Is Anyone Out There? Solving the Drake Equation
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Transcript Is Anyone Out There? Solving the Drake Equation
Jeremy P. Carlo
Columbia University
AAI Astronomy Day
5/10/2008
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Q: Is there life beyond the earth?
•
How many of these planets have intelligent
life?
•
How many are able to communicate with us?
– (have adequate technology to send signals into
space)
•
(How many of
them want to?)
?
What this is not about:
Aliens visiting the earth
▪ Alien abductions, UFOs, etc.
Us going to other planets in search of life
Justification: Traveling to other solar systems
is hard. Much easier to use radio.
SPEED
TRAVEL TIME
COST
SPACE TRAVEL
Sloooow…
Looooong….
$$$$$$$$
RADIO
COMMUNICATION
Fast! (c)
Long, but not as
much
Cheap!
•
Developed in 1960 by Frank Drake and others at
SETI
– (SETI: Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence)
N = Ns*fs-p*fp-e*fp-l*fl-i*fi-c*Tc / Tg
N = # of communicative civilizations in our galaxy, right now
Ns = number of stars in the Galaxy
fs-p = fraction of stars with planets
fp-e= fraction of planets that are “earthlike”
fp-l = fraction of “earthlike” planets that develop life
fl-i = fraction of above that develop intelligence
fi-c= fraction of above that develop communication
Tc = lifetime of communicative civilization
Tg = age of Galaxy
•
How to deal with really big or small (“astronomical”)
numbers!
•
10,000,000,000,000 = big number.
Count up the zeroes… 13
10,000,000,000,000 = 1013 (1E13 in the computer)
•
0.000000001 = small number.
0.000000001 = 1/1,000,000,000 = 1/109 = 10-9 (1E-9)
•
450,000,000 = 4.5×100,000,000 = 4.5×108 (4.5E8)
multiplication: 1013 ×1011 = 1024
• division: 109/103 = 106
•
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Most of the terms in the Drake Equation are in the
form of fractions.
•
f=1 implies something that always happens
•
f=0 implies something that never happens
•
Values in between are things that might happen
•
•
•
•
f=0.5 means a 50/50 chance
f=0.1 means a 1 in 10 chance
f=10-3 is a 1/1000 chance
etc.
This is well known to astronomers…
Ns = 200-400 billion = 2 to 4 × 1011
So far,
so good…
M31, the Andromeda Galaxy
Astrophoto by Robert Gendler
•
Q: Given one of the many stars in the galaxy…
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What is the probability that it has planets?
•
Until recently no exoplanets were known
– First discovery 1989, then…
The
Snowball
Effect!
Today, almost 300 exoplanets known!
20 known multi-planet systems!
•
Searches still have a lot of bias
– Cannot “see” the planets directly, only their effect on the parent
star
– Hard to detect small (earth-size) planets
• Only Jupiter/Saturn/Uranus/Neptune sized planets (mostly)
– Favor “hot Jupiters”
– Also orbital inclination angle, parent star’s mass & brightness…
– Which stars do you choose for detailed study?
We don’t yet have a decent unbiased sample.
And it’s nowhere near complete.
But we can estimate…
We now know that at least 10% of “typical” stars
have planets. (fs-p = 0.1)
Infrared studies of discs around young stars
indicate fs-p ~ 0.2-0.5.
But we can only detect a limited subset of
planets…
So maybe they all do! (fs-p = 1)
•
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Q: Given many solar systems, what fraction of
these have “earthlike” planets?
If 1 (or more) in the “typical” solar system:
– fp-e = 1 (or more)
•
If typical systems do not have an earthlike planet:
– fp-e << 1
Star:
Massive stars have short lifetimes…
▪ not long enough to develop life.
Low mass star:
▪ Not enough ionizing radiation,
▪ “habitable zone” is very small,
▪ Susceptible to outbursts (“flares”).
Distance from star:
Too close: TOO HOT!
Too far: TOO COLD!
Defines
“habitable
zone”
Orbit too elliptical: Temperature varies too much!
Need a stable orbit over time!
Planet’s composition:
▪ Need liquid H2O
▪ (are NH3, CH4 etc. acceptable substitutes?)
▪ Need an atmosphere!
▪ Need organic (carbon) compounds
▪ (silicon based life?)
▪ No acidic / corrosive environment
▪ Need elements heavier than
hydrogen / helium
▪ No “Population II” stars!
Planet’s size
Too small -> less gravity ->
no atmosphere -> no liquid H2O
▪ Also, loses geothermal energy too fast
▪ No magnetic field?
Too big – probably tend to be
“gas giants” like Jupiter.
No solid surface.
▪ (Floating life forms?)
Other factors
Moderate axial tilt
Moderate rotation rate
▪ No spin-orbit lock?
▪ Red dwarfs out?
Large moon necessary for the above?
What about moons of gas giants?
“Good Jupiter”
In the Galactic Habitable Zone?
No nearby supernovae,
gamma emitters, etc.
?
•
Our own solar system has fp-e = 1
• (Of course!!)
•
Stretching the definition, maybe fp-e = 2 or more:
• Mars?
• Europa?
• Titan?
•
Probably “borderline”
Outside habitable zone
But tidal interactions…
So far no truly “earthlike” planets have
been found outside the solar system.
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55 Cancri f ?
HD28185 b ?
And only a few come close…
Gliese 581 c/d ?
Guess from current data…. ~few / 300 ~ 0.01 ?
But current searches are biased against “earthlike” planets!
May be much higher!
But limited if red dwarf planets aren’t allowed (must be <0.2 or so)
Q: Given an “earthlike” planet…
What is the probability
that it will develop life?
Simplest definition:
A living organism is something
capable of replicating
▪ Bacteria
▪ Viruses
▪ Other one-celled organisms
Need a self-assembling,
self-replicating genetic code!
▪ Earth-based life: DNA / RNA
▪ Are there other possibilities?
If life always arises on “earthlike” planets,
then fp-l = 1
Otherwise, fp-l < 1 (maybe << 1)
Only one known example of a planet with life!
Not much hard data to go on here…
Two schools of thought:
School 1:
Even the simplest life is extremely complex!
Simplest organisms have about a million base pairs in
DNA/RNA
Lots of things have to go “just right”
fp-l is “obviously” very small!
School 2:
Building blocks of life are found in space and on other
planets
▪ Organic molecules
▪ Water
Initial life on earth seems to have developed rather
quickly…
▪ fp-l might be large (possibly 1?)
But seems to have developed only once , not many
times…
▪ So it’s not just popping up everywhere!
Life can survive under all sorts of conditions
▪ Extremophiles!
If life were to be found on Mars…
▪ Implies fp-l is large!
Q: Given a planet with simple life forms…
…things like bacteria…
…what’s the probability that intelligent life
will eventually develop?
Simplest life forms: self-replicating organisms
But “copies” are not exact
Mutations
Those variants best suited to survive,
best able to reproduce, are more
likely to pass on their genetic code
to the next generation
Natural selection
Over time those changes
progressively accumulate
Evolution
Given a planet with intelligent life…
What is the probability that they develop
tools to communicate through space?
Given a planet with intelligent life forms that
can communicate…
How long do they remain that way?
Tg is the age of the galaxy
Tg = 10 billion years = 1010 years
Whew!
Tc : once a civilization becomes able to
communicate, how long does it stay able to do so?
?
We only became able to communicate…
Early 1900’s: <100 years ago!
How much longer will we last?
5 billion years: sun turns into a red giant
Mass extinctions every ~100 million years
But will we even last that long…