDTH which means that one thousand times as much modulated information can be carried on it. This is what enabled the technology of television, because a complex television image requires MANY more times the amount of information of simple radio transmission of voice, music or other sounds.

Later advances involved slightly higher modulating frequencies that enabled transmitting COLOR television signals (which require about three times the amount of electronic information as a black-and-white signal). Technology continued to advance, and soon UHF and microwave technologies came into existence. With even higher carrier frequencies, bandwidth became even broader, so even more information could be carried on a transmitted electromagnetic (radio) carrier wave. Soon, the technology of “multiplexing” MANY desired signals together allowed sending hundreds of sound signals together on a single microwave carrier wave.

Recent advancements have extended these technologies to modulating light waves, especially laser or maser generated light waves. Light is actually very similar to radio and television and microwave in that they are all electromagnetic radiation. Their (carrier) frequency is the main difference. In the case of light, the frequency is on the scale many millions of times higher than any of the others.

This means that the BANDWIDTH available for signals being carried on a carrier light wave is so broad that many millions of times as much information can be sent from the source to the destination! Our earth-based technologies are already developing these areas, and optic cables are becoming common. These are cables that do not even include metal but rather special glass fibers. A light signal is sent through the cable that is modulated with astounding amounts of multiplexed signals. This field of technology is another one where many textbooks describe the field, but which is rather advanced and beyond what we need here.

Carrier Frequency

During the early thinking regarding SETI, an assumption was made. In the 1950s and 1960s, it may have sounded like a good assumption, but it is clearly incorrect now. As radio telescopes explored and charted the skies (since THAT technology was invented in the 1930s) it was noticed that natural signals of every imaginable frequency seemed to exist, but that there was a particular microwave frequency (about 1.4 Ghz) that seemed generally clearer. That frequency is associated with a characteristic of the Hydrogen that makes up much of the material of the Universe. (Another technical subject!)

In any event, it was decided that any extra-terrestrial civilization would probably use this frequency (because it was clear and not subject to static or other signal disruption from other natural sources). In the 1950s and 1960s, this microwave frequency was right at the edge of our technologies, and there was the assumption that the OTHER intelligent life was exactly as intelligent as we were! Again, our arrogance led us to believe that we knew ALL the answers! Any TRULY advanced civilization would know just what WE knew (and little more!)

In just a few decades, our technology has discovered how to put millions of times as much information on light waves. This begs a question! Why would the OTHER intelligent life form use an inefficient and even antiquated carrier frequency as microwaves, when they could use light as a carrier, with millions of times the signal carrying ability? They WOULDN’T!

Energy Efficiency

Another obviously incorrect assumption is related to the inefficient use of energy. During the Twentieth Century, earth societies went berserk in using (and wasting) phenomenal amounts of energy in almost every field of endeavor. The list of negative consequences is a long one, which includes global warming, innumerable types of pollution, and many effects that will not be noticed or documented for years to come.

This attitude of having unlimited energy available and not having to worry about any unintentional “collateral damage” that might be caused by massive radiation, extends to the field of SETI. A REALLY illogical assumption has been made that an intelligent society would send omni-directional or broadly directionalized radiation throughout the Universe when they would certainly be actually interested in sending a message in one very specific direction, like to a colony on another planet or to a spacecraft. Why would they create a transmitter that would radiate a BILLION watts of electromagnetic radiation in all directions, when, by carefully directing it, a ONE-WATT signal would have the same result of contact with their colony? Why would they waste the time and effort and expense to build such a transmitter, and why would they continually waste a billion watts of energy when one watt would do the job? They WOULDN’T!

Even earth-based technologies have already learned these things. When NASA scientists try to communicate with a spacecraft they sent to Mars, do they send billions of watts of signals in all directions? No! They use a special transmitting antenna that directs a fairly narrow signal toward Mars. And the spacecraft has its own directional antenna to receive those signals and to send back its own messages. These things only make sense, because they are tremendous improvements in power usage efficiency. Some day, NASA will figure out how to use even narrower laser beam light waves as the carrier waves, and energy efficiency will be enhanced far better yet!

If we actually BELIEVE the word INTELLIGENT in the concept of SETI, we should conclude that an intelligent civilization would not long squander astounding amounts of energy in communications methods. Given our present knowledge, the best guess is that modulated laser light beams would be a FAR more efficient method of communication that any method assumed related to SETI projects. Why would an advanced (more so than us) civilization use such a crude method of communicating as a limited bandwidth microwave, omni-directional method? They WOULDN’T!

And MORE!

All of our speculations on the methods used by alien life forms include DOZENS of assumptions! WE have only even KNOWN ABOUT electromagnetic radiation for about one hundred years. What new and more advanced phenomena will we learn about in the future? Will we ever learn the mechanism of ESP? If so, the phenomenon may have nothing to do with electromagnetic radiation but some entirely new field that we have no clue about! What if the INTELLIGENT beings in the Universe use such a system for communication. We could have no experimental way of knowing about it! (Yet!)

Imagine people of two hundred years ago speculating on how we would communicate today. They knew nothing of cars, airplanes, light bulbs, electricity, computers, phonographs, CDs, radio, television, or thousands of other common parts of our lives. How accurate are our speculations likely to be about our own society two hundred years from now? Or two thousand? Or two million? Or some alien society that doesn’t even resemble us, fifty million years advanced of us? No chance! We can only make wild guesses regarding these things. So, believing that we understand what kind of equipment they will be using and what kinds of signals they will transmit is really just a demonstration of our great arrogance!

It MAY be worth attempting some sort of SETI project. If so, that project will certainly have to be VERY different from efforts made so far, if there is to be ANY hope of success.

The civilizations on earth have taken billions of years of evolution and many thousands of years of social development to get to the level of knowledge we have today. If some other planet’s development was just one percent ahead of ours, they would be millions of years more advanced than we are. If that planet’s development was just one percent behind ours, their “intelligent life” would still be hunting and gathering. It is totally illogical to assume that the other end of ANY long distance conversation would be exactly at our stage of development (or within 50 years or so).

There’s another implicit assumption in this. If the other planet’s civilization was a million years ahead of us, what could they POSSIBLY learn from such a primitive civilization as ours? If we today could locate a community of primitive earth men from a million years ago, would we try to talk to them? Why? They would not have a significant language, and they would have few concepts they even understood. Eat, sleep, cave, warmth, survive, and maybe fire. Would you go out of your way to try to get a conversation going with someone with so little to share?


This discussion seems to suggest that the many SETI projects that are listening for modulated radio waves are doomed to total failure. The only REMOTE possibility is regarding a distant civilization that also just discovered radio waves, and doesn’t know any more about the field than we do!

Given our current knowledge, it seems FAR more reasonable to look for modulated light signals. Even then we would have to be somewhat lucky to receive one. We would have to be exactly on line and behind the target for such a communication signal to arrive in our location. But such a signal would not have a simple mathematical sequence as its modulation. It would certainly have a VERY high frequency modulation signal, so as to best use the available band width. Such a modulation signal would likely be so high a frequency on its own to be above the ability of any sensing equipment we now can build. So the signal would just appear to us to be a monochromatic light source.

The conclusion is then that we are probably just not yet technologically advanced enough to create a decent SETI project!
Milan M. Cirkovic, & Robert J. Bradbury (2005). Galactic Gradients, Postbiological Evolution and the Apparent Failure of
SETI New Astron. 11 (2006) 628-639 arXiv: astro-ph/0506110v1

Update:Alien Graveyard Found

Scientists say they have
found an extraterrestrial
cemetery in central Africa
that is at least 500 years
old!
“There must be 200
bodies buried there and
not a single one of them is
human, ” Dr. Hugo Childs,
the Swiss anthropologist,
told reporters in Kigali,
Rwanda. They are in
amazing state of
preservation to be so old,”
he added. “Soil and tissue
samples indicate the
bodies have been in the
ground since the 1400s.
We ’re now trying to figure
out where they came from
– and what killed them.”
Dr. Childs and his
colleagues reportedly
discovered the alien
graveyard on a routine
survey of the Rwandan
jungle.
They originally thought
they had stumbled on the
remains of a centuries-old
village. But excavation
reportedly revealed
nothing but alien bodies –
stacked in fives in a jungle
clearing.
“The creatures themselves
were much taller and
skinnier than humans,”
said the expert. They
stood about 7 feet tall and
they were not any bigger
around than small sapling
trees. Their heads were
larger than the average
man’s and they had no
mouth, nose or eyes to
speak of. I assume that
they communicated with
one another telepathically
and moved around like
bats with some kind of
biological radar.”
Without further study
there is no way to tell for
sure what killed the
extraterrestrials.
But Dr. Childs speculated
that the 200 aliens were
part of a single landing
party that encountered a
deadly virus. Because they
would have had no
immunity to Earth disease,
he added, something as
simple as the flu could
have wiped out the entire
party.
“Some of them must have
survived because there is
no evidence of a spaceship
to be found, ” said Dr.
Childs. “Of course, as our
excavation effort
continues, there ’s no
telling what we may run
across. ”
Dr. Childs would not take
reporters to the site, for
fear of the bodies being
disturbed. However, he
promised to reveal the
location once the
excavation was complete.
“ It will change the world,”
Dr. Childs said.

What Does Solution to Fermi Paradox Implies?

No present observations suggest a technologically advanced extraterrestrial intelligence
(ETI) has spread through the galaxy. However, under commonplace assumptions about galactic
civilization formation and expansion, this absence of observation is highly unlikely. This
improbability is the heart of the Fermi Paradox. The Fermi Paradox leads some to conclude that
humans have the only advanced civilization in this galaxy, either because civilization formation
is very rare or because intelligent civilizations inevitably destroy themselves. I find this case more implicitely appropriate. However, there are many cases   which may be plausible.

The classic Fermi Paradox can lead to the conclusion that humans have formed the first

advanced civilization in the galaxy because extraterrestrial intelligence (ETI) has not yet been

observed. Numerous resolutions to this paradox have been proposed , spanning the range

of cosmological limits to sociological assumptions. A popular class of solutions assumes that the

evolution of life is rare in the Universe: Earth may not be wholly unique, but other inhabited

planets in the Universe could be too far away for any interaction or detection. But if life is a

common phenomenon in the galaxy, then it seems reasonable to expect observable evidence.

Furthermore, if the evolution of intelligence is commonplace, then there is hope for projects such

as the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI), even though no present observations suggest

a technologically advanced ETI has spread throughout the galaxy.

The conclusion that other ETI do not exist contains implicit assumptions about the nature

and pattern of ETI. Specifically, this argument requires that ETI expand exponentially from their

home location throughout the entire galaxy [4], an assumption that is based on observations of

the expansion of human civilization on Earth. The assumption of exponential or other fastergrowth

is crucial to the conclusion that extraterrestrial civilizations should have colonized the

galaxy by now.

However, a closer look at human civilization suggests two problems with this

assumption. First, where human populations are exponentially expansive, they often—perhaps

always—do so unsustainably,

expansion. Second, not all human populations are exponentially expansive, such as the !Kung

San of the Kalahari Desert. These slower-growth human populations are without question

intelligent. Indeed, global human population growth is currently slowing, and humanity as a

whole may be transitioning towards a slower-growth, sustainable development pattern. A slowergrowth

humanity would even remain capable of space colonization.

It is possible that extraterrestrial civilizations face similar sustainability constraints. This

possibility suggests a resolution to the Fermi Paradox, which we name the “Sustainability

Solution”.

If the Sustainability Solution is true,

i.e. if intelligent civilizations cannot sustainexponential growth, then no exponentially expansive civilizations should likely be observed.

However, the Sustainability Solution does not rule out the possibility of civilizations following

slower-growth patterns. Such slower-growth civilizations expand sufficiently slowly that they

would not necessarily have colonized the entire galaxy by now. The Sustainability Solution also

does not rule out the possibility of faster-growth civilizations colonizing the galaxy and then

collapsing. The existence of slower-growth or collapsed civilizations is thus consistent with the

lack of human observations of extraterrestrial civilization.

The Fermi Paradox ultimately concerns the spatial expansion of civilizations, but spatial

expansion is closely linked with expansion in population, environmental impact, and resource

consumption. For example, migration is often driven by resource shortages, which in turn may

result from large population and/or environmental degradation. Likewise, migration to

uninhabited regions can lead to resource surpluses, which can in turn drive population growth.

Finally, broadly expansionist policy can cause expansion in each of space, population,

environmental impact, and resource consumption.

The Fermi Paradox posits that if intelligent life were common in the Universe, then in all

likelihood there would exist some extraterrestrial intelligence (ETI) capable of interstellar travel.

This ETI would then explore and colonize the galaxy, just as humans have explored and

colonized Earth and have begun exploring the Solar System. The magnitude of time required for

a technological ETI to spread throughout the galaxy is on the order of 1-100 Myr [4, 15],

significantly less than the ~10 Gyr age of the galactic thin disk, so the question arises:

where arethey?

If they exist, advanced ETI could have colonized the galaxy several times over by now, sothe lack of evidence for their presence implies their non-existence.

i.e. in a way that leads to an eventual end to the exponential.

Okey just take following implications

where

A = ETI exist, B = ETI are here, and

C = ETI are observed:

S1: If

A, then (probably B)

If (probably

B), then (probably C)

5

Not-(probably

C)

Therefore not-(probably

B)

Therefore not-

A

This inference can be criticized because it is only correct if

not-(probably C) is true. If (probablyC)

For example, ETI exploration of the galaxy could take the form of messenger probes that may have

already reached the Solar System, residing in the asteroid belt, Lagrange points, or other stable

orbits. Such probes with a limiting size of only ~1-10 meters may have so far eluded

observation. If ETI exploration takes such a remote form, then artifacts in the Solar System may

yet be observed, but ETI colonization of the Solar System, so far as we know, has not occurred.

Technological ETI are typically assumed to explore and colonize the galaxy just as

humans have explored and colonized Earth. This expansion implicitly assumes an exponential

growth pattern, leading to the colonization of the entire galaxy:

Assume that we eventually send expeditions to each of the 100 nearest stars. (These

are all within 20 light-years of the Sun.) Each of these colonies has the potential of

eventually sending out their own expeditions, and their colonies in turn can colonize,

and so forth. If there were no pause between trips, the frontier of space exploration

would then lie on the surface of a sphere whose radius was increasing at a speed of

0.10 c. At that rate, most of our Galaxy would be traversed within 650 000 years.

The assumption of exponential growth is in turn based on observations of the expansion of

human civilization on Earth:

If, the argument goes, there were intelligent beings elsewhere in our Galaxy, then

they would eventually have achieved space travel, and would have explored and

colonized the Galaxy, as we have explored and colonized the Earth.

