👽extra terrestrial life👽
Forums › General Discussion › 👽extra terrestrial life👽-
Who else reckons that there are alians out there. What do you all think? I reckon there is👽👽
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^I FOUND ONE PROBE IT
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If they do exist hope they never "discover us" like Columbus discovered America.
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Nope.
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I'm an astronomer,,,, of course they exist somewhere, it's a mathematical improbability for them not to. Have they visited earth? Absolutely not, anyone who thinks otherwise doesn't understand the vastness of space and the universe. There's probably about 10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way alone and millions of microbe civilizations. If you want to discuss this further, pm me . I do this for a living
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😈ℙɪɳɠḁṩ wrote:
10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way...doubt that, what do you consider intelligent?I'm an astronomer,,,, of course they exist somewhere, it's a mathematical improbability for them not to. Have they visited earth? Absolutely not, anyone who thinks otherwise doesn't understand the vastness of space and the universe. There's probably about 10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way alone and millions of microbe civilizations. If you want to discuss this further, pm me . I do this for a living
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☠ðůナ⌖ʟḁẘ☠ wrote:
Everyone knows the Vikings discovered America 😉😏If they do exist hope they never "discover us" like Columbus discovered America.
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★MΛΥΗΞΜ★ wrote:
not sure we can count one in the galaxy.😈ℙɪɳɠḁṩ wrote:
10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way...doubt that, what do you consider intelligent?I'm an astronomer,,,, of course they exist somewhere, it's a mathematical improbability for them not to. Have they visited earth? Absolutely not, anyone who thinks otherwise doesn't understand the vastness of space and the universe. There's probably about 10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way alone and millions of microbe civilizations. If you want to discuss this further, pm me . I do this for a living
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Has to be, we can't be alone.
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pingas id like to hear where you got 10 from. gotta say every estimate i hear tends to be much higher. i think your right but would like to know how you came to that number
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Helloooo! Close Encounters of the Third Kind, E.T., Independence Day. That's three right there👽👽👽
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c. wrote:
He used a very conservative version of the DRAKE equation. If you apply the equation to the Milky Way you'd get around 3500 extraterrestrial civilizations. Now what's the definition of an extraterrestrial civilization?pingas id like to hear where you got 10 from. gotta say every estimate i hear tends to be much higher. i think your right but would like to know how you came to that number
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Oh they exist!!! You ought to see my probing scar....😩
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★ʗℝ₳ℤㄚℝㅌⅆℕⅇʗҜ★ wrote:
😐 No thanks.Oh they exist!!! You ought to see my probing scar....😩
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😈ℙɪɳɠḁṩ wrote:
Kepler-186fI'm an astronomer,,,, of course they exist somewhere, it's a mathematical improbability for them not to. Have they visited earth? Absolutely not, anyone who thinks otherwise doesn't understand the vastness of space and the universe. There's probably about 10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way alone and millions of microbe civilizations. If you want to discuss this further, pm me . I do this for a living
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★MΛVΞЯICK★ wrote:
drake equation can give very different results depending on the assumptions made on your input data. the example ive always read is a biologist tends to get very low numbersxout of drake while an astronomer tends to get higher. personally i think the universe is too vast for us to b the only life. i think we still might find microbe life on some outer moons in our solar systemc. wrote:
He used a very conservative version of the DRAKE equation. If you apply the equation to the Milky Way you'd get around 3500 extraterrestrial civilizations. Now what's the definition of an extraterrestrial civilization?pingas id like to hear where you got 10 from. gotta say every estimate i hear tends to be much higher. i think your right but would like to know how you came to that number
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Helixranger wrote:
AgreeHas to be, we can't be alone.
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i think drake is interesting because it tells you about the person doing it. saw someone cone up with over 1 million inteligent civilizations in the milky way alone. an opptomist imo.
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★MΛΥΗΞΜ★ wrote:
Complex life capable of communicating and emitting radio waves into space😈ℙɪɳɠḁṩ wrote:
10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way...doubt that, what do you consider intelligent?I'm an astronomer,,,, of course they exist somewhere, it's a mathematical improbability for them not to. Have they visited earth? Absolutely not, anyone who thinks otherwise doesn't understand the vastness of space and the universe. There's probably about 10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way alone and millions of microbe civilizations. If you want to discuss this further, pm me . I do this for a living
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c. wrote:
I'm using the drake equation, being very conservative with it to play it safe, there's at least 10 in the milky way but there could be upwards of a couple thousands, i just don't want to over estimate.pingas id like to hear where you got 10 from. gotta say every estimate i hear tends to be much higher. i think your right but would like to know how you came to that number
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★MΛVΞЯICK★ wrote:
Exactly, an extraterrestrial civilization i'd say would be complex life forms able to communicate with one another and possess technology to emit radio wavesc. wrote:
He used a very conservative version of the DRAKE equation. If you apply the equation to the Milky Way you'd get around 3500 extraterrestrial civilizations. Now what's the definition of an extraterrestrial civilization?pingas id like to hear where you got 10 from. gotta say every estimate i hear tends to be much higher. i think your right but would like to know how you came to that number
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The Drake equation is just so much guesswork. It doesn't even ask many of the questions that make earth habitable. A Jupiter sized comet catcher, magnetic field, a large moon, tectonics, atmosphere?
