I have always been fascinated by astronomy, astronauts, space exploration, and the thought of finding life on other planets since my father began sharing updates on space exploration with me when I was a young child. Since then I have become much more familiar with quantum physics and particle physics, and am fascinated by all of the various studies of our physical world. Secondary interests of mine include marine exploration, marine biology, archaeology, taxonomy, biochemistry, and nuclear chemistry.
My greatest accomplishment (as far as I believe) is dispelling the Fermi Paradox by way of demonstrating that the universe is still too young to be filled with advanced civilizations, though it should be relatively soon (5-15 billion years). I am continuing to brush up on the history of the universe, the solar system, and Earth's life as we learn more about it, and honing my understanding of the time ranges we can expect. One day I hope to publish this result, complete with significant evidence vindicating my hypothesis and completely crushing the idea that we should ever expect to actually observe any civilizations at our current tech level, even if there were many of them in our galaxy.
- Birthday
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Dec 15, 1983
(Age: 41)
- Location
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Washington, USA
- Education in Progress
- Not in school
- Educational Background
- Undergrad
- Favorite Area of Science
- astrophysics and astrobiology
- Favorite Scientist/s
- Mike Brown; Nikola Tesla; Stephen Hawking
- Favorite Books
- How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming; Bio of a Space Tyrant