Shouldn't we have heard alien radio signals by now? Why not?

In summary, intelligent life may not have formed until the second generation stars that started birthing forth carbon 3 billion years after the Big Bang. If this is true, that may imply that radio signals from these intelligent civilizations may have been traveling for ~7 billion years or so prior to today. However, the signal was impressive enough to warrant a big WOW written next to it and it has referred to by that ever since.
  • #1
SeventhSigma
257
0
I figure that intelligent life couldn't have formed until, at the very least, the second generation stars that started birthing forth carbon (maybe 3 billion years after the Big Bang?). On Earth, it took something like 2.5 billion years until multicellular life formed, and so maybe we can estimate that intelligent civilizations didn't start popping up until ~7 billion years after the Big Bang.

If this is true, that may imply that radio signals from these intelligent civilizations may have been traveling for ~7 billion years or so prior to today. Shouldn't that be a decent stretch across the cosmos -- about half of our cosmic horizon?

Do you think radio signals are "weakened" to the point where we can't detect them? Is it possible that intelligent life couldn't have formed until much later in the game despite the carbon influxes? Do you think it's some other reason? Let me know your thoughts!
 
Astronomy news on Phys.org
  • #2
I think that there is a very short window for a civilization, maybe only 5000 years between the time it starts broadcasting radio signals and the time its technology becomes so advanced that they no longer broadcast high power RF signals.

This leaves only the possibility that they are deliberately sending signals for another civilization to pick up. I find this very unlikely due to the inherent danger in the uncontrolled contact between civilizations of widely differing technology.
 
  • #3
Other issues - how many radio capable [and utilizing] civilizations overlap? How many have the means and desire to transmit sufficiently powerful radio signals during the overlap period? I don't think intelligent civilizations are necessarily unique, just that they rapidly pass through the radio era of communication. I think they are sufficiently rare that funding for sufficiently powerful ET radio studies have a very tiny window.
 
  • #4
Do you think radio signals are "weakened" to the point where we can't detect them?

Yes, of course. Think about how hard it is to see an individual star in a nearby galaxy. Now compare the power output of such a star to the power output of a typical radio transmitter that an intelligent civilization might have. It is pretty much unthinkable that we would ever get ET signals from outside of our galaxy, let alone, from billions of light years away.
 
  • #5
Try googling the "Fermi paradox". Basically Fermi asked the same question - "If intelligent life is common, then where are they?" The simple answer is that we don't know. Maybe intelligent life is extremely rare. Maybe intelligent life destroys itself after a short time. Maybe (this is Hawking's recent point) there are predators out there and any civilization that makes "noise" gets quickly found and snuffed out or enslaved. Maybe energetic events like gamma ray bursts periodically sterilize the galaxy. Maybe... We simply don't know yet.
 
  • #6
Some believe that the WOW-Signal constituted the necessary evidence to conclude that there are other civilizations out there. Unfortunately, that signal was not sustained and finding it again by scanning that same section of the universe has proven fruitless. Some have said that we might have just listened in a brief ship-to-ship communication. Others a distress signal that was heeded and needed no repetition. Still others say that we don't listen long enough and their transmission schedule might not coincide with our listening one. In any case the signal was impressive enough to warrant a big WOW written next to it and it has referred to by that ever since.
 
  • #8
Those who believe radio communication is a temporary development are likely correct. It was barely a century ago that Marconi first sent his three-dot "S"s into the void. Radio and television broadcasting work well for sending content from the few to the many, but today people want more give-and-take. Most TV is now received through shielded coaxial cables, and radio is rapidly becoming outdated through satellite broadcasts that are aimed down at the Earth, not from it into space. In another twenty years or so, we are unlikely to have much of a radio wave signal to show the universe, so, figuring maybe 150 years out of 7 billion for use of radio waves, perhaps one in 50,000,000 planets with intelligent life would show some radio profile. Then again, maybe radio was developed here because we missed the development of greeblatz or some other alternative technology that sends nothing at all skyward. Woe is us!
 
  • #9
Despite mentor warnings, this thread was getting side-tracked into a non-scientific direction. Those messages have been removed.