However, as discussed above, exponential human population growth and colonization of the

planet may not be a sustainable development pattern. This fact calls into question a core

justification for the assumption of exponential expansion of ETI civilizations. If ETI civilizations

share similar development issues as human civilization, as is assumed in the Fermi Paradox, then

ETI civilizations would not be able to sustain exponential expansion. Likewise, if

exponential expansion could not be sustained, then ETI civilizations would either have switched.

to a slower-growth development pattern or collapsed. Collectively, these possibilities suggest the
“Sustainability Solution” to the Fermi Paradox: The absence of ETI observation can be explained
by the possibility that exponential growth is not a sustainable development pattern for intelligent
civilizations.
The Sustainability Solution implies that the existence of slower-growth ETI civilizations
cannot be ruled out by the lack of observed ETI because these civilizations would grow too
slowly to have reached Earth by now. These civilizations may have always followed a slowergrowth
development pattern, or they may have started with an exponential or other faster-growth
growth pattern only to transition towards slower-growth as faster-growth became unsustainable
. Both of these development patterns can be observed in human populations, suggesting
that both could be possible among ETI civilizations. Furthermore, just as slower-growth human
populations (including the global human civilization if it transitions successfully towards
sustainable development) are highly intelligent and technologically capable, slower-growth ETI
may still be as well. Indeed, slower-growth ETI may even possess space colonization capacity,
just without having expanded so rapidly as to colonize the entire galaxy.
The Sustainability Solution also implies that ETI civilizations may have previously
followed an exponential or other faster-growth development pattern but eventually collapsed.
This collapse could occur at the planetary scale, as is suspected may happen to human
civilization ,at the solar system scale, or even at the galactic scale. If the entire galaxy were
once colonized by an ETI civilization, then the colonizing civilization must have collapsed in
such a way that no evidence of the colonization has been detected. Evidence of such a graveyard
civilization may still exist and may eventually be detectable by humans using search efforts
different from those already attempted. Furthermore, just as human populations sometimes
persist in diminished numbers after undergoing collapse, a collapsed ETI civilization may still
exist at a smaller scale.
Having considered the sustainability of ETI civilizations, we can now revisit the Fermi
Paradox. If exponential or other faster-growth is unsustainable at the sub-galactic scale, then the
supposition by Hart  and others that advanced ETI civilization could easily colonize the
galaxy is false. Alternatively, this supposition could be true if ETI civilizations that colonize the
galaxy eventually collapse, but we are unlikely to observe a galactic colony because fastergrowth
civilizations collapse quickly relative to astronomical timescales. In principle a
civilization could colonize the galaxy through faster-growth and then avoid collapse by
transitioning towards sustainable slower-growth; however, the absence of observation of galactic
civilization suggests that this has not occurred. In either case, the Fermi Paradox cannot rule out
the possibility that slower-growth or post-collapse ETI civilizations currently exist.

to a slower-growth development pattern or collapsed. Collectively, these possibilities suggest the“Sustainability Solution” to the Fermi Paradox: The absence of ETI observation can be explainedby the possibility that exponential growth is not a sustainable development pattern for intelligentcivilizations.The Sustainability Solution implies that the existence of slower-growth ETI civilizationscannot be ruled out by the lack of observed ETI because these civilizations would grow tooslowly to have reached Earth by now. These civilizations may have always followed a slowergrowthdevelopment pattern, or they may have started with an exponential or other faster-growthgrowth pattern only to transition towards slower-growth as faster-growth became unsustainable. Both of these development patterns can be observed in human populations , suggestingthat both could be possible among ETI civilizations. Furthermore, just as slower-growth humanpopulations (including the global human civilization if it transitions successfully towardssustainable development) are highly intelligent and technologically capable, slower-growth ETImay still be as well. Indeed, slower-growth ETI may even possess space colonization capacity,just without having expanded so rapidly as to colonize the entire galaxy.The Sustainability Solution also implies that ETI civilizations may have previouslyfollowed an exponential or other faster-growth development pattern but eventually collapsed.This collapse could occur at the planetary scale, as is suspected may happen to human civilization , at the solar system scale, or even at the galactic scale. If the entire galaxy wereonce colonized by an ETI civilization, then the colonizing civilization must have collapsed insuch a way that no evidence of the colonization has been detected. Evidence of such a graveyardcivilization may still exist and may eventually be detectable by humans using search effortsdifferent from those already attempted. Furthermore, just as human populations sometimespersist in diminished numbers after undergoing collapse, a collapsed ETI civilization may stillexist at a smaller scale.Having considered the sustainability of ETI civilizations, we can now revisit the FermiParadox. If exponential or other faster-growth is unsustainable at the sub-galactic scale, then thesupposition by Hart  and others that advanced ETI civilization could easily colonize thegalaxy is false. Alternatively, this supposition could be true if ETI civilizations that colonize thegalaxy eventually collapse, but we are unlikely to observe a galactic colony because fastergrowthcivilizations collapse quickly relative to astronomical timescales. In principle acivilization could colonize the galaxy through faster-growth and then avoid collapse bytransitioning towards sustainable slower-growth; however, the absence of observation of galactic7civilization suggests that this has not occurred. In either case, the Fermi Paradox cannot rule outthe possibility that slower-growth or post-collapse ETI civilizations currently exist.

A popular class of explanations for this absence of observation involves speculation into

the behavior or sociology of ETI. For example, a solution known as the zoo hypothesis predicts

that ETI civilization has set aside Earth as an undisturbed wildlife preserve , stealthily

observing Earth (perhaps using a virtual planetarium ) and waiting for its inhabitants to cross

a technological threshold before making themselves known . A recent hypothesis involving

common economic assumptions  proposed a solution derived from resource issues,

concluding that ETI, like humans, will necessarily lack the patience required to conserve

resources for space colonization. Testing such hypotheses may require future technology; for

example, the zoo hypothesis might not be falsified (or vindicated) until humans begin interstellar

exploration. Nevertheless, most solutions of this class are falsifiable and thus legitimate avenues

of scientific inquiry.

Other possible explanations invoke the non-linearity of migration. If colonization through

the galaxy proceeds as a percolation problem, then expansion should halt after a finite number of

colonies, resulting in sub-galactic scale clusters around the parent star. Under this scenario,

colonized regions of the galaxy would remain isolated from each other, even in a galaxy teeming

with intelligent life. Alternatively, a relatively young civilization that engages in economic

interstellar travel may find its rapid expansion self-limited by the speed of light.

Civilizations that pursue aggressive growth may quickly collapse because growth outpaces

migration, while ETI that grow with the limits of the carrying capacity may expand too slow to

8

have colonized the galaxy yet. The persistence hypothesis suggests ETI civilization remains

undetected because the solar vicinity is persistently unvisited by ETI civilization—just as regions

of Earth such as the Amazon Basin, Siberia, and Indonesian islands are largely untouched by the

global human civilization. Persistent sites may remain persistent for a long time, explaining the

lack of ETI civilization in the neighborhood of the Sun. Many factors including these may limit

the expansion of ETI civilization at the sub-galactic scale. If any ETI civilization overcomes

such barriers, then the Sustainability Solution predicts an upper limit to faster-growth galactic

expansion.

The classic Fermi Paradox can now be rephrased to account for its implicit assumptions.

If faster-growth development is unsustainable, then a faster-growth ETI civilization could

expand throughout the galaxy, only to collapse shortly thereafter. As a result, we would likely

not observe such a short-lived ETI civilization. This leads us to the inference that exponentially

expansive ETI civilization does not exist—contrary to the classic conclusion that ETI do not exist

at all. However, the non-existence of exponentially expansive ETI civilization does not preclude

the existence of ETI. Just as there are human populations maintaining sustainable, slower-growth

development, it is entirely possible that ETI exist with slower-growth development patterns.

Likewise, just as human populations sometimes persist in diminished numbers after a collapse, it

is possible that there exist post-collapse ETI.

Implications For SETI

The Sustainability Solution suggests a recalibration of the human search for ETI,

focusing on slower-growth and post-collapse ETI. Each of these forms of ETI would likely yield

different signs of their existence, which in turn could be detectable through different strategies.

Traditional SETI projects search for electromagnetic signals broadcast from ETI

civilizations . Electromagnetic signals could be broadcast by slower-growth ETI

civilizations, just as human civilization would retain the capacity to broadcast signals if it

transitions to slower-growth sustainable development. Electromagnetic signals could also be

broadcast by post-collapse graveyard civilizations: if part of the population survives the collapse,

then the survivors could make graveyard broadcasts. Alternatively, if the collapse leaves no

survivors, then the signal could, at least in principle, be broadcast by an automatic system

deployed before the collapse.

Another approach is to search for terrestrial planets whose atmospheric spectral

signatures suggest a higher likelihood of life on the planet . Atmospheric composition alone cannot conclusively demonstrate the presence of life on a distant planet, nor can they necessarily

distinguish between intelligent and non-intelligent life, but certain spectral signatures would be

unlikely in an abiotic world. For example, the presence of O3 and O2 could be a good biomarker,

especially if coupled with atmospheric CH4, and anoxic atmospheres analogous to the early Earth

may also be suitable candidates for life [32]. Additionally, the red edge of chlorophyll is a unique

biosignature on Earth [33, 34], and inhabited extrasolar planets may exhibit their own distinctive

biosignatures. Such signatures would likely occur for slower-growth ETI civilizations because

the civilizations’ planets necessarily have life on them. Spectral biomarkers may also occur for

post-collapse civilizations; if the collapse has survivors, then, as with slower-growth ETI, the

survivors’ planets necessarily have life on them. Alternatively, if the collapse leaves no

survivors, then the planets may still retain a similar biosignature if non-intelligent or nontechnological

life persists.

A third search strategy allows for the possibility of remote exploration by ETI

civilizations. Though colonization of the galaxy may be problematic, slower-growth ETI could

conceivably achieve interstellar exploration using small long-lived probes . Remote

interstellar exploration by future humans is at least plausible, foreshadowed by the entry of

Voyager into the heliosheath at the edge of the Solar System , suggesting that slower-growth

ETI with sufficient technology could embark on this form of galactic exploration. Searches for

ETI probes known Solar System SETI, also called SETA (Search for Extraterrestrial Artifacts) or

SETV (Search for Extraterrestrial Visitation) , has been proposed at visible  and radio

wavelengths, capable of detecting probes as small as ~10 meters or less. Calls for a Solar

System SETI acknowledge that the possibility of remote ETI exploration is at least as likely as

interstellar ETI broadcasts, and a survey of the solar vicinity may be more pragmatic than an allsky

search for encoded messages .

The Sustainability Solution suggests that Solar System SETI may be the preferred option

in searching for technological ETI. Spectral signatures can be detected even if civilization on the

planet has not yet developed the capacity to perform electromagnetic broadcast, and a slowergrowth

civilization may persist for an extended period of time before gaining broadcast capacity.

Additionally, spectral signatures can be detected if a post-collapse civilization loses broadcast

capacity, and experience with human civilization suggests that collapse is much more likely to

cause loss of broadcast capacity than significant change in long-term atmospheric composition.

Nevertheless, remote spectral signatures only provide probable biosignatures at best—far from

the confirmation of intelligence or technology elsewhere. Solar System SETI, on the other hand,

would search for probes of extraterrestrial origin in our stellar vicinity. Artifacts may originate from an extant slower-growth ETI or an extinct galactic empire, but the discovery of either

would be near conclusive evidence of extraterrestrial technology.

Ultimately, assumptions about life in the Universe are heavily based on what we observe

on Earth. This is because Earth hosts our only known example of life. However, we cannot rule

out the possibility that ETI civilization may follow a development pattern sufficiently different

that we wouldn’t recognize it even if we detected its signal. Therefore, the implications for SETI

discussed here cannot be taken as conclusive.

Finally I can  that the Fermi Paradox cannot logically conclude that humans are the only intelligent

civilization in the galaxy. This is due to the Sustainability Solution to the Fermi Paradox

presented here: the absence of ETI observation can be explained by the possibility that

exponential growth is not a sustainable development pattern for intelligent civilizations. Thus,

the Paradox can only conclude that other intelligent civilizations have not sustained exponential

growth patterns throughout the galaxy. It is still possible that slower-growth ETI civilizations

exist but have not expanded rapidly enough to be easily detectable by the searches humans have

yet made. It is also possible that faster-growth ETI civilizations previously expanded throughout

the galaxy but could not sustain this state, collapsing in a way that whatever artifacts they might

have left have also remained undetected. Both of these growth patterns can be observed in

human civilization, suggesting that they may be possible for ETI civilizations as well.

The Sustainability Solution to the Fermi Paradox has practical implications for both the

search for extraterrestrial life and human civilization management. In the search for

extraterrestrial life, the Sustainability Solution allows that slower-growth ETI civilizations may

still transmit radio or other signals. Furthermore, ambitions such as Solar System SETI may

eventually discover extraterrestrial messenger probes residing in the asteroid belt and other

stellar orbits. For human civilization management, the Sustainability Solution increases the

likelihood that human civilization needs to transition towards sustainable development in order

to avoid its own collapse.


Jacob D. Haqq-Misra, & Seth D. Baum (2009). The Sustainability Solution to the Fermi Paradox J.Br.Interplanet.Soc.62:47-51, 2009 arXiv: 0906.0568v1

UFOs Revisited

We have some serious thoughts about ufos. Mystery still remains either regarding existence of aliens or any other such thingy. Too many anomalies are out there concerning moon and Mars. Some says that there are cities on moon and Mars . Well there is nothing that we can’t believe on it. Something is certainly strange. Recently I came across a youtube video which features the UFOs sightings captured by NASA. You can watch them below.

Enjoy Folks!! Very interesting!!!

Behind The Star Trek Physics

Inertial Dampers

You are at the helm of the starship Defiant (NCC-1 764), currently in orbit around the planet Iconia, near the Neutral Zone. Your mission: to rendezvous with a nearby supply vessel at the other end of this solar system in order to pick up components to repair faulty transporter primary energizing coils. There is no need to achieve warp speeds; you direct the impulse drive to be set at full power for leisurely half-light-speed travel, which should bring you to your destination in a few hours, giving you time to bring the captain’s log up to date. However, as you begin to pull out of orbit, you feel an intense pressure in your chest. Your hands are leaden, and you are glued to your seat. Your mouth is fixed in an evil-looking grimace, your eyes feel like they are about to burst out of their sockets, and the blood flowing through your body refuses to rise to your head. Slowly, you lose consciousness … and within minutes you die.

What happened? It is not the first signs of spatial “interphase” drift, which will later overwhelm the ship, or an attack from a previously cloaked Romulan vessel. Rather, you have fallen prey to something far more powerful. The ingenious writers of Star Trek, on whom you depend, have not yet invented inertial dampers, which they will introduce sometime later in the series. You have been defeated by nothing more exotic than Isaac Newton’s laws of motion – the very first things one can forget about high school physics.

OK, I know some trekkers out there are saying to themselves, “How lame! Don’t give me Newton. Tell me things I really want to know, like ‘How does warp drive work?’ or ‘What is the flash before going to warp speed – Is it like a sonic boom?’ or’What is a dilithium crystal anyway?”‘ All I can say is that we will get there eventually. Travel in the Star Trek universe involves some of the most exotic concepts in physics. But many different aspects come together before we can really address everyone’s most fundamental question about Star Trek: “Is any of this really possible, and if so, how?”