As for Kepler 186f, a small rocky planet in the "goldilock's" zone could as easily be mars or Venus-like as earth-like. Goldilocks is meaningless without answers to those other questions.
Finally: Fermi Paradox
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😈ℙɪɳɠḁṩ wrote:
What about the wow signal.do you guys think it was just a glitch in the system, an unknown satellite from another country we didn't know was there? My personal belief is we are not alone.👽★MΛΥΗΞΜ★ wrote:
Complex life capable of communicating and emitting radio waves into space😈ℙɪɳɠḁṩ wrote:
10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way...doubt that, what do you consider intelligent?I'm an astronomer,,,, of course they exist somewhere, it's a mathematical improbability for them not to. Have they visited earth? Absolutely not, anyone who thinks otherwise doesn't understand the vastness of space and the universe. There's probably about 10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way alone and millions of microbe civilizations. If you want to discuss this further, pm me . I do this for a living
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Ojibwe wrote:
That's assuming that the life is similiar to life on earth and needs the same conditions. This is what i get from intelligent design theorists all the time, a large moon isnt neccessarly vital although it does help, a magnetic field isn't uncommon and a jupiter sized planet is almost given to be in every solar system. As far as kepler 186f i doubt there's life there but i know we will find a planet that fits by 2040. I guarantee itThe Drake equation is just so much guesswork. It doesn't even ask many of the questions that make earth habitable. A Jupiter sized comet catcher, magnetic field, a large moon, tectonics, atmosphere?
As for Kepler 186f, a small rocky planet in the "goldilock's" zone could as easily be mars or Venus-like as earth-like. Goldilocks is meaningless without answers to those other questions.
Finally: Fermi Paradox
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✧ᙢᗩᖇᙅᗝ☠И~山~Я✧ wrote:
I think it was an alien civilization although we havent been able to pick it up again. Anything is possible, as time goes on we will find them😈ℙɪɳɠḁṩ wrote:
What about the wow signal.do you guys think it was just a glitch in the system, an unknown satellite from another country we didn't know was there? My personal belief is we are not alone.👽★MΛΥΗΞΜ★ wrote:
Complex life capable of communicating and emitting radio waves into space😈ℙɪɳɠḁṩ wrote:
10 intelligent civilizations in the milky way...doubt that, what do you consider intelligent?Cut
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Physics and chemistry is the same everywhere. It defines the parameters where life can exist. You can bring up stuff like silicone based life but it still needs to fit in those parameters.
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Our solar system is proving to be really odd compared to those Kepler has discovered. There are lots of jupiters but in the inner system rather than outside the rocky planet orbits. In fact they seem to commonly spiral inward over the life of a system. For some lucky reason our gas giants are holding a position where they can do the most good.
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With billions of galaxies containing billions of stars with billions of planets... There must be other life forms- from amoeba like creatures to intelligent life.
Whether any have visited here is debatable. From personal experience... I once did see an event with many lights in the sky with formations zipping left, right, up, down and then just gone. And then the fighter jets came looking 👀
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Ojibwe wrote:
That's because we haven't scanned far enough yet. We've only looked at a few thousand stars so farOur solar system is proving to be really odd compared to those Kepler has discovered. There are lots of jupiters but in the inner system rather than outside the rocky planet orbits. In fact they seem to commonly spiral inward over the life of a system. For some lucky reason our gas giants are holding a position where they can do the most good.
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In the infinite amount of space that we even know of in the universe, having the opinion that "we are only the lucky one's to have gained intelligent life" is just arrogant and narrow minded.
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˛❥࿔ℳⱥⅆ˜❧ᙢ⍺₥₳˞ৡ༅ wrote:
You're basing your conclusion on something akin to faith, not actual evidence. There is zero evidence for any life anywhere outside of planet earth right now. That said, I tend to agree with you anyway.In the infinite amount of space that we even know of in the universe, having the opinion that "we are only the lucky one's to have gained intelligent life" is just arrogant and narrow minded.
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