What is the probability of life in Universe?

In summary, most scientists believe that there is a high probability of life on other planets in the universe, but it is still very difficult to find evidence of it.
  • #36
Dickfore said:
It's 1 ...
No, that's the probability of you not reading the opening post.


...the probability of having life on other planets..

:rolleyes:
 
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  • #37
Ahahah. too late. I saw that. :wink:
 
  • #38
DaveC426913 said:
Ahahah. too late. I saw that. :wink:
Did you see the reason for deletion? :blushing: Instead of the op, I saw the first post on the 3rd page.
 
  • #39
I like the idea of a high probability of life anywhere liquid water is found, and an extreme probability where oxygen exists in the atmosphere of an exoplanet. Both are the subject of study by exobiologists. Evidence of liquid water has already been found on the moons of Jupiter and Saturn. An undersea volcano would provide sufficient energy to fuel carbon based life forms. Current evidence suggests this is how life originated on earth. It is unlikely any element other than carbon would permit the complex molecules necessary for life. Silicon runs a very poor second.
 
  • #40
Thinking about this makes my head spin!

From the 200 billion stars in the milky way, how many planets on average for each? From the ones with planets, how many are stable solar systems? From those, how many will remain relatively uninterrupted for billions of years (not only the central star(s) but uninterrupted from outside-the-solar-system influences)? From those how many have a 'free' goldie locks area (no asteroid fields, no collisions for billions of years, no gas giants, no highly elliptical or irregular orbits)? From those how many have giant outside planets, such as Jupiter and Saturn that shield the life-bearing planets from asteroids and other planet killers? From those how many have a lot of water? From those how many have the other ingredients for life?

I can see the 200 billion stars yielding zero or a handful of candidates before we even ask if intelligent life can arise in them.

I'd like to know when do we think scientists will be able to come up with a more accurate estimate? 100 years from now? 50? 25?
 
  • #41
Chronos said:
I like the idea of a high probability of life anywhere liquid water is found, and an extreme probability where oxygen exists in the atmosphere of an exoplanet. Both are the subject of study by exobiologists. Evidence of liquid water has already been found on the moons of Jupiter and Saturn. An undersea volcano would provide sufficient energy to fuel carbon based life forms. Current evidence suggests this is how life originated on earth. It is unlikely any element other than carbon would permit the complex molecules necessary for life. Silicon runs a very poor second.

I agree Chronos. Its great that we have such close neighbours to study that are in the infant form of a possible abiogenesis. I am also convinced that panspermia is a definite player in the appearance of (carbon based:rolleyes:) life. The liquid water and oxygen atmosphere not only provide good conditions for it but also provide a familiar environment for any visiting bacteria or large virus.

It is entirely probable that Mars seeded Earth or that Earth seeded Mars with life during the last 4.5 billion years. Especially since Mars shows signs of having been hit and having lost half her crust and all her oceans. At least some of her ejected bacteria or megaviruses could have made it here and began to colonize again.
 
  • #42
ranrod said:
Thinking about this makes my head spin!

From the 200 billion stars in the milky way, how many planets on average for each? From the ones with planets, how many are stable solar systems? From those, how many will remain relatively uninterrupted for billions of years (not only the central star(s) but uninterrupted from outside-the-solar-system influences)? From those how many have a 'free' goldie locks area (no asteroid fields, no collisions for billions of years, no gas giants, no highly elliptical or irregular orbits)? From those how many have giant outside planets, such as Jupiter and Saturn that shield the life-bearing planets from asteroids and other planet killers? From those how many have a lot of water? From those how many have the other ingredients for life?

I can see the 200 billion stars yielding zero or a handful of candidates before we even ask if intelligent life can arise in them.

I'd like to know when do we think scientists will be able to come up with a more accurate estimate? 100 years from now? 50? 25?

Like Dr. Stephen Hawking says, intelligence may not be the ultimate result of evolution and may actually be a mutation that hinders the survival of our species. This may not bode well in the search for other intelligent beings. He does hold out hope of finding life on other planets mind you.
 