To go where no one has gone before – indeed, before we even get out of Starfleet Headquarters – we first have to confront the same peculiarities that Galileo and Newton did over three hundred years ago. The ultimate motivation will be the truly cosmic question which was at the heart of Gene Roddenberry’s vision of Star Trek and which, to me, makes this whole subject worth thinking about: “What does modern science allow us to imagine about our possible future as a civilization?”

Anyone who has ever been in an airplane or a fast car knows the feeling of being pushed back into the seat as the vehicle accelerates from a standstill. This phenomenon works with a vengeance aboard a starship. The fusion reactions in the impulse drive produce huge pressures, which push gases and radiation backward away from the ship at high velocity. It is the backreaction force on the engines – from the escaping gas and radiation – that causes the engines to “recoil” forward. The ship, being anchored to the engines, also recoils forward. At the helm, you are pushed forward too, by the force of the captain’s seat on your body. In turn, your body pushes back on the seat.

If you are in the captain’s seat and you issue a command for the ship to accelerate, you must take into account the force with which the seat will push you forward. If you request an acceleration twice as great, the force on you from the seat will be twice as great. The greater the acceleration, the greater the push. The only problem is that nothing can withstand the kind of force needed to accelerate to impulse speed quickly – certainly not your body.

By the way, this same problem crops up in different contexts throughout Star Trek – even on Earth. At the beginning of Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, James Kirk is free-climbing while on vacation in Yosemite when he slips and fails. Spock, who has on his rocket boots, speeds to the rescue, aborting the captain’s fall within a foot or two of the ground. Unfortunately, this is a case where the solution can be as bad as the problem. It is the process of stopping over a distance of a few inches which can kill you, whether or not it is the ground that does the stopping or Spock’s Vulcan grip.

Well before the reaction forces that will physically tear or break your body occur, other severe physiological problems set in. First and foremost, it becomes impossible for your heart to pump strongly enough to force the blood up to your head. This is why fighter pilots sometimes black out when they perform maneuvers involving rapid acceleration. Special suits have been created to force the blood up from pilots’ legs to keep them conscious during acceleration. This physiological reaction remains one of the limiting factors in determining how fast the acceleration of present-day spacecraft can be, and it is why NASA, unlike Jules Verne in his classic From the Earth to the Moon, has never launched three men into orbit from a giant cannon.

To accelerate gently from rest to half the speed of light, with an acceleration of 3g, it will take 2.5 months to reach this speed! This would not make for an exciting episode of Star Trek. To resolve this dilemma, sometime after the production of the first Constitution Class starship – the Enterprise (NCC-1701) – the Star Trek writers had to develop a response to the criticism that the accelerations aboard a starship would instantly turn the crew into “chunky salsa.” They came up with “inertial dampers,” a kind of cosmic shock absorber and an ingenious plot device designed to get around this sticky little problem.

The inertial dampers are most notable in their absence. Indeed, almost every time the Enterprise is destroyed (usually in some renegade timeline), the destruction is preceded by loss of the inertial dampers.

Tractor Beam

Another technological marvel that has to face Newton’s laws is the Enterprise’s tractor beam. It seems simple enough: more like an invisible rope or rod. The only problem is that when we pull something with a rope our feet are firmly anchored on the ground. Without any firm grounding, you are a helpless victim of your own inertia. If the Enterprise tries to use the tractor beam to push away any object, the resulting force would push the Enterprise back as well!

This phenomenon has already dramatically affected the way we work in space at present. Say, for example, that you are an astronaut assigned to tighten a bolt on the Hubble Space Telescope. If you take an electric screwdriver with you to do the job, you are in for a rude awakening after you drift over to the offending bolt. When you switch on the screwdriver as it is pressed against the bolt, you are as likely to start spinning around as the bolt is to turn. This is because the Hubble Telescope is a lot heavier than you are. When the screwdriver applies a force to the bolt, the reaction force you feel may more easily turn you than the bolt, especially if the bolt is still fairly tightly secured to the frame.

Likewise, you can see what will happen if the Enterprise tries to pull another spacecraft toward it. Unless the Enterprise is very much heavier, it will move toward the other object when the tractor beam turns on, rather than vice versa. In the depths of space, this distinction is a meaningless semantic one. With no reference system nearby, who is to say who is pulling whom? However, if you are on a hapless planet like Moab IV in the path of a renegade star on a collision course, it makes a great deal of difference whether the Enterprise pushes the star aside or the star pushes the Enterprise aside!

Time Loops

While every one of us is a time traveler, the cosmic pathos that elevates human history to the level of tragedy arises precisely because we seem doomed to travel in only one direction – into the future. What wouldn’t any of us give to travel into the past, relive glories, correct wrongs, meet our heroes, perhaps even avert disasters, or simply revisit youth with the wisdom of age? The possibilities of space travel beckon us every time we gaze up at the stars, yet we seem to be permanent captives in the present. The question that motivates not only dramatic license but a surprising amount of modern theoretical physics research can be simply put: Are we or are we not prisoners on a cosmic temporal freight train that cannot jump the tracks?

Perhaps the most fascinating aspect of time travel as far as Star Trek is concerned is that there is no stronger potential for violation of the Prime Directive. The crews of Starfleet are admonished not to interfere with the present normal historical development of any alien society they visit. Yet by traveling back in time it is possible to remove the present altogether. Indeed, it is possible to remove history altogether!

A famous paradox is to be found in both science fiction and physics: What happens if you go back in time and kill your mother before you were born? You must then cease to exist. But if you cease to exist, you could not have gone back and killed your mother. But if you didn’t kill your mother, then you have not ceased to exist. Put another way: if you exist, then you cannot exist, while if you don’t exist, you must exist. (Reread the article that was posted on the relativity page: click .)

Actually, if the above plot line is confusing, it is nothing compared to the Mother of all time paradoxes, which arises in the final episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, when Picard sets off a chain of events that will travel back in time and destroy not just his own ancestry but all life on Earth. Specifically, a “subspace temporal distortion” involving “antitime” threatens to grow backward in time, eventually engulfing the amino acid protoplasm on the nascent Earth before the first proteins, which will be the building blocks of life, can form. This is the ultimate case of an effect producing a cause. The temporal distortion is apparently created in the future. If, in the distant past, the subspace temporal distortion was able to destroy the first life on Earth, then life on Earth could never have evolved to establish a civilization capable of creating the distortion in the future!

The standard resolution of these paradoxes, at least among many physicists, is to argue a priori that such possibilities must not be allowed in a sensible universe, such as the one we presumably live in. However, the problem is that Einstein’s equations of general relativity not only do not directly forbid such possibilities, they encourage them.

Within thirty years of the development of the equations of general relativity, an explicit solution in which time travel could occur was developed by the famous mathematician Kurt Godel, who worked at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton along with Einstein. In Star Trek language, this solution allowed the creation of a “temporal causality loop,” such as the one the Enterprise got caught in after being hit by the starship Bozeman. The dryer terminology of modern physics labels this a “closed timelike curve.” In either case, what it implies is that you can travel on a round-trip and return to your starting point in both space and time! Godel’s solution involved a universe that, unlike the one we happen to live in, is not expanding but instead is spinning uniformly. In such a universe, it turns out that one could in principle go back in time merely by traveling in a large circle in space. While such a hypothetical universe is dramatically different than the one in which we live, the mere fact that this solution exists at all indicates clearly that time travel is possible within the context of general relativity.

As was discussed in class, as one approaches light speed, it is speed that becomes an absolute quantity, and therefore space and time must become relative! Einstein’s Special Relativity Theory (STR), also produced the remarkable consequences of time dilation, length contraction and suprises in simultaneity. The later refers to the inability to synchronize clocks for observers that are moving with respect to each other. This fact is critical in Star Trek. It is absolutely essential that (a) light speed be avoided, in order not to put the Federation out of synchronization, and (b) faster-than-light speed be realized, in order to move practically about the galaxy.

The kicker is that, in the context of special relativity alone, the latter possibility cannot be realized. Physics becomes full of impossibilities if super light speed is allowed. Not least among the problems is that because objects get more massive as they approach the speed of light, it takes progressively more and more energy to accelerate them by a smaller and smaller amount. As in the myth of the Greek hero Sisyphus, who was condemned to push a boulder uphill for all eternity only to be continually thwarted near the very top, all the energy in the universe would not be sufficient to allow us to push even a speck of dust, much less a starship, past this ultimate speed limit.

By the same token, not just light but all massless radiation must travel at the speed of light. This means that the many types of beings of “pure energy” encountered by the Enterprise, and later by the Voyager, would have difficulty existing as shown. In the first place, they wouldn’t be able to sit still. Light cannot be slowed down, let alone stopped in empty space. In the second place, any form of intelligent-energy being (such as the “photonic” energy beings in the Voyager series; the energy beings in the Beta Renna cloud, in The Next Generation; the Zetarians, in the original series; and the Dal’Rok, in Deep Space Nine), which is constrained to travel at the speed of light, would have clocks that are infinitely slowed compared to our own. The entire history of the universe would pass by in a single instant. If energy beings could experience anything, they would experience everything at once! Needless to say, before they could actually interact with corporeal beings the corporeal beings would be long dead.

Warp Drive

Warp Drive is the main power system of the Enterprise, which propels it to faster-than-light travel. Warp power relies on the annihilation of matter with antimatter, and the resulting energy pushes the Enterprise. For speeds lower than the speed of light, the Enterprise uses impulse power engines.

However, while the warp drive aboard the Enterprise uses matter-antimatter fuel, the impulse drive does not. It is powered instead by nuclear fusion – the same nuclear reaction that powers the Sun by turning hydrogen into helium. In fusion reactions, about 1 percent of the available mass is converted into energy. With this much available energy, the helium atoms that are produced can come streaming out the back of the rocket at about an eighth of the speed of light. Using this exhaust velocity for the propellant, we then can calculate the amount of fuel the Enterprise needs in order to accelerate to, say, half the speed of light. The calculation is not difficult, but I will just give the answer here. It may surprise you. Each time the Enterprise accelerates to half the speed of light, it must burn 81 TIMES ITS ENTIRE MASS in hydrogen fuel. Given that a Galaxy Class starship such as Picard’s Enterprise-D would weigh in excess of 4 million metric tons, this means that over 300 million metric tons of fuel would need to be used each time the impulse drive is used to accelerate the ship to half light speed! And then, of course, energy is needed to slow down the Enterprise as well!

The Curvature of Spacetime

The central premise of Einstein’s general relativity is simple to state in words: the curvature of spacetime is directly determined by the distribution of matter and energy contained within it. Einstein’s equations, in fact, provide simply the strict mathematical relation between curvature on the one hand and matter and energy on the other:

Left-hand side  =   Right-hand side
  {CURVATURE}      {MATTER AND ENERGY}

What makes the theory so devilishly difficult to work with is this simple feedback loop: The curvature of spacetime is determined by the distribution of matter and energy in the universe, but this distribution is in turn governed by the curvature of space. It is like the chicken and the egg. Which was there first? Matter acts as the source of curvature, which in turn determines how matter evolves, which in turn alters the curvature, and so on.

Indeed, this may be perhaps the most important single aspect of general relativity as far as Star Trek is concerned. The complexity of the theory means that we still have not yet fully understood all its consequences; therefore we cannot rule out various exotic possibilities. It is these exotic possibilities that are the grist of Star Trek’s mill. In fact, we shall see that all these possibilities rely on one great unknown that permeates everything, from wormholes and black holes to time machines.

If space is curved, in fact, then a straight line need not be the shortest distance between two points. Consider the two figures below

The shortest distance between two points located on opposite sides of the circle above, is a diameter of the circle. Travelling around the circle from A to B increases this distance by 1.5. However, if the circle was drawn on a rubber sheet which was then stretched, we see clearly that going through the central region is no longer the shortest path! This time, going around the perimeter of the circle is shorter. In other words, if, in curved space, the shortest distance between two points need not be a straight line, then it might be possible to traverse what appearsalong the line of sight to be a huge distance, by finding instead a shorter route through curved spacetime.

Wormholes

 

Let’s look at a consequence of the short-path argument from above. Assume I have a large rubber sheet which looks something like this:

If I were to poke a pencil down A until I touched B, and then sewed the two parts together, I would create a “short-cut” from A to B. As you have no doubt surmised, the tunnel connecting A and B in this figure is a two-dimensional analogue of a three-dimensional wormhole, which could, in principle, connect distant regions of space-time. As exciting as this possibility is, there are several deceptive aspects of the picture which I want to bring to your attention. In the first place, even though the rubber sheet is shown embedded in a three-dimensional space in order for us to “see” the curvature of the sheet, the curved sheet can exist without the three-dimensional space around it needing to exist. Thus, while a wormhole could exist joining A and B, there is no sense in which A and B are “close” without the wormhole being present. It is not as if one is free to leave the rubber sheet and move from A to B through the three-dimensional space in which the sheet is embedded. If the three-dimensional space is not there, the rubber sheet is all there is to the universe.

Finally, although mathematically wormholes can exist, their construction is unpredictable, they are unstable, and they need huge amounts exotic (negative energy) to exist. If one was to open a wormhole, one could never guess where it would open to, nor how long would it stay open. Travelling through such a construct undoubtedly would be hazardous to one’s health! Nevertheless, without such exotic possibilities we will probably never voyage through space.

Black Holes

 

We have alreary discussed these in the lectures on Relativity and Astrophysics. Black holes are “singularities” (essentially a point, with infinite mass and density) in space. Gravity is so large near a black hole that it is governed by the laws of quantum mechanics. Yet no one has yet been able to write down a theory that consistently accommodates both general relativity (that is, gravity) and quantum mechanics. Star Trek writers correctly recognized this tension between quantum mechanics and gravity, as they usually refer to all spacetime singularities as “quantum singularities.” One thing is certain, however: by the time the gravitational field at the center of a black hole reaches a strength large enough for our present picture of physics to break down, any ordinary physical object will be torn apart beyond recognition. Nothing could survive intact.

You may notice that I referred to a black hole as “hiding” a singularity at its center. The reason is that at the outskirts of a black hole is a mathematically defined surface we call the “event horizon,” which shields our view of what happens to objects that fall into the hole. Inside the event horizon, everything must eventually hit the ominous singularity. Outside the event horizon, objects can escape. While an observer unlucky enough to fall into a black hole will notice nothing special at all as he or she (soon to be “it”) crosses the event horizon, an observer watching the process from far away sees something very different. Time slows down for the observer freely falling in the vicinity of the event horizon, relative to an observer located far away. As a result, the falling observer appears from the outside to slow down as he or she nears the event horizon. The closer the falling observer gets to the event horizon, the slower is his or her clock relative to the outside observer’s. While it may take the falling observer a few moments (local time) to cross the event horizon – where, I repeat, nothing special happens and nothing special sits – it will take an eternity as observed by someone on the outside. The infalling object appears to become frozen in time.