I think people are missing something. It is completely plausible that a society will use less and less radio for communications, for all the obvious reasons. However, SETI doesn't have to just look for radio - it also looks for radar. Radar has many advantages. A putative civilization would like some advance notice of nearby asteroids that might collide with them. It's high power. It's aimed up in the sky. It's likely to be reasonably regular and thus easy to spot.
 
  • #11
The other question is how much of a sample have we really been able to take so far? We've been looking for what, 50 years? I saw an astrophysicist on some program on the Science Channel put it very well: If you dipped a glass of water in the ocean and looked it at, would you conclude that the ocean has no fish in it?
 
  • #12
SeventhSigma said:
I figure that intelligent life couldn't have formed until, at the very least, the second generation stars that started birthing forth carbon (maybe 3 billion years after the Big Bang?). On Earth, it took something like 2.5 billion years until multicellular life formed, and so maybe we can estimate that intelligent civilizations didn't start popping up until ~7 billion years after the Big Bang.

If this is true, that may imply that radio signals from these intelligent civilizations may have been traveling for ~7 billion years or so prior to today. Shouldn't that be a decent stretch across the cosmos -- about half of our cosmic horizon?

Do you think radio signals are "weakened" to the point where we can't detect them? Is it possible that intelligent life couldn't have formed until much later in the game despite the carbon influxes? Do you think it's some other reason? Let me know your thoughts!


Are you sure about fully developed civilizations being possible as far back as 7 billion years ago?

So you mean a modern type solar system at least 10 billion years old because I can only assume it would take a few billion years to form a civilization from a rocky world.

That seems like a very broad window.



EDIT:
Can someone who is well versed in Astronomy confirm or deny the plausibility of modern (extra)solar systems existing that far back? Modern =A long lived yellow to red sun with rocky bodies made of heavy elements orbiting it. How far back was this even possible?

If we truly want to approach this question shouldn't we start there?

What exactly is the timeline window for the development of solar systems and life on them?
 
Last edited:
  • #13
SeventhSigma said:
Shouldn't we have heard alien radio signals by now? Why not?

Maybe we did, but the source LGM-1 was later downgraded and written off as being a rotating neutron star.
 
Last edited:
  • #14
We are first.
 
  • #15
tasp77 said:
We are first.

Care to clarify any reasoning behind this?
 
  • #16
ThomasEdison said:
Can someone who is well versed in Astronomy confirm or deny the plausibility of modern (extra)solar systems existing that far back? Modern =A long lived yellow to red sun with rocky bodies made of heavy elements orbiting it. How far back was this even possible?

If we truly want to approach this question shouldn't we start there?

What exactly is the timeline window for the development of solar systems and life on them?

supermassive stars appear to have formed relatively early in the history of the universe (around 13 billion years ago, more or less) and would have very rapidly (within a million years or so) begun spewing out heavier elements.

life on our planet evolved within 1 billion years after the formation of the earth, if not earlier.

the crux here is that there are uncountably more explanations for why something has *not* happened than for why it *has* happened.

surely the inverse square law of radiation, and the sheer scale of the universe, and the disparity between energy requirements and practical motivation, suggests that at some point there is a horizon on the signals one might receive from an advanced civilization elsewhere in our galaxy.

but because i choose something that appears relatively more plausible as a piece of the scheme of things does not mitigate the problem. I'm still dabbling with the toy of my ignorance ... or i work for the SETI foundation.
 
  • #17
ryan_m_b said:
Care to clarify any reasoning behind this?



Consistent with data we have on hand,


+


being first has to happen to some civilization, mighty profound if it be us.
 
  • #18
tasp77 said:
Consistent with data we have on hand,
+
being first has to happen to some civilization, mighty profound if it be us.

Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. You are making a fallacious statement when you claim that we are first.
 
  • #19

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17jymDn0W6U
Most humans underestimate the vastness of space-time.

Watch this video and pay close attention to time index 2:35 to 2:49, the extent of humanity's first radio signals to scale with the Milky Way galaxy. This should provide some indication as to just how difficult it is to detect an artificial transmission, even within our own galaxy, let alone any artificial transmission from another galaxy.