  • #43
baywax said:
Like Dr. Stephen Hawking says, intelligence may not be the ultimate result of evolution and may actually be a mutation that hinders the survival of our species. This may not bode well in the search for other intelligent beings. He does hold out hope of finding life on other planets mind you.

That statement may work locally, but bacteria (used in his example) can't see the giant asteroid that will wipe out the planet. Intelligence allows us to protect Earth, as well as make other homes elsewhere in the galaxy (though we may not be doing a good job at either). Besides, on what grounds could we claim there's an ultimate goal to evolution? I can make the converse case - what good are all the amazing wonderments of the universe if there's no one out there to comprehend them?
 
  • #44
ranrod said:
That statement may work locally, but bacteria (used in his example) can't see the giant asteroid that will wipe out the planet. Intelligence allows us to protect Earth, as well as make other homes elsewhere in the galaxy (though we may not be doing a good job at either). Besides, on what grounds could we claim there's an ultimate goal to evolution? I can make the converse case - what good are all the amazing wonderments of the universe if there's no one out there to comprehend them?

Its true that there is, in all probability, no ultimate goal of evolution... except that it seems to be "survival". With regard to "what good are all the amazing..."... "good" is only relative to an observer, if and when there is one.
 
  • #45
My view is pessimistic: We exist, and probability of life in INFINITE Universe is 1, and there are infinitely many inhabited planets, however, probably even in the whole observable Universe there are no other planets with life.

There is a BIG GAP between complex molecules and primitive cell organisms. Very likely first bacteria was created by PURE CHANCE - in any case, nobody AFAIK was able to split that big gap into simpler steps
 
  • #46
Here is another site I found on this subject which I like. http://www.tufts.edu/as/wright_center/cosmic_evolution/docs/fr_1/fr_1_chem.html"

In section Qualities of Life it makes the following profound statement
... The reason is that living systems are so much more complex than any inanimate objects; a potted plant is more complicated than the most splendid galaxy.
 
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  • #47
Gannet said:
Here is another site I found on this subject which I like. http://www.tufts.edu/as/wright_center/cosmic_evolution/docs/fr_1/fr_1_chem.html"

In section Qualities of Life it makes the following profound statement

That's a bizarre statement in every imaginable way. I'm not even sure what they mean by it... By galaxy, do they mean everything that happens on every cosmic body at any given time? Just the shape? The gravitational forces keeping them together? The shape?

Any way, Milky way. I think we can consider the statement irrefutably disproved now.
 
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  • #48
Dmitry67 said:
My view is pessimistic: We exist, and probability of life in INFINITE Universe is 1...

That is a very depressing statement :cry:

I would think if that "PURE CHANCE" you were talking about was 1 in 1,000 trillion, there would still be other planets with intelligent life. I guess that makes me optimistic :biggrin:
 
  • #49
Chronos said:
I like the idea of a high probability of life anywhere liquid water is found, and an extreme probability where oxygen exists in the atmosphere of an exoplanet.

Can you clarify? It seems you are saying that life should have a high probability of forming where there is oxygen.

IIRC, oxygen is not a requirement for life; life on Earth started in a CO2 and ammonia atmo.

The reason exobiologists are interested in it is because its presence in an atmo is a sign of life - but it is a waste product.

So the cause-effect relationship is the other way 'round: first life, then oxygen.
 
  • #50
DaveC426913 said:
Can you clarify? It seems you are saying that life should have a high probability of forming where there is oxygen.

IIRC, oxygen is not a requirement for life; life on Earth started in a CO2 and ammonia atmo.

The reason exobiologists are interested in it is because its presence in an atmo is a sign of life - but it is a waste product.

So the cause-effect relationship is the other way 'round: first life, then oxygen.

True Dave... however, the oxygen content of H2O is not a waste product and as someone or some paper has already pointed out in this thread amino acids are hydrophobic which probably coaxes them to bond together and form a primitive VRNA, RNA or DNA.
 