Moreover, the light emitted by any infalling object gets harder and harder to see from the outside. As an object approaches the event horizon, the object gets dimmer and dimmer (because the observable radiation from it gets shifted to frequencies below the visible). Finally, even if you could see, from the outside, the object’s transit of the event horizon (which you cannot, in any finite amount of time), the object would disappear completely once it passed the horizon, because any light it emitted would be trapped inside, along with the object. Whatever falls inside the event horizon is lost forever to the outside world. It appears that this lack of communication is a one-way street: an observer on the outside can send signals into the black hole, but no signal can ever be returned.

This brings us to Steven Hawking’s remarkable result about black holes. Under normal circumstances, when a quantum fluctuation creates a virtual particle pair, the pair will annihilate and disappear back into the vacuum in a time short enough so that the violation of conservation of energy (incurred by the pair’s creation from nothing) is not observable (this is Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, discussed in class). However, when a virtual particle pair pops out in the curved space near a black hole, one of the particles may fall into the hole, and then the other can escape and be observed. This is because the particle that falls into the black hole can in principle lose more energy in the process than the amount required to create it from nothing. It thus contributes “negative energy” to the black hole, and the black hole’s own energy is therefore decreased. This satisfies the energy-conservation law’s balance-sheet, making up for the energy that the escaping particle is observed to have. This is how the black hole emits radiation. Moreover, as the black hole’s own energy decreases bit by bit in this process, there is a concomitant decrease in its mass. Eventually, it may completely evaporate, leaving behind only the radiation it produced in its lifetime.

Wormhole Time Machines

 

If wormholes exist, they can and will be time machines! This startling realization has grown over the last decade, as various theorists, for lack of anything more interesting to do, began to investigate the physics of wormholes a little more seriously. Wormhole time machines are easy to design: perhaps the simplest example (due again to the physicist Kip Thorne) is to imagine a wormhole with one end fixed and the other end moving at a fast but sublight speed through a remote region of the galaxy. In principle, this is possible even if the length of the wormhole remains unchanged. In the earlier two-dimensional wormhole drawing, just drag the bottom half of the sheet to the left, letting space “slide” past the bottom mouth of the wormhole while this mouth stays fixed relative to the wormhole’s other mouth:

 

Because the bottom mouth of the wormhole will be moving with respect to the space in which it is situated, while the top mouth will not, special relativity tells us that clocks will tick at different rates at each mouth. On the other hand, if the length of the wormhole remains fixed, then as long as one is inside the wormhole the two ends appear to be at rest relative to each other. In this frame, clocks at either end should be ticking at the same rate. Now slide the bottom sheet back to where it used to be, so that the bottom mouth of the wormhole ends up back where it started relative to the background space. Let’s say that this process takes a day, as observed by someone near the bottom mouth. But for an observer near the top mouth, this same process could appear to take ten days. If this second observer were to peer through the top mouth to look at the observer located near the bottom mouth, he would see on the wall calendar next to the observer a date nine days earlier! If he now decides to go though the wormhole for a visit, he will travel back in time.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Warp Speed, Deflector Shields and Cloaking

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Is warp speed, i.e. speed faster than that of light, possible? The answer is a resounding “Maybe”!

The curvature in spacetime produces a loophole in special relativistic arguments – a loophole large enough to drive a Federation starship through. If spacetime itself can be manipulated, objects can travel locally at very slow velocities, yet an accompanying expansion or contraction of space could allow huge distances to be traversed in short time intervals. We have already seen how an extreme manipulation – namely, cutting and pasting distant parts of the universe together with a wormhole – might create shortcuts through spacetime. What is argued here is that even if we do not resort to this surgery, faster-than-light travel might globally be possible, even if it is not locally possible.

A proof in principle of this idea was recently developed by a physicist in Wales, Miguel Alcubierre, who for fun decided to explore whether a consistent solution in general relativity could be derived which would correspond to “warp travel.” He was able to demonstrate that it was possible to tailor a spacetime configuration wherein a spacecraft could travel between two points in an arbitrarily short time. Moreover, throughout the journey the spacecraft could be moving with respect to its local surroundings at speeds much less than the speed of light, so that clocks aboard the spacecraft would remain synchronized with those at its place of origin and at its destination. General relativity appears to allow us to have our cake and eat it too. The idea is straightforward. If spacetime can locally be warped so that it expands behind a starship and contracts in front of it, then the craft will be propelled along with the space it is in, like a surfboard on a wave. The craft will never travel locally faster than the speed of light, because the light, too, will be carried along with the expanding wave of space.

One way to picture what is happening is to imagine yourself on the starship. If space suddenly expands behind you by a huge amount, you will find that the starbase you just left a few minutes ago is now many light-years away. Similarly, if space contracts in front of you, you will find that the starbase you are heading for, which formerly was a few light-years away, is now close to you, within reach by normal rocket propulsion in a matter of minutes.

It is also possible to arrange the geometry of spacetlme in this solution so that the huge gravitational fields necessary to expand and contract space in this way are never large near the ship or any of the starbases. In the vicinity of the ship and the bases, space can be almost flat, and therefore clocks on the ship and the starbases remain synchronized. Somewhere in between the ship and the bases, the tidal forces due to gravity will be immense, but that’s OK as long as we aren’t located there.

This scenario must be what the Star Trek writers intended when they invented warp drive, even if it bears little resemblance to the technical descriptions they have provided. It fulfills all the requirements we listed earlier for successful controlled intergalactic space travel: (1) faster-than-light travel, (2) no time dilation, and (3) no resort to rocket propulsion. Of course, we have begged a pretty big question thus far. By making spacetime itself dynamical, general relativity allows the creation of “designer spacetimes,” in which almost any type of motion in space and time is possible. However, the cost is that the theory relates these spacetimes to some underlying distribution of matter and energy. Thus, for the desired spacetime to be “physical,” the underlying distribution of matter and energy must be attainable.

First, however, the wonder of such “designer spacetimes” is that they allow us to return to Newton’s original challenge and to create inertial dampers and tractor beams. The idea is identical to warp drive. If spacetime around the ship can be warped, then objects can move apart or together without experiencing any sense of local acceleration, which you will recall was Newton’s bane. To avoid the incredible accelerations required to get to impulse sublight speeds, one must resort to the same spacetime shenanigans as one does to travel at warp speeds. The distinction between impulse drive and warp drive is thus diminished. Similarly, to use a tractor beam to pull a heavy object like a planet, one merely has to expand space on the other side of the planet and contract it on the near side. Simple!

Warping space has other advantages as well. Clearly, if spacetime becomes strongly curved in front of the Enterprise, then any light ray – or phaser beam, for that matter – will be deflected away from the ship. This is doubtless the principle behind deflector shields. Indeed, we are told that the deflector shields operate by “coherent graviton emission.” Since gravitons are by definition particles that transmit the force of gravity, then “coherent graviton emission” is nothing other than the creation of a coherent gravitational field. A coherent gravitational field is, in modern parlance, precisely what curves space! So once again the Star Trek writers have at least settled upon the right language.

I would imagine that the Romulans’ cloaking device might operate in a similar manner. In fact, an Enterprise that has its deflector shield deployed should be very close to a cloaked Enterprise. After all, the reason we see something that doesn’t shine of its own accord is that it reflects light, which travels back to us. Cloaking must somehow warp space so that incident light rays bend around a Warbird instead of being reflected from it. The distinction between this and deflecting light rays away from the Enterprise is thus pretty subtle.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Beam me up Scotty!”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To avoid the costly special effects of landing the Enterprise on various new worlds each week, the “transporter” was invented by the writers of Star Trek. This is one of the best recognized features of Star Trek. The phrase “Beam me up Scotty!” has been ingrained into our culture, in the sense that it is even known by persons who have never watched a single episode of Star Trek.

Transporting an inanimate object, like a book for example, is one thing. The book’s information can be digitized into bits and sent to the recipient, who can “read” the book on his/her computer. Thus, it is not necessary to physically send the book.

But what about people? If you are going to move people around, do you have to move their atoms or just their information? At first you might think that moving the information is a lot easier; for one thing, information can travel at the speed of light. However, in the case of people, you have two problems you don’t have with books: first, you have to extract the information, which is not so easy, and then you have to recombine it with matter. After all, people, unlike books, require the atoms.

The Star Trek writers seem never to have got it exactly clear what they want the transporter to do. Does the transporter send the atoms and the bits, or just the bits? You might wonder why I make this point, since the Next Generation Technical Manual describes the process in detail: First the transporter locks on target. Then it scans the image to be transported, “dematerializes” it, holds it in a “pattern buffer” for a while, and then transmits the “matter stream,” in an “annular confinement beam,” to its destination. The transporter thus apparently sends out the matter along with the information.

WHEN A BODY HAS NO BODY: Perhaps the most fascinating question about beaming – one that is usually not even addressed – is, What comprises a human being? Are we merely the sum of all our atoms? More precisely, if I were to re-create each atom in your body, in precisely the same chemical state of excitation as your atoms are in at this moment, would I produce a functionally identical person who has exactly all your memories, hopes, dreams, spirit? There is every reason to expect that this would be the case, but it is worth noting that it flies in the face of a great deal of spiritual belief about the existence of a “soul” that is somehow distinct from one’s body. What happens when you die, after all? Don’t many religions hold that the “soul” can exist after death? What then happens to the soul during the transport process? In this sense, the transporter would be a wonderful experiment in spirituality. If a person were beamed aboard the Enterprise and remained intact and observably unchanged, it would provide dramatic evidence that a human being is no more than the sum of his or her parts, and the demonstration would directly confront a wealth of spiritual beliefs.

OK, KEEP THE ATOMS: The preceding arguments suggest that on both practical and ethical grounds it might be better to imagine a transporter that carries a matter stream along with the signal, just as we are told the Star Trek transporters do. The problem then becomes, How do you move the atoms? Again, the challenge turns out to be energetics, although in a somewhat more subtle way.

What would be required to “dematerialize” something in the transporter? To answer this, we have to consider a little more carefully a simpler question: What is matter? All normal matter is made up of atoms, which are in turn made up of very dense central nuclei surrounded by a cloud of electrons. As you may recall from high school chemistry or physics, most of the volume of an atom is empty space. The region occupied by the outer electrons is about ten thousand times larger than the region occupied by the nucleus.

Why, if atoms are mostly empty space, doesn’t matter pass through other matter? The answer to this is that what makes a wall solid is not the existence of the particles but of the electric fields between the particles. My hand is stopped from going through my desk when I slam it down primarily because of the electric repulsion felt by the electrons in the atoms in my hand due to the presence of the electrons in the atoms of the desk and not because of the lack of available space for the electrons to move through. As we discussed in class, humans are “electrical creatures.”

And what computing power would I need to process all the information of the 10^28 (ten to the power twenty eight) atoms that a human is composed of? Even though computers are now remarkably fast, they are still not fast enough. Maybe the next generation of computers, namely biocomputers, will be able to solve this dilemma. Or maybe, we will eventually be able to construct an android like Lt. Commander Data, in all his intellectual and physical might!

 

Let’s make a simple estimate of how much information is encoded in a human body. Start with our standard estimate of 10^28 atoms. For each atom, we first must encode its location, which requires three coordinates (the x, y, and z positions). Next, we would have to record the internal state of each atom, which would include things like which energy levels are occupied by its electrons, whether it is bound to a nearby atom to make up a molecule, whether the molecule is vibrating or rotating, and so forth. Let’s be conservative and assume that we can encode all the relevant information in a kilobyte of data. (This is roughly the amount of information on a double-spaced typewritten page.) That means we would need roughly 10^28 kilobytes to store a human pattern in the pattern buffer. I remind you that this is a 1 followed by 28 zeros.

Compare this with, say, the total information stored in all the books ever written. The largest libraries contain several million volumes, so let’s be very generous and say that there are a billion different books in existence (one written for every five people now alive on the planet). Say each book contains the equivalent of a thousand typewritten pages of information (again on the generous side) – or about a megabyte. Then all the information in all the books ever written would require about 10^12, or about a million million, kilobytes of storage. This is about sixteen orders of magnitude – or about one tenmillionth of a billionth – smaller than the storage capacity needed to record a single human pattern! When numbers get this large, it is difficult to comprehend the enormity of the task. Perhaps a comparison is in order. The storage requirements for a human pattern are ten thousand times as large, compared to the information in all the books ever written, as the information in all the books ever written is compared to the information on this page.

Storing this much information is, in an understatement physicists love to use, nontrivial. At present, the largest commercially available single hard disks store about 10 gigabytes, or 10,000 thousand megabytes, of information. If each disk is about 10 cm thick, then if we stacked all the disks currently needed to store a human pattern on top of one another, they would reach a third of the way to the center of the galaxy-about 10,000 light-years, or about 5 years’ travel in the Enterprise at warp 9!

Retrieving this information in real time is no less of a challenge. The fastest digital information transfer mechanisms at present can move somewhat less than about 100 megabytes per second. At this rate, it would take about 2000 times the present age of the universe (assuming an approximate age of 10 billion years) to write the data describing a human pattern to tape! Imagine then the dramatic tension: Kirk and McCoy have escaped to the surface of the penal colony at Rura Penthe. You don’t have even the age of the universe to beam them back, but rather just seconds to transfer a million billion billion megabytes of information in the time it takes the jailor to aim his weapon before firing.

There are mainy other problems with transporters as well. In other words, transporters are a tough cookie!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Antimatter

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We discussed this in class as well. Every particle has an antiparticle, which has opposite charge. In the case of neutral particles, they are their own antiparticle.

Antiparticles are produced by cosmic rays at the top of the atmosphere, but also by particle accelerators. In the later, magnetic fields are employed to contain the antiparticles, usually, in circles of prescribed sizes. In this way, for example, they can travel around inside a doughnut-shaped container without ever touching the walls. This principle is also used in so-called Tokomak devices (see p. 624-627 in our text) to contain the high-temperature plasmas in studies of controlled nuclear fusion.

Besides containment, another problem faces us immediately if we want to use a matter-antimatter drive: where to get the antimatter. As far as we can tell, the universe is made mostly of matter, not antimatter. We can confirm that this is the case by examining the content of high-energy cosmic rays, many of which originate well outside our own galaxy. Some antiparticles should be created during the collisions of high-energy cosmic rays with matter, and if one explores the cosmic-ray signatures over wide energy ranges, the antimatter signal is completely consistent with this phenomenon alone; there is no evidence of a primordial antimatter component.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dilithium Crystals

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The famous dilithium crystals are a crucial component of the matter-antimatter drive of the Enterprise. It would be unthinkable not to mention them, since they are a centerpiece of the warp drive and as such figure prominently in the economics of the Federation and in various plot developments. (For example, without the economic importance of dilithlum, the Enterprise would never have been sent to the Halkan system to secure its mining rights, and we would never have been treated to the “mirror universe,” in which the Federation is an evil empire!)

