What WOULD be adequate proof of alien visitation to Earth?

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    Alien Earth Proof
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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the criteria for what would constitute adequate proof of alien visitation to Earth. Participants explore various hypotheses, scenarios, and the implications of such proof, touching on theoretical, conceptual, and speculative aspects of extraterrestrial life and visitation.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that significant evidence, such as a clear manufactured object that cannot be explained by natural processes, would be necessary to convince the world of alien visitation.
  • Others propose that the consensus of the scientific community regarding the evidence would be a crucial factor in determining the validity of claims about alien visitation.
  • Several participants express skepticism about the feasibility of alien visitation, arguing that the logistics of such an event would be monumental and unlikely.
  • Some participants reference fictional scenarios, like those depicted in movies, as examples of what might be considered convincing evidence, while questioning their realism.
  • There are discussions about the potential for advanced civilizations to send robotic probes rather than manned missions, with differing views on the capabilities and motivations of such civilizations.
  • Some participants reflect on their past beliefs in UFO conspiracies and express a desire for more rational and scientifically grounded discussions about extraterrestrial life.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views, with no clear consensus on what constitutes adequate proof of alien visitation. There are competing hypotheses about the nature of evidence required and the plausibility of alien contact.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the complexity of defining proof and the assumptions underlying their arguments, including the nature of evidence, the capabilities of advanced civilizations, and the implications of human technological progress.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to those exploring the intersection of science, philosophy, and speculative thought regarding extraterrestrial life and the implications of potential contact with alien civilizations.

  • #31
Jarvis323 said:
I think you've misread my posts.
Okay, we're saying that:

a) An uncrewed interstellar craft is still potentially far in the future, but is plausible. Especially if a trip to Alpha Centauri that takes a hundred years is acceptable.

b) A crewed mission to Alpha Centauri presents an additional order of magnitude of difficulty. And, rather than be an overall help to a mission, a human crew would make the mission an order of magnitude harder to achieve.

What are you saying?
 
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  • #32
Jarvis323 said:
All of the early prototypes involved things like pulsed nuclear propulsion, which would get the crafts up to something like .1c to .4c. Over long distances, damage would accumulate to the shields from dust, and the shields would need to be repaired. I'll look for the references in a bit when I have time. You can look up Daedalus and follow the links.
Jarvis323 said:
Here is one paper on dust damage.

https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1525731
That paper doesn't say the damage would need to be repaired.
 
  • #33
PeroK said:
Okay, we're saying that:

a) An uncrewed interstellar craft is still potentially far in the future, but is plausible. Especially if a trip to Alpha Centauri that takes a hundred years is acceptable.

b) A crewed mission to Alpha Centauri presents an additional order of magnitude of difficulty. And, rather than be an overall help to a mission, a human crew would make the mission an order of magnitude harder to achieve.
c) Neither "AI" nor general purpose robots are required either.
 
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  • #34
russ_watters said:
That paper doesn't say the damage would need to be repaired.
I said that the prototype missions I know of included autonomous robots that would repair damage accumulating from dust.
 
  • #35
Jarvis323 said:
I said that the prototype missions I know of included autonomous robots that would repair damage accumulating from dust.
Yes, and I said I'd like to see references for that. In response, you referenced a paper that appears to directly contradict your claim that repairs are needed.
 
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  • #36
PeroK said:
Okay, we're saying that:

a) An uncrewed interstellar craft is still potentially far in the future, but is plausible. Especially if a trip to Alpha Centauri that takes a hundred years is acceptable.

b) A crewed mission to Alpha Centauri presents an additional order of magnitude of difficulty. And, rather than be an overall help to a mission, a human crew would make the mission an order of magnitude harder to achieve.

What are you saying?
It seems you are trying to read between the lines in what I am saying or something. What I am saying is exactly what I said, taken literally. Some of what I have said can be almost summarized as an argument that (b) isn't necessarily true and might well be false. Except that (b) seems to be based on a misrepresentation of my previous arguments, which were that biological entities that have been genetically enhanced and augmented with technology might end up being the state of the art for maintaining and carrying out interstellar missions before classical robots with AI are. I never said humans, except when I said it could be possible that our descendants or creations may fit this category at some point.

I haven't said anything about (a) except to imply that 100 years isn't a long time in the grand scheme of things, and that all of the proposed missions I've seen identify automatons as being necessary in order to repair damage. I just got free, so I'll post the links to those proposals.
 
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  • #37
Presumably any advanced civilization would want to outlive the star around which it originated, maybe not with a galactic empire, but at least spreading to a few nearby systems. Perhaps no civilization in our galaxy has yet reached the point where they had to start thinking about the issue.
 
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  • #38
"What WOULD be adequate proof of alien visitation to Earth?"

I haven't read the other answers in this thread yet, but here's my answer:
Something physical we can all see (and maybe touch and feel), i.e. physical evidence.
 
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  • #39
DennisN said:
"What WOULD be adequate proof of alien visitation to Earth?"

I haven't read the other answers in this thread yet, but here's my answer:
Something physical we can all see (and maybe touch and feel), i.e. physical evidence.
We might be able to see them with these glasses!
5D447C75-03A7-4EAE-A830-BB50428F7680.jpeg
 
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  • #40
russ_watters said:
Yes, and I said I'd like to see references for that. In response, you referenced a paper that appears to directly contradict your claim that repairs are needed.
I disagree that the paper contradicts my claim that repairs are needed. I posted that link in response mainly to Perok's skepticism emoji that presumably expressed skepticism that interstellar dust could cause damage.

I'm having trouble finding copies of the original documents that source the things I've read about repairs being needed. But maybe this will do for now (last 4 pages).

https://kiss.caltech.edu/workshops/systems/presentations/garrett.pdf
 
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  • #41
Jarvis323 said:
I disagree that the paper contradicts my claim that repairs are needed. I posted that link in response mainly to Perok's skepticism emoji that presumably expressed skepticism that interstellar dust could cause damage.

I'm having trouble finding copies of the original documents that source the things I've read about repairs being needed. But maybe this will do for now (last 4 pages).

https://kiss.caltech.edu/workshops/systems/presentations/garrett.pdf
Thanks, but page 18 says that at 20% C, for a 6 LY mission, the erosion would equal 1 cm of aluminum. That seems pretty manageable to me.

These papers at least strongly imply that the solution to the problem is better shielding, not in-flight repair.
[edit]
But I hadn't gotten to page 20 yet. It does indeed say it needs robots capable of in-flight repair. I don't think they've demonstrated the need since it is listed in the conclusions even though I don't see it being discussed in the report, but fair enough, it's in there.
 
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  • #42
The autonomous probes would be self -replicating, and with the ability to harness solar energy to convert asteroids or other stellar material into millions or billions of new probes at each new system. Would not care about the attrition rate from dust or mechanical failure, numbers would solve all that. The probes likely would be small as possible to minimize the energy needed to accelerate to reasonable speeds - so maybe they are here now, but too small and dark to see. This model, which could have covered the whole galaxy within a few million years, is most applicable to the Fermi Paradox

https://arxiv.org/pdf/1111.6131.pdf
 
  • #43
I believe we have exhausted any allowable answers without going down the wacky hole. There is no answer we can prove without an obvious alien presence, I don't mean actual aliens, but indisputable proof, all else is currently speculation. Not saying that there isn't already proof, we just can't verify it, like in court "beyond a reasonable doubt".
 
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