  • #51
Agreed dave, oxygen is the byproduct of life, not a prerequisite. Almost no other explanation is known that can account for free oxygen in a planetary atmosphere. Water, on the other hand, is a necessary precursor for life [as we know it]. It's presence is merely makes life a reasonable possibility.
 
  • #52
In infinite Universe the probability is irrelevant. I suspect that probability of life is about something 10**-200. But even in such case there are infinitely many planets with life - beyond the cosmological horizon
 
  • #53
I suspect that life is fairly likely (75%) to exist. But I am wondering what is the definition that classifies as life? And isn't life not requiring oxygen and can form based on any element? I did a report on diatoms and found that some in the Antarctic only require sulfur and iron to live.
Cheers, BT
 
  • #54
In the section Prospects for Life in the {Milky Way} Galaxy
http://www.tufts.edu/as/wright_center/cosmic_evolution/docs/fr_1/fr_1_future.html"

The following chart is shown (see attachment)
 

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  • #55
The problem with this figure is that the size of the boxes are complete guesses. We have a pretty good idea of the number of stars with planetary systems, but most of the other probabilities, such as:
(1) the probability that a planet is habitable, or
(2) the probability that if it is habitable that it has life, or
(3) the probability that if it has life that it has intelligent life

are complete guesses. Today we have no idea if these probabilities are 1 in 100 or 1 in 10^100.
 
  • #56
phyzguy said:
The problem with this figure is that the size of the boxes are complete guesses. We have a pretty good idea of the number of stars with planetary systems, but most of the other probabilities, such as:
(1) the probability that a planet is habitable, or
(2) the probability that if it is habitable that it has life, or
(3) the probability that if it has life that it has intelligent life

are complete guesses. Today we have no idea if these probabilities are 1 in 100 or 1 in 10^100.

Well not quite. We know that the worst the odds can possibly be at the highest level are 1 in 10^11 (one example in 500 billion stars).
 
  • #57
DaveC426913 said:
Well not quite. We know that the worst the odds can possibly be at the highest level are 1 in 10^11 (one example in 500 billion stars).

How do we know that? Are you basing it on the fact that there is intelligent life on Earth? We cannot draw conclusions of the probability of an event based on one example.
 
  • #58
phyzguy said:
How do we know that? Are you basing it on the fact that there is intelligent life on Earth? We cannot draw conclusions of the probability of an event based on one example.
Your wording was a bit ambiguous.

You were suggesting that the chances of any given planet in our galaxy being habitable could be as low as 1 in 10^100. I am simply saying that the odds for life on a a planet in the galaxy cannot be worse than 10^11, because in the sample 500 billion so far, we've found one example.

i.e. There are 10,000 clover plants in a field. You claim the odds that one of them is a four-leafed variety could be 1 in 10,000,000,000. I'm saying "Nope, I already have one from this field. That means the odds at worst are one in 10,000."

I think what you are trying to say is "the odds of finding another four-leafed variety could easily be 1 in 100,000,000." Which is true, it's just an odd way of calculating probabilities. Kind of like every time you get a positive hit, you toss it away and start counting again.
 
  • #59
DaveC426913 said:
You were suggesting that the chances of any given planet in our galaxy being habitable could be as low as 1 in 10^100. I am simply saying that the odds for life on a a planet in the galaxy cannot be worse than 10^11, because in the sample 500 billion so far, we've found one example.

?
This is true only if most of galaxies have life at least on one planet!
You are assuming that the choice of our galaxy is random, which is not of course (anthropic principle) - the sample is not fair - even worse, for obvious reasons this sample is guaranteed to be unfair until you find planets except our own

I claim that that probablility is 10**-200
This number is not only consstent with the data we have, but it is even supported by the observational data - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi_paradox - so called 'Great Silence'
 
  • #60
Dmitry67 said:
This is true only if most of galaxies have life at least on one planet!
You are assuming that the choice of our galaxy is random,

It hasn't been an assumption. We have been talking only about our galaxy.
 