What do these remarkable figments of the Star Trek writers’ imaginations do? These crystals (known also by their longer formula- 2(5)6 dilithlum 2(:)l diallosilicate 1:9:1 heptoferranide) can regulate the matter-antimatter annihilation rate, because they are claimed to be the only form of matter known which is “porous” to antimatter. This can be liberally interpreted this as follows: Crystals are atoms regularly arrayed in a lattice; I assume therefore that the antihydrogen atoms are threaded through the lattices of the dilithium crystals and therefore remain a fixed distance both from atoms of normal matter and one another. In this way, dilithlum could regulate the antimatter density, and thus the matter-antimatter reaction rate.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Holodecks and Holograms

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Given the rather cerebral pastimes the crew generally engage in on the holodeck, one may imagine that the hormonal instincts driving twentieth-century humanity have evolved somewhat by the twenty-third century (although if this is the case, Will Riker is not representative of his peers). Based on what is known of the world of today, we would have expected that sex would almost completely drive the holodeck. (Indeed, the holodeck would give safe sex a whole new meaning.) The holodeck represents what is so enticing about fantasy, particularly sexual fantasy: actions without consequences, pleasure without pain, and situations that can be repeated and refined at will.

However, holograms aren’t all there is to the holodeck. As we know, they have no corporeal integrity. You can walk through one-or shoot through one. This incorporeality simply will not do for the objects one would like to interact with – that is, touch on the holodeck. Here techniques that are more esoteric are required, and the Star Trek writers have turned to the transporter, or at least to the replicators, which are less sophisticated versions of the transporter. Presumably, using transporter technology, matter is replicated and moved around on the holodeck to resemble exactly the beings in question, in careful coordination with computer programs that control the voices and movements of the re-created beings. Similarly, the replicators reproduce the inanimate objects in the scene – tables, chairs, and so forth. This “holodeck matter” owes its form to the pattern held in the replicator buffer. When the transporter is turned off or the object is removed from the holodeck, the matter can then disassemble as easily as it would if the pattern buffer were turned off during the beaming process. Thus, creatures created from holodeck matter can be trapped on the holodeck.

So here is how I envisage the holodeck: holograms would be effective around the walls, to give one the impression of being in a three-dimensional environment that extended to the horizon, and the transporter-based replicators would then create the moving “solid” objects within the scene. Since holography is realistic, while transporters are not, one would have to find some other way of molding and moving matter around in order to make a workable holodeck. Still, one out of two technologies in hand isn’t bad.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Other Intelligent Life in the Universe?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 "It's difficult to work in a group when
 you are omnipotent."
    -Q, upon joining the crew of the
              Enterprise, in "Deja Q"

Restless aggression, territorial conquest, and genocidal “annihilation … whenever possible…. The colony is integrated as though it were in fact one organism ruled by a genome that constrains behavior as it also enables it…. The physical superorganism acts to adjust the demographic mix so as to optimize its energy economy… The austere rules allow of no play, no art, no empathy.”

The Borg are among the most frightening, and intriguing, species of alien creature ever portrayed on the television screen. What makes them so fascinating, from my point of view, is that some organism like them seems plausible on the basis of natural selection. Indeed, although the paragraph quoted above provides an apt description of the Borg, it is not taken from a Star Trek episode. Rather it appears in a review of Bert Holldobler and Edward O. Wilson’s Journey to the Ants, and it is a description not of the Borg but of our own terrestrial insect friends. Ants have been remarkably successful on an evolutionary scale, and it is not hard to see why. Is it impossible to imagine a cognizant society developing into a similar communal superorganism? Would intellectual refinements such as empathy be necessary to such a society? Or would they be a hindrance?

Indeed, the “continuing mission” of the starship Enterprise is not to further explore the laws of physics but “to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations.” What makes Star Trek so fascinating – and so long-lived, I suspect – is that this allows the human drama to be extended far beyond the human realm. We get to imagine how alien species might develop to deal with the same problems and issues that confront humanity. We are exposed to new imaginary cultures, new threats. It provides some of the same fascination as visiting a foreign country for the first time does, or as one sometimes gets from reading history and discovering both what is completely different and what is exactly the same about the behavior of people living centuries apart.

So, does other life, intelligent or not, exist out there? The important fact to recognize is that life did form in the galaxy at least once. I cannot overemphasize how important this is. Based on all our experience in science, nature rarely produces a phenomenon just once. We are a test case. The fact that we exist proves that the formation of life is possible. Once we know that life can originate here in the galaxy, the likelihood of it occurring elsewhere is vastly increased. (Of course, as some evolutionary biologists have argued, it need not develop an intelligence.)

Such a question can be computed numerically, by assigning probabilities to various requirements: the universe is certainly very large and old enough for the task at hand, with billion billion billion stars in it. If we try to estimate how many of these are like our sun, then how many have planets around them that are not too close, not too far, not too cold, not too hot, and with an atmosphere, the number we are left with is still very large! So the chances of life elsewhere, are pretty good.

What are some of the more important details? Well, an atmosphere containing oxygen certainly helps. Only when there is sufficient oxygen in the atmosphere can ozone form. Ozone, as we are becoming more and more aware, is essential to life on Earth because it screens out ultraviolet radiation, which is harmful to most life-forms. It is therefore not surprising that the rapid explosion of life on Earth began only after oxygen was abundant.

Recent measurements indicate that oxygen began building up in the atmosphere about 2 billion years ago, and reached current levels within 600 million years after that. While oxygen had been produced earlier, by photosynthesis in the blue-green algae of the primordial oceans, it could not at first build up in the atmosphere. Oxygen reacts with so many substances, such as iron, that whatever was photosynthetically produced combined with other elements before it could reach the atmosphere. Eventually, enough materials in the ocean were oxidized so that free oxygen could accumulate in the atmosphere. (This process never took place on Venus because the temperature was too high there for oceans to form, and thus the life-forming and life-saving blue-green algae never arose there.)

So, after conditions were really ripe for complex life-forms, it took about a billion years for them to evolve. Of course, it is not clear at all that this is a characteristic timescale. Accidents such as evolutionary wrong turns, climate changes, and cataclysmic events that caused extinctions affected both the biological timescale and the end results.

Nevertheless, these results indicate that intelligent life can evolve in a rather short interval on the cosmic timescale – a billion years or so. The extent of this timeframe has to do with purely physical factors, such as heat production and chemical reaction rates. Our terrestrial experience suggests that even if we limit our expectations of intelligent life to the organic and aerobic – surely a very conservative assumption, and one that the Star Trek writers were willing to abandon (the silicon-based Horta is one of my favorites) – planets surrounding several-billion-year-old stars of about 1 solar mass are good candidates. And, as we saw in class, the Hubble Space Telescope has identified Proplyds (Proto-Planetary Discs) in the Orion Nebula, that show how planets are created from discs fulll of interstellar debris, surrounding a star. All the basic ingredients are out there!

There are many popular SciFi TV drama series, many of which involve extraterrestrials. TV’s X-Files is perhaps the best known series, and huge numbers flocked to the movie theaters to seeIndependence Day and Starship Troopers. Both these shows presented extraterrestrials, the usual “greys” in X-files (large black eyes, large cranium), while the ones in ID-4 looked similar, but were encased in a powerful biomechanical suit. These aliens, are conveniently hidden by the US Government in a secret location in Nevada, called Area 51. Is this scenario plausible? (Well,…)

 

In the first place, we have clearly seen how daunting interstellar space travel would be. Energy expenditures beyond our current wildest dreams would be needed – warp drive or no warp drive. Recall that to power a rocket by propulsion using matter-antimatter engines at something like 3/4 the speed of light for a 10-year round-trip voyage to just the nearest star would require an energy release that could fulfill the entire current power needs in the United States for more than 100,000 years! This is dwarfed by the power that would be required to actually warp space. Moreover, to have a fair chance of finding life, one would probably want to be able to sample at least several thousand stars. I’m afraid that even at the speed of light this couldn’t be done anytime in the next millennium.

That’s the bad news. The good news, I suppose, is that by the same token we probably don’t have to worry too much about being abducted by aliens. They, too, have probably figured out the energy budget and will have discovered that it is easier to learn about us from afar.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Star Trek Physics?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 "That is the exploration that awaits you!  Not mapping
 stars and studying nebula, but charting the unknown
 possibilities of existence."
              -Q to Picard, in "All Good Things  ......

In the course of more than 13 TV-years of the various Star Trek I series, the writers have had the opportunity to tap into some of the most exciting ideas from all fields of physics. Sometimes they get it right; sometimes they blow it. Sometimes they just use the words that physicists use, and sometimes they incorporate the ideas associated with them. The topics they have dealt with read like a review of modern physics: special relativity, general relativity, cosmology, particle physics, time travel, space warping, and quantum fluctuations, to name just a few.

Let’s have a look at a few more interesting ideas from modern physics which the Star Trek writers have borrowed.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Neutron Stars

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

These are leftovers from the collapsed core of a star that has undergone a supernova. They have as much mass as our sun, but are compressed to the size of Manhattan!

 

The Enterprise has several times encountered material expelled from a neutron star – a material that the writers have dubbed “neutronium.” Since neutron stars are composed almost entirely of neutrons held so tightly together that the star is basically one huge atomic nucleus, the name is a good one. The Doomsday machine in the episode of the same name was apparently made of pure neutronium, which is why it was impervious to Federation weapons. However, in order for this material to be stable it has to be under the incredibly high pressure created by the gravitational attraction of a stellar mass of material only 15 kilometers in radius. In the real world, such material exists only as part of a neutron star.

There are no doubt millions of neutron stars in the galaxy. Most of these are born with incredibly large magnetic fields inside them. If they are spinning rapidly, they make wonderful radio beacons. Radiation is emitted from each of their poles, and if the magnetic field is tilted with respect to the spin axis, a rotating beacon is created. On Earth, we detect these periodic bursts of radio waves, and call their sources pulsars. Rotating out in space, they make the best clocks in the universe. The pulsar signals can keep time to better than one microsecond per year. Moreover, some pulsars produce more than 1000 pulses per second. This means that an object that is essentially a huge atomic nucleus with the mass of the Sun and 10 to 20 kilometers across is rotating over 1000 times each second. Think about that. The rotation speed at the neutron star surface is therefore almost half the speed of light. Pulsars are one illustration of the fact that nature produces objects more remarkable than any Star Trek writer is likely to invent.

 

 

 

From another dimension

 

 

 

Physicists, science fiction writers and even psychiatric patients (no jokes for listing all these groups together) have all discussed additional dimensions to the four-dimensional spacetime that we reside in. In the calculation of the theoretical physicists Kaluza and Klein, the only waves that can be sent into the fifth dimension have much more energy than we can produce even in high-energy accelerators, then we cannot experience this extra dimension. The fifth dimension is thus “curled up” in a tight circle, due to gravity effects.

In spite of its intrinsic interest, the Kaluza-Klein theory cannot be a complete theory. First, it does not explain why the fifth dimension would be curled up into a tiny circle. Second, we now know of the existence of two other fundamental forces in nature beyond electro-magnetism and gravity – the strong nuclear force and the weak nuclear force. Why stop at a fifth dimension? Why not include enough extra dimensions to accommodate all the fundamental forces?

In fact, modern particle physics has raised just such a possibility. The modern effort, centered around what is called superstring theory, focused initially on extending the general theory of relativity so that a consistent theory of quantum gravity could be constructed. In the end, however, the goal of a unified theory of all interactions has resurfaced.

The challenges faced in developing a theory wherein general relativity is made consistent with quantum mechanics are enormous. The key difficulty in this effort is trying to understand how quantum fluctuations in spacetime can be handled. In elementary particle theory, quantum excitations in fields – the electric field, for example – are manifested as elementary particles, or quanta. If one tries to understand quantum excitations in the gravitational field – which, in general relativity, correspond to quantum excitations of spacetime – the mathematics leads to nonsensical predictions.

The advance of string theory was to suppose that at microscopic levels, typical of the very small scales (that is, 10^-33 cm) where quantum gravitational effects might be important, what we think of as pointlike elementary particles actually could be resolved as vibrating strings. The mass of each particle would correspond in some sense to the energy of vibration of these strings.

The reason for making this otherwise rather outlandish proposal is that it was discovered as early as the 1970s that such a theory requires the existence of particles having the properties that quantum excitations in spacetime – known as gravitons – should have. General relativity is thus in some sense imbedded in the theory in a way that may be consistent with quantum mechanics.

However, a quantum theory of strings cannot be made mathematically consistent in 4 dimensions, or 5, or even 6. It turns out that such theories can exist consistently only in 10 dimensions, or perhaps only 26! Indeed, Lieutenant Reginald Barclay, while he momentarily possessed an IQ of 1200 after having been zapped by a Cytherian probe, had quite a debate with Albert Einstein on the holodeck about which of these two possibilities was more palatable in order to incorporate quantum mechanics in general relativity.

This plethora of dimensions may seem an embarrassment, but it was quickly recognized that like many embarrassments it also presented an opportunity. Perhaps all the fundamental forces in nature could be incorporated in a theory of 10 or more dimensions, in which all the dimensions but the four we know curl up with diameters on the order of the Planck scale (10-33 cm) – as Lieutenant Barclay surmised they must – and are thus unmeasurable today.

Alas, this great hope has remained no more than that. We have, at the present time, absolutely no idea whether the tentative proposals of string theory can produce a unified Theory of Everything. Also, just as with the Kaluza-Klein theory, no one has any clear notion of why the other dimensions, if they exist, would curl up, leaving four-dimensional spacetime on large scales.

 

 

 

Schrodinger’s Cat

 

 

 

A characteristic property of subatomic particles is their “spin”, which is a quantum number. This spin can either be “up” or “down”. Once you make a measurement of the spin, the quantum mechanical wavefunction of the particle (which describes it’s condition completely) it will from then on include only the component you measured the particle to have; if you measured spin up, you will go on measuring this same value for this particle.

This picture presents problems. How, you may ask, can the particle have had both spin up and spin down before the measurement? The correct answer is that it had neither. The configuration of its spin was indeterminate before the measurement. (Isn’t Quantum Mechanics wonderful?)

The fact that the quantum mechanical wavefunction that describes objects does not correspond to unique values for observables is especially disturbing when one begins to think of living objects. There is a famous paradox called “Schrodinger’s cat.” (Erwin Schrodinger was one of the young Turks in their twenties who, early in this century, helped uncover the laws of quantum mechanics. The equation describing the time evolution of the quantum mechanical wavefunction is known as Schrodinger’s equation.) Imagine a box, inside of which is a cat. Inside the box, aimed at the cat, is a gun, which is hooked up to a radioactive source. The radioactive source has a certain quantum mechanical probability of decaying at any given time. When the source decays, the gun will fire and kill the cat. Is the wavefunction describing the cat, before I open the box, a linear superposition of a live cat and a dead cat? This seems absurd.

