yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Why Aliens Might Already Be On Their Way To Us


7m read
·Nov 2, 2024

The universe is magnificent and vast. Hundreds of billions of galaxies, trillions of stars, and even more planets. If even the tiniest fraction are habitable, then the universe should be teeming with life. And yet, we see nothing; only vast emptiness. Where is everyone else? The answer to this riddle could be as exciting as it is creepy. We are early, born before almost all other life. But very soon, this may change. Not only might aliens appear, they could quickly surround us. An irreversible competition for the universe might be about to begin.

While this video is based on scientific papers, we're presenting interesting ideas based on little data and lots of extrapolation, so take them with a grain of salt. Okay, we need to look at three essential questions to understand the galactic competition.

One: How fast can bacteria build spaceships to become a starfaring civilization? Life, as we know it, needs to master a number of very hard steps. It starts with dead stuff turning into the building blocks of life. Then, it needs to organize into self-contained cells. Those cells have to learn to work together to form multicellular organisms. This keeps going until complex creatures with big brains learn to use tools and language. Civilization has to be formed from cultures that value progress and technological development, and then they need to actually venture out beyond their home planet.

On Earth, life appeared basically as soon as the oceans formed. But then, it took 2 billion years to make the step from single cells to multicellular organisms, and 2 billion more for us to appear. Culture, civilization, and space travel developed super quickly, though. Do things always take that long, or was this actually exceptionally fast?

Also, passing one step does not mean the next one is guaranteed. Multicellularity evolved over 25 times independently on Earth, but there's only one species that builds spaceships. We don't know how many steps life needs to pass and how long they take to give rise to a technological civilization, but there are probably many. It's likely that on trillions of planets, life has been trying for billions of years. Since we don't see any other technological civilizations out there, it might well be that we are a rare exception. We might be among the first, or even the first technological civilization in the Milky Way.

But this is just one piece of the puzzle. On top of that, we may have just hit the perfect time window. Why does humanity exist now? Now, the universe is already 13.8 billion years old, but it's unlikely that many other technological civilizations had a chance to appear before us. Because, in the earlier universe, life would have had a pretty hard time to emerge, let alone thrive.

Because it was such a hostile environment—early stars constantly blew up, galaxies crashed into each other, and supermassive black holes vomited massive amounts of radiation, enough to sterilize galaxies over and over again. Our sun was born right at the end of this cosmic death show. The universe has never been more welcoming to life than it is now, so humanity has arrived at a very convenient spot in time—maybe the earliest reasonably possible for life to thrive.

What about the future? The sun burns brighter than 90% of the stars in our galaxy and will keep getting brighter. In about a billion years, it will boil all of Earth's oceans and then become a giant that swallows it whole. So, in the galactic context, the sun is very short-lived. Most stars are red dwarves that can sustain habitable planets for tens of trillions of years. Life on these planets has an incredibly long time window to appear and pass the hard steps.

Even knowing nothing about how rare or common life is, this makes it way more likely for technological civilizations to appear sometime in the future than in the past. Because if civilizations appear at random in the Milky Way within a time window of a trillion years, then very few, if any, would appear before today. Then a couple more arrive in this period of a billion years that we're in before all starfaring civilizations that could ever exist emerge all together.

This weird tsunami-like distribution is the result of both the hard steps model and something else: a sort of deadline for any spacefaring civilization. Any civilization coming after will find it hard to have room to survive, so all potential life has to cram in before it. Humanity exists now because otherwise, we might have missed this deadline.

What or who creates this deadline? Why aren't aliens already on Earth? Humans are curious, expansionist, and hungry for more. We've spread over the world and made it our own. Our technology has been improving over time—first slowly, then breathtakingly fast. If these things don't change drastically and our descendants want to prosper, they will expand into space.

We could construct a Dyson swarm for endless energy and transform planets into new homes. We could cross interstellar distances, allowing us to reach for planets around distant stars. If we have the most motivation, we can become a galactic civilization. A civilization that does this sort of stuff can be called "loud" because its activity creates noise, signs that can be detected from far away.

Imagine someone in a forest cutting down trees, starting fires, and laying down roads. The more intense their work, the easier they are to notice. An expanding technological civilization would probably be hard to miss. Our telescopes would pick up all that energy and we would clearly identify artificial interference with stars and planets.