  • #61
DaveC426913 said:
I am simply saying that the odds for life on a a planet in the galaxy cannot be worse than 10^11, because in the sample 500 billion so far, we've found one example.

You simply can't make probability arguments like this based on one data point. What you are saying is equivalent to the following reasoning:

(1) I deal out two poker hands. One is a royal flush.
(2) Therefore the odds of dealing a royal flush are at least 50%.
 
  • #62
phyzguy said:
You simply can't make probability arguments like this based on one data point. What you are saying is equivalent to the following reasoning:

(1) I deal out two poker hands. One is a royal flush.
(2) Therefore the odds of dealing a royal flush are at least 50%.

This analogy is flawed. A deck of cards is shuffled and then redealt. Our galaxy is not.

To keep your deck of cards analogy, we would say: this instance of the cards has dealt a royal flush, thus the probability of this instance dealing out a royal flush cannot be worse than 5 in 52 (the odds are, however, better than that, since there's 47 undealt cards that could still make a RF).


Is it possible that you are talking about galaxies, whereas I (and I thought everyone else) is talking about galaxy?
 
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  • #63
Our galaxy is SPECIAL because WE are there.
Imagine that probability of life is 10^-200 per planet
So only one of 10^-189 galaxies has life
Observer in that galaxy (based on your logic) would conclude that life is very likely event - because in his sample (one galaxy) there is life.
 
  • #64
DaveC426913 said:
I am simply saying that the odds for life on a a planet in the galaxy cannot be worse than 10^11, because in the sample 500 billion so far, we've found one example.

There are three problems with your argument. First, we have not examined 500 billion star systems and determined that only one has life. We've only examined one star system. Second, by your argument, why stop with only the galaxy? Why not include the entire observable universe, with ~ 10^23 stars? We haven't found any life anywhere. Third, even if we had examined 500 billion star systems, the fact that we only have one example means that the uncertainty in the estimate (which is proportional to the square root of the number of observations) is equal to the estimate itself. Back to my royal flush analogy. If I have two poker hands, and one is a royal flush, I can say that the odds of a royal flush are 50% +/-50% - in other words I know nothing about the odds of a royal flush. That is the situation we are in.
 
  • #65
Dmitry67 said:
Our galaxy is SPECIAL because WE are there.
Imagine that probability of life is 10^-200 per planet
So only one of 10^-189 galaxies has life
Observer in that galaxy (based on your logic) would conclude that life is very likely event - because in his sample (one galaxy) there is life.
But we have only been talking about our galaxy.

I must call a point of order here. While this thread is titled "life in the universe", the discussion has evolved since post 54 to "life in our galaxy".

In retrospect, this is not necessarily the shift everyone else has made (though I have been inserting it in every one of my posts), so I state retroactively that my discussions about odds are most definitely only applicable to our galaxy.

phyzguy said:
There are three problems with your argument. First, we have not examined 500 billion star systems and determined that only one has life. We've only examined one star system.
That is not a flaw.

If I turn over the top card of a deck and it's an ace, I can say with certainty that the odds of this deck containing aces are no worse than 1 in 52 (even if the chances are much higher than that).

phyzguy said:
Second, by your argument, why stop with only the galaxy?
Also not a flaw.

That is the premise of the argument we are in. My odds are based on this galaxy and this galaxy alone.

If you wish to set a different premise, I have no problem with that. The odds will change completely.


phyzguy said:
the fact that we only have one example means that the uncertainty in the estimate (which is proportional to the square root of the number of observations) is equal to the estimate itself. Back to my royal flush analogy. If I have two poker hands, and one is a royal flush, I can say that the odds of a royal flush are 50% +/-50% - in other words I know nothing about the odds of a royal flush. That is the situation we are in.
Hang on. You've twisted the analogy. You're not comparing apples to apples.

We're not talking about a hand; we're talking about the deck. The odds of a royal flush in the current configuration of cards cannot be 0; it is actually 1.

Deck = our galaxy
Hand = one planet

You are correct that the next hand that is dealt (i.e. the next planet we check) is not affected by the fact that the first hand dealt (the first planet we checked) turned up positive.