Similarly, our consciousness is always unique, never indeterminate. Is the act of consciousness a measurement? If so, then it could be said that at any instant there is a nonzero quantum mechanical probability for a number of different outcomes to occur, and our act of consciousness determines which outcome we experience. Reality then has an infinite number of branches. At every instant our consciousness determines which branch we inhabit, but an infinite number of other possibilities exist a priori.

However, we cannot jump from one possibility to another, as some Star Trek episodes have suggested with parallel worlds. Once we make a measurement (i.e. experience a particular world) we fix reality. Quantum mechanics demands this. So, fortunately or unfortunately, you will never get to meet that evil twin of yours, who resides in a parallel universe.

 

 

 

Star Trek Blunders

 

 

 

Star Trek physics must be taken with a grain of salt. While finding obscure technical flaws with each episode is a universal trekker pastime, it is not the subtle errors that physicists and physics students seem to relish catching. It is the really big ones that are most talked about over lunch and at coffee breaks during professional meetings. (Nerdy, huh?)

To be fair, sometimes a sweet piece of physics in the series – even a minor moment – can trigger a morning-after discussion at coffee time. Indeed, I remember vividly the day when a former graduate student of mine at Yale – Martin White, who is now at the University of Chicago – came into my office fresh from seeing Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. I had thought we were going to talk about gravitational waves from the very early universe. But instead Martin started raving about one particular scene from the movie-a scene that lasted all of about 15 seconds. Two helmeted assassins board Chancellor Gorkon’s vessel – which has been disabled by photon torpedoes fired from the Enterprise and is thus in zero gravity conditions – and shoot everyone in sight, including Gorkon. What impressed Martin and, to my surprise, a number of other physics students and faculty I discussed the movie with, was that the drops of blood flying about the ship were spherical. On Earth, all drops of liquid are tear-shaped, because of the relentless pull of gravity. In a region devoid of gravity, like Gorkon’s ship, even tears would be spherical. Physicists know this but seldom have the opportunity to see it. So by getting this simple fact perfectly right, the Star Trek special effects people made a lot of physics types happy. It doesn’t take that much….

But let’s have a look at a few prominent physics blunders by the Star Trek writers. This is not meant as an excersise to make fun of the writers; however, this is a physics course, and it’s good practice to think in correct physics terms. Afterall, completely correct physics often makes for poor Hollywood drama.

 

 

 

“In Space, No One Can Hear You Scream”

 

 

 

The promo for the movie Alien got it right, but Star Trek usually doesn’t. Sound waves DO NOT travel in empty space! [A flunking grade will be given to anyone who forgets this in the final exam!] Indeed, in many Star Trek episodes, sure enough, kaboom! Example from the most recent Star Trek movie, Generations. There, even a bottle of champagne makes noise when it explodes in space.

In fact, a physics colleague, Mark Srednicki of U.C. Santa Barbara, brought to my attention a much greater gaffe in one episode, in which sound waves are used as a weapon against an orbiting ship. As if that weren’t bad enough, the sound waves are said to reach “18 to the 12th power decibels.” What makes this particularly grate on the ear of a physicist is that the decibel scale Is a logarithmic scale, like the Richter scale for seismic events. This means that the number of decibels already represents a power of 10, and they are normalized so that 20 decibels is 10 times louder than 10 decibels, and 30 decibels is 10 times louder again. Thus, 18 to the 12th power decibels would be (10^18)^12, or 1 followed by 11,568,313,814,300 zeroes times louder than a jet plane!

 

 

 

Faster than a Speeding Phaser

 

 

 

While faster-than-light warp travel is something we must live with in Star Trek, such a possibility relies on all the subtleties of general relativity and exotic new forms of matter, as I have described. But for normal objects doing everyday kinds of things, light speed is and always will be the ultimate barrier. Sometimes this simple fact is forgotten. In a wild episode called “Wink of an Eye,” Kirk is tricked by the Scalosians into drinking a potion that speeds up his actions by a huge factor to the Scalosian level, so that he can become a mate for their queen, Deela. The Scalosians live a hyperaccelerated existence and cannot be sensed by the Enterprise’s crew. Before bedding the queen, Kirk first tries to shoot her with his phaser. However, since she can move in the wink of an eye by normal human standards, she moves out of the way before the beam can hit her. Now what is wrong with this picture? The answer is, Everything! For this to be true within the framework of special relativity, she has to be moving so fast, that her clock will be slowed down by a factor of 300 million, and thus for her it takes 10 years for what takes a fraction of a second in Enterprise time!

OK, let’s forgive the Star Trek writers this lapse. Nevertheless, there is a much bigger problem, which is impossible to solve and which several physicists I know have leapt upon. Phasers are, we are told, directed energy weapons, so that the phaser beam travels at the speed of light. Sorry, but there is no way out of this. If phasers are pure energy and not particle beams, as the Star Trek technical manual states, the beams must move at the speed of light. No matter how fast one moves, even 1 if one is sped up by a factor of 300 million, one can never move out of the way of an oncoming phaser beam. Why? Because in order to know it is coming, you have to first see the gun being fired. But the light that allows you to see this travels at the same speed as the beam. Put simply, it is impossible to know it is going to hit you until it hits you! As long as phaser beams are energy beams, there is no escape.

 

 

 

Crack in a Black Hole?

 

 

 

In an episode of Voyager, the ship becomes trapped in a black hole, and escapes through a crack in its event horizon. This saves the day for the Voyager but sounds particularly ludicrous to physicists. A “crack” in an event horizon is like removing one end of a circle, or like being a little bit pregnant. It doesn’t mean anything. The event horizon around a black hole is not a physical entity, but rather a location inside of which all trajectories remain inside the hole. It is a property of curved space that the trajectory of anything, including light, will bend back toward the hole once you are inside a certain radius. Either the event horizon exists, in which case a black hole exists, or it doesn’t. There is no middle ground big enough to slip a needle through, much less theVoyager.

 

 

 

How Solid a Guy is the Doctor?

 

 

 

I must admit that the technological twist I like the most in the Voyager series is the holographic doctor. There is a wonderful scene in which a patient asks the doctor how he can be solid if he is only a hologram. This is a good question. The doctor answers by turning off a “magnetic confinement beam” to show that without it he is as noncorporeal as a mirage. He then orders the beam turned back on, so that he can slap the poor patient around. It’s a great moment, but unfortunately it’s also an impossible one. As we know from class magnetic confinement works wonders for charged particles, which experience a force in a constant magnetic field that causes them to move in circular orbits. However, light is not charged. It experiences no force in a magnetic field. Since a hologram is no more than a light image, neither is the doctor.

 

 

 

Sweeping out the Baby with the Bathwater

 

 

 

In the Next Generation episode “Starship Mine,” the Enterprise docks at the Remmler Array to have a “baryon sweep.” It seems that these particles build up on starship superstructures as a result of long-term travel at warp speed, and must be removed. During the sweep, the crew must evacuate, because the removal beam is lethal to living tissue. Well, it certainly would be! The only stable baryons are (1) protons and (2) neutrons in atomic nuclei. Since these particles make up everything we see, ridding the Enterprise of them wouldn’t leave much of it for future episodes.

 

 

 

How Cold is Cold?

 

 

 

Another favorite Star Trek gaffe involves an object’s being frozen to a temperature of -295 Celsius. This is a very exciting discovery, because on the Celsius scale, absolute zero is -273. Absolute zero, as its name implies, is the lowest temperature anything can potentially attain, because it is defined as the temperature at which all molecular and atomic motions, vibrations, and rotations cease. Though it is impossible to achieve this theoretical zero temperature, atomic systems have been cooled to within a millionth of a degree above it (and as of this writing have just been cooled to 2 billionths of a degree above absolute zero). Since temperature is associated with molecular and atomic motion, you can never get less than no motion at all; hence, even 400 years from now, absolute zero will still be absolute.

 

 

 

Closing Remarks by Lawrence M. Krauss

 

 

 

So I will instead close this book where I began – not with the mistakes but with the possibilities. Our culture has been as surely shaped by the miracles of modern physics – and here I include Galileo and Newton among the moderns – as it has by any other human intellectual endeavor. And while it is an unfortunate modern misconception that science is somehow divorced from culture, it is, in fact, a vital part of what makes up our civilization. Our explorations of the universe represent some of the most remarkable discoveries of the human intellect, and it is a pity that they are not shared among as broad an audience as enjoys the inspirations of great literature, or painting, or music.

By emphasizing the potential role of science in the development of the human species, Star Trek whimsically displays the powerful connection between science and culture. While I have argued at times that the science of the twenty-third century may bear very little resemblance to anything the imaginations of the Star Trek writers have come up with, nevertheless I expect that this science may be even more remarkable. In any case I am convinced that the physics of today and tomorrow will as surely determine the character of our future as the physics of Newton and Galileo colors our present existence. I suppose I am a scientist in part because of my faith in the potential of our species to continue to uncover hidden wonders in the universe. And this is after all the spirit animating the Star Trek series. Perhaps Gene Roddenberry should have the last word. As he said on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Star Trek series, one year before his death: “The human race is a remarkable creature, one with great potential, and I hope that Star Trek has helped to show us what we can be if we believe in ourselves and our abilities.”

The U.S. Airforce, Antigravitation And UFO’s

A s we all know, “Area 51” (otherwise called Groom Lake, in Nevada) is the most famous of the ultra-secret military bases of the United States.

Its existence is not officially recognized. The security perimeter around it has recently again been enlarged with a view to discouraging the efforts of curiosity-seekers equipped with binoculars or super-telescopic lenses who might be hoping to see UFOs flying there.

And in fact eyewitnesses have indeed, at night, seen strange luminous and silent craft flying there and executing trajectories that could not be the trajectories of aeroplanes.

We know of several cases of people who have apparently been subjected to brainwashing before they could go out from Groom Lake. In particular we will cite the cases of an RAF pilot who was in Nevada for training, and who inadvertently landed on the Groom Lake Base, and of an electrical engineer (Bob Lazar) who had been engaged to work there temporarily in secret Air Force hangars situated in the same zone.

Lazar, conscious of the absurdity of certain recollections that he had retained from his time there, stated that he had been ordered to work on repairing a UFO that had been recovered, and that as working equipment they had given him an ordinary electronic voltmeter without furnishing him with any sensible explanation, and that he had been able to have, and carry around with him, with impunity, a piece of the heavy transuranian Element 115 (unknown on Earth) serving as a base for the craft’s anti-gravitational (?) engine.

Such sorts of scarcely credible assertions unfortunately managed to fool a few naive ufologists but, above all, they also served to ridicule Ufology in the eyes of sensible people and – more particularly – to discredit the rumours about the repairing of recovered UFOs at Groom Lake or the manufacture there of copies of UFOs, which doubtless was the purpose intended.

VIDEO

It is worth noting that Lazar remembers having had to drink liquids and to submit to sessions of hypnosis when he was working at Groom Lake.

As for the R.A.F. pilot, he was kept at the Base for several days, and when he came out he had amnesia and could no longer even remember his own name!


INFORMATION TRICKLING OUT IN DROPLETS.

 

T hat this Base does exist, nobody can deny, and for good reason. And matters have now reached the stage that, from time to time, in specialized journalistic circles, certain reports on the activities carried on there even appear officially. Firstly, it is recognized that they are developing the hypersonic aircraft of the future there.

They state explicitly that these planes will be at least 15 years ahead of those already existing elsewhere in the world, and that the details of their performance will not be divulged before that same number of years have elapsed.

Nevertheless a few secrets have leaked out about one of these aircraft -AURORA, said to attain Mach 8 in the stratosphere.

The American authorities have recently laid on an ‘Open Day’ – assuredly of course not at Groom Lake itself, but on the Nellis Base, which surrounds it – in order to show to a selected public – certain of these aircraft, grounded, but assuredly not the most futuristic ones!

(One may wonder whether this operation was not just another means of ‘defusing’ the rumours about the presence of UFOs at Groom Lake or at other U.S. bases?)

The aircraft displayed were filmed by a team of reporters from French Television (FRANCE 2).

Seen in profile, the machines shown could vaguely evoke the idea of “flying saucers”, but they weren’t “flying saucers”. It was more a question of “flying wings”.

However fast these machines may be, they still behave – at any rate until proof to the contrary is forthcoming – in accordance with the classic laws of physics, although it has already been suggested (Aviation Week and Space Technology, March 9, 1992) that the B-2 was using an anti-gravitational system when flying at high altitudes.
In any case, these aircraft aren’t copies of UFOs. There is no indication that they can hover silently or zigzag at supersonic speed without producing any shock-wave. Numerous people have seen AURORA flying in the sky over the American South-West. This aircraft seems to be driven by ramjets. It has been said that it “richochets along on the air”, no doubt because it leaves behind it a string of little condensations and emits a pulsed roar.

Assuredly its conception derives from a state-of-the-art technology that is indeed far in advance of what exists elsewhere, but there is no evidence to prove that the AURORA is equipped with an antigravitational system and even less reason still to indicate that it could perform hypothetical spatio-temporal ‘short-cuts’ such as the UFOs seem to know how to do.

Yet, nevertheless, among the reports, true or false, that trickle out into industrial and political circles about secret American research in the realm of flying machines, there are some that speak specifically of the study of flight by antigravitational means. (For a very long time past there have been ufologists who,though having no proof of it, have suggested this type of propulsion for the UFOs, for it could account for certain aspects of their movement).

In his book Les Etrangers de l’Espace* (The Strangers from Space) Donald Keyhoe reported that, at the beginning of the 1960s, a certain
“PROGRAMME G” had been started up in the United States, mobilizing 7 aeronautical firms and 21 American and foreign universities – including the celebrated M.I.T., with a view to the discovery and the exploitation of the principle of Antigravity.

According to Keyhoe, in 1966, it had to be admitted that this research had still not been successful. But that they have not ceased and that they have even made progress is what we learn from an article in the very serious British review, JANE’S DEFENCE WEEKLY, which specializes in questions of defence and armaments around the world. I cannot do better than to quote some passages from this article from the review’s issue of June 10, 1995:

“Technicians who dabble in the interpretation of visions do not always get it right. Take this example from a specialist US aviation magazine in 1956: “We’re already working with equipment to cancel out gravity”, Lawrence D. Bell, founder of the company that bears his name, was quoted as saying. Bell, apparently, was not the only one working in this field. others said to be seeking to master this arcane ‘science’ included the Glenn L. Martin Company, Convair, Lear, and Sperry Gyroscope.
Within a few years, so we were assured, aircraft, cars, submarines, and power stations would all be driven by this radical new propulsion technology. Sadly, it was not to be”.

The rest of the article passes in review of the various accomplishments in the realm of American futuristic aircraft derived from “black projects” (i.e. projects financed from funds free of any parliamentary control). In its conclusion, the article tackles more specifically the question of the very secret activities that are carried on at Groom Lake:-


BEYOND 2001.