Another consequence of this business is that it's very disruptive to the environment. Clearing a forest means the end of its wildlife. Human activity has left no chance for a squirrel civilization to appear—not because we hated squirrels, but simply that the thought that they might want to do that at some point never crossed our minds and we needed to work. Similarly, if loud civilizations were running around the galaxy in the past, terraforming planets or harvesting the energy of stars, they may have prevented our existence.

Had aliens started colonizing Earth while we were still sludge in the oceans, that sludge would never have turned into humans. This is how loud aliens create a deadline for new civilizations appearing. The galaxy may have trillions of years to create life, but there may only be a short window for it to spread and thrive. Even if a loud civilization respects planets with naturally occurring life and expands around them, like humans do with wildlife reserves, any civilization on such a planet would not be able to expand—ever trapped, forever on a tiny island.

But here we are. So loud aliens will probably never be. What about aliens that don't expand? They would be quiet aliens. They're probably limited to one star system and don't have a noticeable impact on their cosmic surroundings. Humanity is like this right now. We wouldn't be able to detect ourselves from the other side of the Milky Way. If they stay quiet forever, maybe because of their culture or abilities, then they are not really a concern for us.

We only have one sample to draw from: humanity. And right now, we are on the path to becoming loud. If we're not special and succeed anyway, then any other civilization with the motivation and resources would eventually expand beyond its planet of origin.

Okay, what are the consequences of all these assumptions and ideas? Grave consequences. Race to the stars. If we are really early, then eventually others will catch up with us. Civilizations will emerge all over the place, and these new aliens will look at space, see no signs of life, and come to the same conclusion: they exist because loud civilizations have not yet taken over everything.

But it only takes one loud civilization to crowd them out of the entire galaxy. They, like us, will face an important decision: do they stay quiet, take it easy, and tend to their planet for as long as possible, or do they start expanding to take a chunk of the galaxy before someone else arrives? Meeting others does not necessarily mean war or conflict, but it means that new borders will arise—limits that may persist forever.

In the worst case, a civilization could be completely enveloped by the empires of others, eternally doomed to be a galactic backwater without control over their fate. So if we want a seat at the galactic adults' table, we best get to work. If we really are early, we have an incredible opportunity to mold thousands or even millions of planets according to our vision and dreams.

And one day, when we meet others, we can greet them and meet them as equals. Wouldn't that be nice? If you want to explore the vast universe from the comfort of your own home, we've got a lot of amazing space and science-inspired products for you. All of our products are designed and produced with love and care by us here at Kot Kazak. They're an integral part of the science story we try to tell. So start your journey on our channel and continue it with one of our posters, notebooks, or plushes. Every purchase directly funds what we do on this channel. Thank you so much for your support, and never stop dreaming of space adventures.

More Articles

View All
Meth Hidden in a Spare Tire | To Catch A Smuggler
[suspenseful music] [dog panting] [power tool whirring] Oh yeah, it’s a pretty big load. Yeah. OFFICER ON RADIO 1: [inaudible] OFFICER ON RADIO 2: Copy, thank you. This is a pretty significant load, right here. Roll it over this way. Yeah, they’…
The smallest solution to one of our biggest problems - Tierney Thys & Christian Sardet
At this very moment, almost everything around you is being eaten. Invisible to the naked eye, organisms called microbes swarm every surface. Hordes of bacteria, archaea, and fungi have evolved to produce powerful enzymes that break down tough organic mate…
Michael Fenlon: It Takes Confidence to Instill Confidence | Big Think.
This year, as we look towards our next Aspire to Lead global video webcast, we’re going to touch upon the topic of confidence. You know, there are consistent research findings that show that men tend to overestimate their competence and women underestimat…
Homeroom with Sal & Eduardo Cetlin - Wednesday, September 2
Hi everyone! Welcome to our homeroom live stream. Really excited about the conversation we’re going to have in a few minutes with Eduardo Setlin from the Amgen Foundation. I encourage any of y’all who have questions to start putting them in the message bo…
Terry Crews Skydives Over Iceland | Running Wild with Bear Grylls
Like a dream. Let’s get your chute up. I’m ready. Here we go. BEAR GRYLLS: Terry Crews and I just landed on a small airfield in the Icelandic mountains. Last night, he told me that skydiving was on his bucket list. Well, Terry, be careful what you wish f…
Stoic Lessons People Learn Too Late in Life | You'll Not Regret Watching This Video
Have you ever wondered what lessons many people learn too late in life? Get ready, because in this video I’m going to reveal those lessons from stoicism, offering you powerful tools to face challenges and grow as an individual. Now, if you are new here, p…