I was not saying otherwise.
 
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  • #66
*OUR* galaxy is special because we are here.
Even we know that probability of life in OUR galaxy is 1 (at least 1 inhabited planet exists) it does not give us anything.

Returning to your statement:

DaveC426913 said:
I am simply saying that the odds for life on a a planet in the galaxy cannot be worse than 10^11, because in the sample 500 billion so far, we've found one example.

If we randomly pick any planet in OUR galaxy, the probability that there is life on is >10**-11 - TRUE

If we randomly pick any planet, the probability that there is life on is >10**-11 - FALSE

In general, this number (10^11) is absolutely useless, because it does not give us any estimation about how rare is the life in the Unvierse.
 
  • #67
Dmitry67 said:
If we randomly pick any planet in OUR galaxy, the probability that there is life on is >10**-11 - TRUE

If we randomly pick any planet, the probability that there is life on is >10**-11 - FALSE

In general, this number (10^11) is absolutely useless, because it does not give us any estimation about how rare is the life in the Unvierse.

I agree completely. Stated another way, as you said, it is true that the odds of some planet in our galaxy having life is >10^-11, since there is life on Earth. However, this tells us nothing about the odds of there being life on some OTHER planet in our galaxy, which is of course what everyone wants to know.

Returning to your deck of cards analogy, it is correct, as DaveC said that if the first card is an ace, that then we know there is at least one ace in the deck. However, this tells us NOTHING about how many OTHER aces are in the deck.
 
  • #68
Dmitry67 said:
In general, this number (10^11) is absolutely useless, because it does not give us any estimation about how rare is the life in the Unvierse.

phyzguy said:
However, this tells us NOTHING about how many OTHER aces are in the deck.

Agreed. This whole side-thread came about because someone said the chances of life could be 1 in 10^100. There was some ambiguity about the scope that was applying to.
 
  • #69
There may be some additional coefficiants that are not being considered. One has already been brought up, that of the definition of life. In biology the definition has been somewhat addressed: something that reproduces, assimilates, has parties :wink: and so on. In talking about life in the universe we might have a different defintion. If we consider quantum mechanics, then life (or more specifically, consciousness) is necessary for there to even be matter otherwise everything is just probability waves. So in cosmology perhaps the definition of life is anything that collapses probability waves. Considering that we have had a limited time on this planet, and assuming that the galaxy existed before us, we might conclude that there was intelligent life before us in order for matter to exist. Quite abstract, but just pushing the envelope here in a playful sort of way.

Also (and I suppose in the same vein) and as someone else here mentioned, without life a universe full of matter, well...doesn't matter, and may not really exist in any real sense of the word. I have felt for sometime that matter and life can't really be separated, you have to have both. With consciousness (which I'm using here as an alternative word for life) you have to have matter, or there is nothing, and with matter you have to have consciousness or there is nothing. So with this in mind, life or at least consciousness in some form or another, must have always existed with the universe or the universe could not exist.

Again, just being playfully abstract.

This may not be relevant to this discussion as I think it's safe to say that what we are searching for is recognizable life, i.e. bacteria or civilizations.
 
  • #70
While playing with the odds may be "numerically" or scientifically correct I think (perhaps even believe) that life permeates our galaxy. I also think (not believe) that intelligent life is going to be much more scattered.
We have what some members of the scientific community claim are signs of microbial life in rocks originating on Mars and if we accept that then there are two planets in our solar system that have supported life and more possibilities with the moons of our two gas giants planets. I think that your odds are scewed by a total lack of real knowledge of what it takes to give life a chance. Carbon and hydrogen are found in abundance throughout the galaxy and all we need in addition to that is some form of energy and a solvent that will allow the chemicals to combine. I don't believe we have the knowledge to limit that to water although our experience says that is necessary. For that matter can we limit life to only carbon based? The galaxy holds more wonders than we can imagine.
I will let you all go back to computing odds when you only know one small hand in a deck that is much larger than 52 cards.
 

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