Reference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17jymDn0W6U"
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #20
Orion1 said:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17jymDn0W6U
Most humans underestimate the vastness of space-time.

Watch this video and pay close attention to time index 2:35 to 2:49, the extent of humanity's first radio signals to scale with the Milky Way galaxy. This should provide some indication as to just how difficult it is to detect an artificial transmission, even within our own galaxy, let alone any artificial transmission from another galaxy.

Reference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17jymDn0W6U"

Very cool! Can anybody tell me the reason as to why the areas of the universe we have mapped extend from Earth in a sort of double fan shape rather than a sphere?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #21
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c64Aia4XE1Y
ryan_m_b said:
Can anybody tell me the reason as to why the areas of the universe we have mapped extend from Earth in a sort of double fan shape rather than a sphere?

Watch the TED lecture by astrophysicist George Smoot. The short answer is that this is the limit of the present galaxy sky survey data which must be mapped and cataloged.

Reference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c64Aia4XE1Y"
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #22
Orion1 said:

Watch the TED lecture by astrophysicist George Smoot. The short answer is that this is the limit of the present galaxy sky survey data which must be mapped and cataloged.

Reference:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c64Aia4XE1Y"

Very interesting. Thanks :smile:
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #23
Orion1 said:

Watch the TED lecture by astrophysicist George Smoot. The short answer is that this is the limit of the present galaxy sky survey data which must be mapped and cataloged.

That was awesome!
 
  • #24
Do all intelligent civilizations evolve like we do? Do they all go through the same technology advances we do? What if another life form, had technology in totally different ways than humans, but they were still type 0 or 1 civilizations like us? Is it possible for life forms on the other side of the universe to have different elements and particles from us? Could their periodical table have more elements?
 
  • #25
Also could someone elaborate on the this question.
I once heard that not every galaxy can even harbor life, my teacher told me that only spiral galaxies can have life. Other galaxies cannot have life because they are not spinning there for new stars are not being born, or something to that extent.
 
  • #26
Flustered said:
Do all intelligent civilizations evolve like we do? Do they all go through the same technology advances we do?
We don't know.

Probably there are some considerable differences, but we kind of assume a certain amount of convergent evolution in both biology and technology. (Not the kind that leads to bipedal axial symmetry, but the kind that leads to physical multi-cellular bodies with sensors, organs and brains, as well as a desire to observe the "thousand point of light" in the night sky.)
Flustered said:
Is it possible for life forms on the other side of the universe to have different elements and particles from us?
They might be made of different elements than us, though those elements will still be from our periodic table

Flustered said:
Could their periodical table have more elements?
No.

Flustered said:
I once heard that not every galaxy can even harbor life, my teacher told me that only spiral galaxies can have life. Other galaxies cannot have life because they are not spinning there for new stars are not being born, or something to that extent.
meh.

There are arguments that they may harbor less life than life as we know it, but it's pretty speculative.
 
  • #27
Flustered said:
Do all intelligent civilizations evolve like we do? Do they all go through the same technology advances we do?
Evolutionary processes are the same whether or not it is life in the Earth's oceans or dots on a simulator but that doesn't mean they have to be anything like us physically or socially (beyond the need to be able to reproduce with variation to evolve and have the faculties to innovate and build/use tools).

There's little reason to believe that they will have the same technology though they may develop similar solutions to similar problems. It all depends on what natural and social problems they attempt to overcome, what resources they have to do it and what their psychology and culture permit.

This is speculation (albeit logical) and doesn't really mean much until we have more than one tool-using species that we would judge equivalently intelligent to compare ourselves with.
 
  • #28
Ryan_m_b said:
Evolutionary processes are the same whether or not it is life in the Earth's oceans or dots on a simulator but that doesn't mean they have to be anything like us physically or socially (beyond the need to be able to reproduce with variation to evolve and have the faculties to innovate and build/use tools).

There's little reason to believe that they will have the same technology though they may develop similar solutions to similar problems. It all depends on what natural and social problems they attempt to overcome, what resources they have to do it and what their psychology and culture permit.

This is speculation (albeit logical) and doesn't really mean much until we have more than one tool-using species that we would judge equivalently intelligent to compare ourselves with.