 

G room Lake, Nevada, is the epicentre of classified USAF research into Stealth and other exotic aerospace technologies. Several years after the collapse of the Soviet threat, activity and investment at this remote, highly secret air base (so secret that its presence is, as yet, unacknowledged by the U.S. Government) is till on the increase.

While research into less sensitive technologies (such as two-dimensional thrust-vectoring and advanced short take-off and vertical landing, ASTOVL) are pursued in the open at nearby Edwards AFB in California, Groom Lake is set to hang onto its secrets. The USAF’s recent confiscation of 1600 hectares of public land bordering the facility is consistent with the Pentagon’s desire to maintain its lead in quantum leap technologies -some of which, according to well qualified observers in and around the Nevada area, defy current thinking into the predicted direction of aerospace engineering.

That aerospace companies continue to look at highly radical alternative air vehicle concepts is evidence of the ongoing quest for breakthrough designs.

Glimpses into this world are rare, but provide some insight into likely 21st century research activity. The 1990 unclassified “Electric Propulsion Study” ( a quest for an anti-gravity propulsion system by another name ) conducted by the USA’s Science Application International Corp on behalf of USAF’s ( then ) Astronautics Laboratory at Edwards AFB, shows that USAF’s visionaries are still being given free rein.

Until recently, BAe also provided internal resources for its own anti-gravity studies, and even went so far as to outline this thinking with artists’ concepts -a case of Lawrence Bell’s vision not being so wide of the mark after all.

Before he died, Ben Rich, who headed Lockheed’s Skunk Works from 1975 to 1991, was quoted as saying: “We have some new things. We are not stagnating. What we are doing is updating ourselves, without advertising. There are some new programmes, and there are certain things -some of them 20 or 30 years old- that are still breakthroughs and appropriate to keep quiet about. Other people don’t have them yet”.

 

 

Thirty years from now, we may still not know the half of what is currently being tested in and around Groom Lake. -JDW.

As one can see, this text refers very clearly to certain entirely new research that represents “a leap into the unknown”. This research, launched with the help of big American industrial firms ( plus, according to Keyhoe, several universities ), is said to be directed in particular at “antigravitational propulsion” ( baptised as “electrical propulsion” -and we shall soon see why ) and is said to have commenced soon after the end of World War II.

According to the text, this research would have quite rapidly yielded som results which are still kept completely secret, and are unknown to other countries, without our being told clearly whether antigravity properly called has yet been mastered, and whether or not certain of the machines tested at Groom Lake are already utilising this method of propulsion -but there is independent suggestion of this in the descriptions given by eyewitnesses positioned around the Base, and to whom we have referred above.

Obviously there is no mention in the article of the allegation made by ertain American ufologists dubbed as “the Lunatic Fringe”, such as John Lear, according to whom aliens are said to be occupying underground laboratories in the Groom Lake Base, and allegedly are giving the American Military scientific and technical help in exchange for silence about the mutilations of animals and the abduction of humans.

It is all going on as if there is under way a progressive preparation of American and world opinion for the announcement of major advances -and obviously of purely terrestrial origin- in aerospatial science and technology, carried out in the greatest secrecy by the USA (and possibly Great Britain) over the past 30 years or more. Antigravity, it is indicated, would be at the core of this research.


PRESENT DAY PHYSICS KNOWS NOTHING ABOUT ANTI-GRAVITY.

 

U ntil now such revelations have scarcely ever triggered off any waves in the realm of theoretical physics, and shortly you will understand why this is so. On the other hand, there is good reason to think that they might be taken seriously in Intelligence circles, but I fear that the latter do not perceive the extremely grave implications that follow from it.

For matters aren’t as simple as they might appear, and these revelations need to be examined from a critical point of view that, it seems to me, has scarecely been taken into account until now.

The problem which is posed is this: Is it realistic to believe that, via the distribution of countless sums of dollars to feed planned ultra-secret research, the discovery of the theoretical physics of antigravity ( not to speak of its practical application ) could be achieved in any reasonable period, starting out from the fundamental basics of our terrestrial science, without the rest of the scientific community knowing about it, and, above all, without the appearance of any prior signs of a crisis in physics obliging us to modify or enlarge those basics? I insist that the answer is NO. And here is why:-

Far too often people confuse fundamental physics and applied physics ( the latter leading to industrial applications ).
This confusion carries with it the risk of leading too many responsible politicians and Military to cite the example of, say, the Manhattan Project, in support of the idea that, simply by “going all out” on a project, the Americans are capable of achieving a decisive breakthrough within a reasonable period of time, and yet still keep all the research secret.

Well now, the Manhattan project was in fact merely a technological project to build the atomic bomb. Certainly it was indeed gigantic for that period, but in no way whatsoever did it call into question the very foundations of theoretical physics. Quite to the contrary, it was entirely founded on them and, more precisely, on the theoretical principle of the equivalence of mass and energy ( E = mc^2 ) which derives from Einstein’s Restricted Relativity, added to which was the experimental fact of the chain-reaction of neutrons in a critical mass of uranium or plutonium, discovered already as early as 1939 and known to all atomic physicists from the start of World War II onwards.

If there was a secret, it was initially the secret of the nature of the project itself. After that, it was the secret of the techniques to be developed in order to achieve it: the separation of the uranium isotopes, the manufacture of the plutonium, the experimental determination of the critical mass ( which cost the lives of several researchers who died from radiation, etc ).

It was possible to keep such a technological piece of research as that secret for a period -which was in any case only limited -by maintaining all the different branches of it so compartmentalised that only those who had conceived the project knew what the final objective was.

BUT, on the contrary, the development of a system of antigravitational propulsion would imply that its theoretical bases have already been discovered! At the present time the theoretical bases are completely unknown to terrestrial physicists ( even though some may suspect that they do know what they are ) for the simple reason that they apparently do not derive from the bases of our own established physics, and at first sight seem to contradict them.

In the three-dimensional model of Space ( which is the visible Universe in which we live ) “gravity” -which Newton called “the force of attraction” of masses of matter -is inherently present in these masses which, in the modern framework of General Relativity, actually bend the “geodetics” of Space-Time ( i.e. the trajectories of the mass bodies ) as though a “force” were being applied to these bodies.

All matter attracts other matter in this fashion, deforming Space-Time, and today we know that even antimatter, in our universe, is attractive, and not repulsive, as at one time was thought.

General Relativity is evidently not the last word in science, even if up till now it has been confirmed with great precision by numerous consequences that one can deduce from it. It is possible that tomorrow certain experimental tests may produce a set-back for it. But we aren’t at that point.

Moreover, quite a number of variations of the theory have now been proposed, still within the framework of a Universe of three dimensions. None of them has prevailed over the rest so far, but in any case all of them retain this fundamental property of the gravitational effect being inherent in mass. Moreover, the new attempts at the modelisation of spatial complexes with a Universe of several “leaves” ( such as Dr Jean-Pierre Petit’s idea of twin universes which would permit the discovery of spatio-temporal short-cuts for travelling in space ) still retain this fundamental property of gravity.

So -at first sight- gravity does not seem at present likely to be cancelled out by any means whatsoever in the present state of our best established theoretical knowledge, unless it were possible to cancel out mass itself, which is nonsense. In fact, however, certain physicists do suspect that there may be a way out which would amount to considering gravitation as a consequence of electromagnetism, and not as a separate force on its own. Whence comes the idea that certain electromagnetic devices would enable weight ( i.e. attraction ) to be nullified without, of course, nullifying mass. ( Maybe this explains why the journalists who talk about the Air Force’s secret projects always mention “research on electrogravity”. )

Among the known attempts made in this direction by certain university researchers, some have turned out to be mathematically erroneous. Others are not open to the same charge, but under no circumstances can they lay claim of being a structured scientific theory analogous to Relativity or to the Quantum Theory:

At the very most ( Puthoff, Haisch ) they are exploratory perspectives that are more qualitative than mathematically established, and still totally unsuited for experimental exploration, and even less for an industrial one.

NO TRUE THEORY OF ANTIGRAVITATIONAL EFFECT OF AN ELECTROMAGNETIC NATURE HAS YET, TO THIS DAY, BEEN DEVELOPED OR PUBLISHED WITHIN THE INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY OF THEORETICAL PHYSICISTS.

Such -in short- is the present state of the knowledge of the academic community of the world on this matter.
Nevertheless, it is worth noting that an experimental plan, and an experiment, are said to have been carried out in 1992 by Podkletnov and Vuorinen of the Tempere University in Finland.These two authors are said to have produced an antigravitic effect yielding a 2% reduction in weight of objects placed above a core of superconductive ceramic in rapid rotation. ( New Scientist, Sept 21, 1996 ).

No explanatory theory for the phenomenon was furnished by the authors who, curiously enough, were refused publication of their paper in the Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, despite the contrary judgement of the three referees commissioned to examine it. Podkletnov is said to have claimed that he was subjected to pressure not to divulge anything before a patent for commercial exploitation had been issued.


THEORETICAL PHYSICS AND MILITARY RESEARCH.

 

J ust as Nuclear Physics is not a chapter in chemistry, but transcends chemistry, so the physics of tomorrow will transcend General Relativity ( or the improved theory that in the near future will replace it ). Maybe a so-called “unitary theory” will finally be worked out which will reconcile gravitation and quantum mechanics, and will be the prelude to a new scientific revolution opening the way to the electromagnetic concept of antigravitation. At present this concept remains outside of the classic bases of the physics that is taught, and is not truly on the agenda in the institutes of theoretical physics.

Such a revolution, of importance at least equal to the importance of General Relativity or Quantum Mechanics, could not take place in some university’s theoretical physics laboratory without being known throughout the entire world, because all the specialists in these matters know each other personally, exchange ideas, publish their papers, and meet each other at international congresses.

This is the very condition required for their creativity. To impose secrecy on those of them who would get contracts with the Armed Forces would be both prejudicial to that creativity, and totally unrealistic.

The research worker in theoretical physics does his job with paper, a pencil, his intuitive sense, and his mastery of his mathematical tools, and also -nowadays- a computer for testing numerically the results derived from his models. He has to let his ideas ripen slowly and freely. And the minute he finds something he has to tell about it.

As one of my colleagues said to me one day: “It is more difficult to confine a theoretician to his office than antimatter to a bottle!”

 

 

THEORETICAL RESEARCH CANNOT BE PLANNED WITHIN THE RESTRICTING FRAMEWORK OF A SECRET MILITARY PROJECT. IT IS “ANTIPODEAN” TO THAT! NEITHER RELATIVITY NOR QUANTUM PHYSICS WAS DISCOVERED BY CONTRACT.


BY WAY OF CONCLUSION.

 

I have no knowledge whatsoever of what is going on at Groom Lake. I have no idea whatsoever whether “Little Greys” are installed as bosses in underground levels of the Base. I have no idea whatsoever whether the Americans are repairing recovered flying saucers there, or whether they are themselves building them in entirety there. I have no idea whether they are contenting themselves with testing military material there of a very advanced technology calling for an exotic physics. BUT, ON THE OTHER HAND, WHAT I THINK I CAN AFFIRM IS THIS:-

EITHER: The snatches of information that the American Air Force permits to filter out regarding the research on antigravity that they are allegedly pursuing there are disinformation (and this cannot be excluded in view of the analysis that I have just given above ).

But then -why this disinformation? Several answers come to mind. The most immediate one is that they simply are trying to mislead those who are trying so hard to know the truth about the Air Force’s secret projects.

OR: The Air Force or the Pentagon really are carrying on at Groom Lake (and no doubt at other sites too) ultra-secret research on antigravity -a “major leap into the unknown”, and one that in practical fact is totally unknown to the entire scientific community of the whole world.

Such an ignorance on the part of the world’s scientists implies that this research is proceeding in a closed circuit, devoid of any exchange whatsoever with the other physicists of the entire world. The very fact that, despite this handicap, they could have arrived -( in a record short time! )- at the creation of a new kind of physics that permits us to conceive of -or even to start embarking on -the construction of revolutionary antigravitational flying machines -why, that would be to fly right in the face of the method by which our own terrestrial science has always proceeded right from the very beginning of its existence.

Such a result, then would imply that the US Air Force has managed to “leap-frog” ahead, and possess access to theoretical information other than what is provided by the known fundamental terrestrial physics.

SUCH INFORMATION, THEREFORE, WOULD NECESSARILY HAVE TO BE OF A NON-TERRESTRIAL ORIGIN.

Some will, of course, at once think of the crashed craft at Roswell, but personally I find it scarcely possible to believe it. For the mere analysis and study of one machine, whether damaged in an accident or not, can hardly enable one to grasp the basic physics of its operation when those physics aren’t even within the framework of any known theory -as was certainly the case back in 1947!

ONE IS CONSEQUENTLY LED RATHER TO VISUALISE THAT ACTUAL EXCHANGES HAVE TAKEN PLACE WITH THE POSSESSORS OF A MORE ADVANCED SCIENCE.

AND THEN ONE FINDS ONESELF CONTEMPLATING THE CATASTROPHIC SCENARIO PAINTED BY JOHN LEAR.

SUCH A STATE OF AFFAIRS WOULD, OF COURSE, HAVE TO BE TOTALLY INADMISSIBLE, AND IT WOULD JUSTIFY THE EXCEPTIONAL SECRECY IN WHICH THE AMERICAN AUTHORITIES HAVE WRAPPED GROOM LAKE.

YES -EXCEPTIONAL, I SAY. FOR, AS FAR AS I KNOW, THEY NEVER DRUGGED AND HYPNOTISED THE ENGINEERS WHO WORKED ON THE MANHATTAN PROJECT WHEN THEY WERE QUITTING THEIR PLACE OF WORK!

Well, there it is. Everyone will decide according to his own preference. AS FOR ME, -I’VE MADE MY DECISION, AS YOU WILL HAVE GUESSED. But I do admit that I am not able to base it on any decisive argument. I MERELY STATE THAT, WHATEVER REPLY THEY GIVE US, THEY ARE DECEIVING US. BUT WE’VE GOT USED TO THAT NOW. EVER SINCE THE UFO BUSINESS STARTED!


ADDITIONAL NOTE.

 

I t is amusing to note that, in his enthralling book, Revelations, Jacques Vallée, who himself lives in California, and knows the whole story of ufology right throughout and has investigated the “Lunatic Fringe” in order to denounce their credulity and the fashion in which they are being manipulated, does himself supply -( not intentionally, of course )- some arguments, even if not decisive ones, in support of the thesis that there is non-human technology at work at Groom Lake!

For in fact he admits, very objectively, that things have been seen flying over that Base “which it would be very difficult to differentiate from real saucers” -things which in fact are the cause of the reports referring to “spectacular sightings similar to the movements of true saucers”.

obviously, of course, in his view those were merely craft of “an advanced terrestrial technology”.

Supposing these telecontrolled “drones” come in several sizes, from little mobile discoidal platforms, almost totally silent and one metre wide, full of sophisticated electronics and with immense manoeuvrability, up to larger arial reconnaissance craft as much as several metres wide, some fitted with searchlights and some not. (It could have been a craft of this type that allegedly landed in December 1980 near an Anglo-American base at Bentwaters ( i.e. Rendlesham).