Is it a given that a type 1 civilization can only get there if math is involved, math is a big part of physics and what not. Is it possible for a civilization to get farther than us without math? Also would they have the same concepts as us? Would they need to use negative numbers like we do? Could they advance farther without language?

Michio Kaku was saying that star wars would be a type 3 civilization, is it even possible for all those different life forms to be living in the same galaxy at the same time and fighting one another. I know it is SCI FY but what are the chances? Also Kaku was talking about civilizations taking all of their power from the stars, how would a civilization begin to take solar power from all the visible stars and use it?
 
  • #29
Flustered said:
Is it a given that a type 1 civilization can only get there if math is involved, math is a big part of physics and what not. Is it possible for a civilization to get farther than us without math? Also would they have the same concepts as us? Would they need to use negative numbers like we do? Could they advance farther without language?

Michio Kaku was saying that star wars would be a type 3 civilization, is it even possible for all those different life forms to be living in the same galaxy at the same time and fighting one another. I know it is SCI FY but what are the chances? Also Kaku was talking about civilizations taking all of their power from the stars, how would a civilization begin to take solar power from all the visible stars and use it?
The kardashev scale isn't a scientific proposition, it's an idea that doesn't entirely make much sense. The idea being that type 2s have the capability to build Dyson spheres and a type 3 simply does this to all stars in the galaxy, but there is no reason to think that there is an absolute path that a tool-using, sentient race would follow this scale. Regarding mathematics it would be pretty important, you can't produce any good science, economics or even politics without it and it would most likely be similar.
 
  • #30
Off topic//

Our all galaxies the same age? And has any galaxies that we know of, started to "die" or are "dead".
 
  • #31
Orion1 said:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c64Aia4XE1Y


Watch the TED lecture by astrophysicist George Smoot. The short answer is that this is the limit of the present galaxy sky survey data which must be mapped and cataloged.

Reference:
George Smoot: The design of the Universe

Problems with this video, how can we map 360 degrees the CMB, but not 360 degrees of all the galaxies in the universe?

He also didn't explain what in our galaxy is blocking us from mapping the voids, nor did he explain why telescopes can't do it either.

He also said our galaxy is on the "boonies" not at the CENTER of the universe, he was implying that there is a center of the universe, he said it as clear as day.

In another thread, everyone is saying there is no center, but he said different.
 
  • #32
Is there a connection between the formation of galaxy superclusters, and the human brain cells. They look a lot alike.
 
  • #33
Flustered said:
Off topic//
Our all galaxies the same age? And has any galaxies that we know of, started to "die" or are "dead".
All galaxies are not the same age, no. But galaxies won't really die. Galaxies are just collections of stars. I suppose in principle a galaxy could be composed of nothing but dead stars...

Flustered said:
Is there a connection between the formation of galaxy superclusters, and the human brain cells. They look a lot alike.
No. Not in any but the most basic ways in mechanics of shapes. (A bubble and a star are both spherical but only because they are both comprised of competing symmetrical inward and outward forces).
 
  • #34
Flustered said:
Problems with this video, how can we map 360 degrees the CMB, but not 360 degrees of all the galaxies in the universe?

He also didn't explain what in our galaxy is blocking us from mapping the voids, nor did he explain why telescopes can't do it either.

The CMB is a much longer wavelength than visible and infrared light and is able to penetrate through large sections of our galaxy to be seen, whereas most of the visible light is blocked by dust. It is also very very smooth and is fairly easy to capture a large portion of the sky. In contrast, the vast majority of galaxies require a very high magnification and multiple hours of exposure time to see properly. This puts constraints on how much we can map with the few telescopes we have that can even see them. As an example, consider the Hubble Deep Field and Hubble Ultra Deep Field images. They requires DAYS of exposure time just to capture a very very small area of the sky.

He also said our galaxy is on the "boonies" not at the CENTER of the universe, he was implying that there is a center of the universe, he said it as clear as day.

If you go to the video again, you can see that he said we were not at the center of our Solar System, Galaxy, and Cluster, not universe.
 
  • #35
Several Speculative Scenarios

There are no active civilizations within a few tens of thousands of light years. Active being functional and broadcasting for at least a hundred thousand years time. [radius of the galaxy]

There are no civilizations active within a hundred thousand years in time, don't forget we are separated in time as much as space. There is only a 100,000 year window of detection after a civilizations stops broadcasting in one wavelength

All current active advanced civilizations use different communication systems than we do, perhaps ones we have not thought of. Maybe other frequencies or other ideas we have not tried

We are the first civilization to emerge and activate in the galaxy

We are alone in the galaxy

Communication methods fade into the cosmic background after a distance. (most likely, stuff fades out as distances get larger) You need power to go long.

We are not trying hard enough [money]
 
<h2>1. Why haven't we heard any alien radio signals yet?</h2><p>There are a few possible explanations for why we have not yet detected any alien radio signals. One possibility is that we simply have not searched a large enough portion of the universe. Another possibility is that advanced civilizations may use different forms of communication that we are not yet capable of detecting. Additionally, the signals may be too weak or distorted by the time they reach us. </p><h2>2. How long have we been searching for alien radio signals?</h2><p>We have been actively searching for alien radio signals since the 1960s, with the launch of the first radio telescopes specifically designed for this purpose. However, some scientists argue that this is a relatively short period of time in the grand scale of the universe, and it may take much longer for us to detect any signals.</p><h2>3. Is it possible that aliens are purposely avoiding contact with us?</h2><p>While it is certainly possible that advanced civilizations may choose to avoid contact with us, there is currently no evidence to support this theory. Additionally, if aliens were purposely avoiding contact, it is unlikely that they would be broadcasting radio signals that we could detect in the first place.</p><h2>4. Are there any ongoing efforts to search for alien radio signals?</h2><p>Yes, there are ongoing efforts to search for alien radio signals, including the SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) program. These efforts involve using radio telescopes to scan the skies for any potential signals that may indicate the presence of intelligent life.</p><h2>5. How would we know if we did receive an alien radio signal?</h2><p>If we were to receive an alien radio signal, it would likely be a highly unusual and distinct pattern that could not be explained by any natural phenomenon. Scientists would carefully analyze the signal to determine its origin and any potential message it may contain. However, it is important to note that just because we have not yet detected any signals does not necessarily mean that we are alone in the universe.</p>

1. Why haven't we heard any alien radio signals yet?

There are a few possible explanations for why we have not yet detected any alien radio signals. One possibility is that we simply have not searched a large enough portion of the universe. Another possibility is that advanced civilizations may use different forms of communication that we are not yet capable of detecting. Additionally, the signals may be too weak or distorted by the time they reach us.

2. How long have we been searching for alien radio signals?

We have been actively searching for alien radio signals since the 1960s, with the launch of the first radio telescopes specifically designed for this purpose. However, some scientists argue that this is a relatively short period of time in the grand scale of the universe, and it may take much longer for us to detect any signals.

3. Is it possible that aliens are purposely avoiding contact with us?

While it is certainly possible that advanced civilizations may choose to avoid contact with us, there is currently no evidence to support this theory. Additionally, if aliens were purposely avoiding contact, it is unlikely that they would be broadcasting radio signals that we could detect in the first place.

4. Are there any ongoing efforts to search for alien radio signals?

Yes, there are ongoing efforts to search for alien radio signals, including the SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) program. These efforts involve using radio telescopes to scan the skies for any potential signals that may indicate the presence of intelligent life.

5. How would we know if we did receive an alien radio signal?

If we were to receive an alien radio signal, it would likely be a highly unusual and distinct pattern that could not be explained by any natural phenomenon. Scientists would carefully analyze the signal to determine its origin and any potential message it may contain. However, it is important to note that just because we have not yet detected any signals does not necessarily mean that we are alone in the universe.

Similar threads

Replies
21
Views
2K
  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
Replies
10
Views
10K
Replies
1
Views
753
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
1
Views
927
  • Biology and Medical
Replies
26
Views
6K
  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
Replies
3
Views
1K
Replies
10
Views
5K
  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
3
Replies
78
Views
15K
  • General Discussion
Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
1
Views
1K
Back
Top