That “UFO”, it seems, was already expected by the military authorities who, before the landing, had already deployed troops from the Base to proceed to the landing-site, as though in order to test the troops’ reactions ( a plausible enough interpretation that I won’t contest.).

But, just as Vallée ( anxious to ridicule those who believe in the existence of a great subterranean base, peopled with aliens, underneath Groom Lake ) puts to such folk the question: “WHO COLLECTS THE GARBAGE?”, I will return the ball to him, and put to him a question that is possibly far more embarrassing, namely:-

“WITH WHAT POWER SOURCE AND WHAT MODE OF PROPULSION CAN THOSE ‘SILENT DRONES’ THAT YOU DESCRIBE TO US BE FLYING?”

Rocket engines are always noisy, require a heavy load of fuel, solid or liquid, if the flight is to be of any duration.

Propulsion by rotary turbine ( for lift ) can be almost silent if the power source is electrical, and it would account for the faint hum of the objects. But as it is a flying machine, the weight-power relationship for the batteries producing that energy would be prohibitive, and the same is also true for a nuclear reactor.

Finally, propulsion by MHD (magnetohydrodynamics) -which would account for the objects’ luminosity at night and for their performance, would require even more electricity, and would presume the problem of controlled fusion to have been resolved -which, in these closing years of this century, twenty years after the Bentwaters affair, it still isn’t!

SO THEN HOW CAN THE FAKE UFOs AT GROOM LAKE AND ELSEWHERE FLY IF THEY AREN’T USING A TECHNOLOGY BASED ON ANOTHER KIND OF PHYSICS? I’m waiting for Vallée to give me the answer. Maybe, of course, there is one! But I confess I haven’t found it yet.

Review On Some Of The Most Popular Mysteries And Conspiracies

The Man in the Moon; the God/Goddess/Demon/Hare in the Moon; the Shield of Somebody Important-Moon. The Moon has a Face, it is Watching us. That last may or may not strike you as a comforting thought. There are lots of permutations, too, but the basic Adamic urge to Put a Name with the (Moon) Face is found in all cultures. It is difficult not to notice it. Also, the close and obvious connection between lunar cycles and plant cycles made the Moon a participant in early agricultural societies, as if it had a will of its own (or a driver) and rated a name. Of course, as soon as you join a new group, the gossip starts… The Moon has built up quite a rap sheet.

Some Native American traditions speak of a time before Earth acquired its present Moon, of a time when Earth had two smaller moons. We won’t detour there right now- details and interpretations galore are available at a website near you, or bookstores everywhere. However, sticking to the subject of the Moon we have now, let us ponder that “acquired” thing. We shall begin with the theories put forth way back in 1976 in a most unusual book, Somebody Else Is On The Moon, by George H. Leonard.

His conclusions were fantastic, even outrageous, but all referenced point by point with quotes from NASA personnel and various experts in geology, astronomy, and other scientific fields. He had a group of students work with him on the visual analysis of lunar photographs, and his book is full of sketches detailing the things he found. That is where I will diverge from his perspective. I agree with most of the conclusions he reached, but for different reasons.

Leonard started with the basic mysteries of the Moon. Like, where did it come from? It is too large, relative to the mass of the Earth, to have been gravitationally captured. If it was a wandering body that strayed near the Earth, it would have been drawn right into a collision course. If it was moving fast enough to be simply deflected, it would have had to make not just one but several wide orbital passes, each and every one at precisely the right angle, before it could have settled into a stable orbit. The mathematics of that sequence of events are quite improbable. Yet it is the least impossible option. Details on other lunar origin theories can be easily found elsewhere, so we won’t waste much time on them here. The notion of collisions and sundering as the mechanism that formed the Earth is one that periodically gets a new presentation, and is also part of the cosmology of ancient Sumer according to the interpretations of Sitchin. Let me make a small detour…

Zechariah Sitchin is not the only orientalist scholar who has studied Sumer. He has, however, made a career out of interpreting certain texts in support of his theories about the Anunnaki and human origin. I will discuss his work a little more thoroughly elsewhere, but I should mention his lunar origin theory. The Sumerian Creation story speaks of (surprise) a “War in Heaven”, better called a Celestial Battle, with (here’s where his interpreting starts) several personified proto-planets getting banged into one another and breaking into pieces. The fragments of one of them, Tiamat, become the Earth and Moon. There is a close pass by Nibiru, planetary home to the Anunnaki, that starts things going.

Nibiru is the “Twelfth Planet”, according to the Sumerians, who (stay with me now) counted out from the Sun and included it and our Moon in their count. It is reputed to have an extended elliptical orbit that takes 3600 years to complete, which furthermore is at an angle to the plane of the ecliptic and therefore to the orbits of all the other planets. Every other known (admittedly smaller) object in such an orbit gets tweaked, altered by each pass through the plane, but Sitchin seems resolute that Nibiru does not. It does the “drive by” tweaking that wreaks miscellaneous havoc on any main planet nearby, as it makes its two passes through the plane each 3600 year cycle. In any event, the problem that no one seems to bring up is the ad hoc amalgam of myth and cosmology.

There is nothing unusual about finding scientific information encoded in folklore. I mentioned previously that oral tradition can preserve specific data very effectively. But when a myth refers to a god in a “Sun chariot”, it is a metaphor. If you operate under the assumption that there is actual fact buried (or encoded, if you prefer) in a particular myth, then you believe that someone at some time must have understood the real origin. The interpretation and transformation into a story had to have been done knowingly. Most supposedly non-fabulous “history” is written this way, too.

This is separate from the circumstances that produce warped interpretations like cargo cults. In those cases, some event which was totally not understood produces a sympathetic magic type of emulation in response, either to keep “it” from happening again or to attempt a restoration. When you read the Sumerian Creation myths, on the other hand, you find an account of beings interacting directly with the population of Earth over a long period of time. These Anunnaki drank, fought, slept with the local women, and generally behaved completely human. It was technology that set them apart – but even though the locals could not duplicate that technology, they seem to have understood it for what it was. They also seem to have understood the other information that was shared, like the cosmological model that Sitchin outlines in his book, The Twelfth Planet. Even if his interpretation is a bit, well, interpretive, the ancient Sumerians did seem to have a rather sophisticated and comprehensive understanding of the makeup of the Solar System. This does not mean that the Anunnaki were being completely candid and truthful, by the way. They were a group with an agenda of their own. But the only detail that concerns us at the present moment is the notion that there were people around before the Anunnaki (if you read between the lines) who were able to move planets around. One more ancient account of a prior age when wonders were possible, and one which tags the Builders as extraterrestrials, not spirit beings.

The Earth is the only place in the Solar System where one can see a total eclipse. The apparent diameter of the Moon seen from the surface of the Earth is exactly the same as the apparent diameter of the Sun. That seems like one Hell of a coincidence, especially considering how difficult it is to explain how the Moon managed to establish a stable orbit. The bottom line scientific argument is that it did so, therefore it must have been possible. Hmm. If you think I am kidding, go look it up. Each of the four “standard” formation models carries a disclaimer about its remaining “problems”. This of course delights the Creationists of fundamentalist Christianity, who are quite willing to embrace the notion that the Moon was placed there by specific intent.

Now then, if the Moon was parked there, one more oddity is also solved. Luna is said to be tidal locked, gravitationally held with one side always facing the Earth, a consequence of having two large bodies so proximate. This implies that the Moon was initially spinning, but slowed down over time due to the gravitational drag. Given even more time, the mass of the Moon slowly migrated Earthward, resulting in a pear shape with the narrow end pointed outward. Somehow this was accomplished without pulling the whole body crashing down from orbit.

Oh, I see a hand raised. Yes? Uh huh, the Moon was molten, and formed the pear shape as it cooled, is that it? Well, if you spin clay on a potter’s wheel, you get a round pot. If that molten mass was not spinning, why would it form a planetoid anyway? It would have had to have been rolling, turning perpendicular to the Earth’s axis, to allow the migration of material that we see.

If, however, it was placed there deliberately, with one side intentionally oriented Earthward (like most of our own artificial satellites), then the “tidal bulge” is more reasonably explained. It would most likely be a feature of the original design. That would be a logical way to ensure that one side would in fact remain pointed at the Earth. Let’s return to Leonard…

George Leonard studied thousands of the photos in the NASA moon archives, noting artificial constructions and machinery (as he saw it) all over the place. He talked to amateur astronomers and NASA personnel, and said he was generally well-received. The only real exception to this he cites is an occasional encounter with the bureaucratic labyrinth when seeking some particular photo. He would be told “it” was not at that location, in some other file, labeled with a different stock number by some other agency and / or his request would be processed if he applied at another office someplace. This might have simply been normal government behavior.

Certainly he was not greeted with a big smile and a hearty, “Come! Let us show you what we are hiding!” That, however, is not anything he expected either. It seemed clear to him that the photo evidence of intelligent activity on the Moon was a subject that NASA did not wish to address. In fact, NASA is and has always been loath to discuss such possibilities, Never mind what appears on the photos, never mind the “anomalies” astronomers (amateur and professional) have thought they spotted for hundreds of years. While peculiar occurrences and odd formations are perfectly good fodder for scholarly papers and grant requests, any suggestion of artificiality or intelligent design would invalidate the enquiry, removing it from official consideration. The main tool used for the lunar cover-up has always been disdain. You don’t see that, because it isn’t there. Behave yourself.

Leonard made sketches of the things he found, and tended to settle on an observational theory of Somebody carrying out mining operations. He drew spidery machines that would be as large as small cities, noting the tracks they left on the crater floor as they chewed away at the rim. He states in the preface to his book that:
No, I do not know who They are
No, I do not know where They come from
No, I do not know precisely what Their purpose is
But he did favor the idea of aliens being responsible, probably more than one type of alien, rather than people from here . He did not completely rule out the possibility of a clandestine Terrestrial space program, but he felt that since this could not explain the long history of observed Moon anomalies, it was less likely to be a factor. There is a lot that one could read between the lines of his one and only book if one was so inclined. He is one of those authors who occasionally seems to be trying to very subtly imply an additional vector or layer. This could have been his way of holding back from making an overly tight fit of the data into his theories, which he repeatedly cautions are incomplete, or it could have meant something else. Perhaps there was more to George H. Leonard than is at first apparent.

There is a reason why professional astronomers, almost all of whom are tied in one way or another to government funding, shy away from pointing their big telescopes at the Moon. They affect a blasé attitude of indifference toward our nearest neighbor, because if they do look, they see Disturbing Things. Leonard makes note of this, and the situation has not changed in the years since. No, Hubble can’t look at the Moon… gee, here’s a photo of the full face of the Moon taken by Hubble… well, we’re too busy, yeah, that’s it. Don’t bother us. Schedules, you know. So most lunar observation (that we know of) is done by the amateurs. There have been plenty of probes launched at the Moon, but except for the Lick Observatory photos taken in the 1950′s there has been relatively little ground based investigation by major observatories, especially in the U.S. Yes, that thing up there is the Moon, so what? Hasn’t changed, has it? Don’t bother us.

Leonard believed that the Apollo missions landed on the Moon. He also deduced a somewhat different agenda for the aliens he connected with the lunar activities than I do, even though he was careful to steer clear of theories that went beyond the data he had accumulated. He did speculate, however. As Richard Hoagland recently commented, a necessary part of science is speculation. No guts, no glory.

Leonard speaks of many conversations with “insiders”, people who knew what the secrets were. Apparently, much of the feedback he received in those chats was of the “You’re on the right track”, or the “Look at such-and-such” variety. This frustrated him greatly. No one wanted to really spill the beans, it seemed. They wanted him to do it, but wouldn’t tell him what was there that needed spilling. The other possibility, which he doesn’t state directly but which had obviously occurred to him, was that they didn’t actually have any confidence that they really knew. There were aliens involved, there was Politics involved, there was spinning going on. Basic life-advice includes, “Don’t spill while you are spinning. It can be very messy.”

I used a quote from Jules Verne in the title art for the Apollo chapter. I’ll save you the bother of going back to puzzle it out from the illustration:
“I have always made a point in my romances of basing my so-called inventions upon a groundwork of actual fact, and of using in their construction methods and materials which are not entirely without the pale of contemporary engineering skill and knowledge.”
I found that quote on one of the NASA web pages, in a biography they have posted of Verne. Yes, he was a scientific visionary, and yes, he had many good and prescient ideas. But the choice of the quote itself is still a bit ironic, a slightly pompous observation given in an interview late in his life. It sounds different when NASA says it.

While doing his research, Leonard found another unusual quote chosen by NASA, this one leading into the Preliminary Science Report published after the Apollo 17 mission:
“There is nothing more difficult to take in hand, or perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success, than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things.”
Even before I tell you the name of the author, you may have already been slightly startled by the last four words of it. but that is of course just the coincidence of contemporary context. Right? The author lived some time ago, in 16th C. Italy. He was Niccolo Machiavelli. Oh, you’ve heard of him? Remember, context is everything…

One thing Leonard did not take into account was the tolas effect. He had no idea that the things he saw were designed to be seen at some particular scale, designed by minds far different from the engineers he imagined. Aliens are one thing, but artists, well now you’re talking about really strange. I am not making the blanket statement that he didn’t see what he saw, I’m just pointing out that he wasn’t separating the structural strangeness of the place, something for which he had no contextual basis, from the intrusive things like machines, ships, and possible bases set up by visitors other than the original Builders. Rather than looking for what he thought he saw.



PLEASE DOWNLOAD IMAGES BELOW TO SEE IN GREAT QUALITY.

Above: Here’s the crater named for Jules Verne, from a Clementine image. The structures on the crater floor are quite typical of the ones found on the Moon.

There is every likelihood that a dome once covered the whole place, which therefore probably is not an impact crater.

The rather blatant letters “C” and “L” (or maybe “V”) can be seen nearby, and in the larger area there are a few more, but I think we can probably risk an assumption that they aren’t really letters.

Even I won’t propose that some Martian Nostrodamus predicted the eventual photographing of the site and had it suitably decorated in honor of the probe. Nor do I think it is some inside joke- the forms are really there.

I should note that this is the only crater where I have personally seen shapes like that, though., so it rates a mention

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platoisis

cleo

pythagoras

luna07_28_848416230512
kepler

Left: Here’s a view of what every science fiction fan would expect to see on the Moon- a wildly alien building, impossibly huge, rising to a staggering height above the lunar surface.This picture was taken by Luna 17, one of a series of robot tractors sent up by theSoviets. Few of the images from those missions were made available, unfortunately.

There are similarities to the Atlantean architecture, but there are differences, too.

Some may say, “If we didn’t go, then they didn’t go either”, but even the most insistent Apollo critics allow that automated probes would have played some part in any hoax. So this is probably the Moon. How about that? There are giant buildings up there after all.

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