'Why haven't the aliens come yet?' frightening answer from scientists to the question
'Why haven't the aliens come yet?' frightening answer from scientists to the question
It has long been debated in the astronomical community why aliens still do not visit Earth or communicate with humans. The last two scientists answered this question with a nightmare scenario that concerns humanity.
Two scientists trying to find a solution to the Fermi Paradox have found a possible and frightening explanation: Advanced civilizations may be doomed to collapse and disintegrate before they can communicate with other civilizations. This paradox, named after the Italian physicist Enrico Fermi, can be roughly summarized with the following question: If there are so many galaxies, stars and planets, the probability of extraterrestrial life is very high. So why haven't we made contact with the aliens yet? According to the new hypothesis, as space-faring civilizations advance technologically, they come to a crisis point where innovation cannot keep up with energy demand. The hypothesis, detailed in a paper published in the peer-reviewed scientific journal Royal Society Open Science, is signed by astrobiologist Michael Wong of the Carnegie Institute for Science and Stuart Bartlett of the California Institute of Technology.
ADVANCED CIVILIZATIONS SHALL INTO THEIR
"Civilizations are either collapsing by depleting their resources or are turning to homeostasis, where cosmic expansion is no longer seen as a goal, making civilization more difficult to detect by those living on other planets," the article said. Homeostasis or balancing is a concept borrowed from biology. The effort of the cells to maintain their own balance in the face of the negativities in their environment means the regulation of the internal balance in changing conditions. According to the article, at the point where innovation cannot reach the energy demand, civilizations that find the solution to reduce their energy consumption turn inward. Therefore, it is not possible for them to reach other star systems, and their existence cannot be discovered by Earthlings. The article also states: "These two possibilities are consistent with the fact that we did not find civilizations across the galaxy." Two scientists formed this hypothesis by examining studies of the "superlinear" growth of cities around the world.
CIVILIZATIONS CLOSE TO THE EASY TARGET
These studies showed that as the population increases, the energy consumption of cities increases exponentially, and this inevitably evolves into crisis points that cause rapid collapses. On the other hand, the two scientists argued that near-collapse civilizations that consume large amounts of energy "insanely and unsustainably" are the easiest targets to communicate. On the other hand, it may be much more difficult to communicate with civilizations that detect collapse and take steps to prevent it. Accordingly, at this stage, societies must have abandoned the goal of unlimited expansion beyond the stars and adopted an understanding that prioritized development and harmony with the environment. While such civilizations may not completely abandon space exploration, they are not expected to continue this pursuit on scales large enough to make contact with Earth.
'SPACE VEHICLE' ALLEGED BY HARVARD SCIENTIST
Israeli-American astrophysicist Avi Loeb, who holds the title of 'the longest-serving department head' at Harvard University's chair of astronomy, claimed that the asteroid 'Oumuamua', which passed by the Solar System in 2017, could be an object belonging to extraterrestrial life. caught all the attention. prof. Loeb claimed in April that the object may have been made by extraterrestrials. He even suggested that the interstellar body that fell to Earth was a type of spacecraft. So much so that after the US Space Command (USSC) verified the information on April 7, Loeb also called for an expedition to find what was left of the object, and said he wanted to examine the 10 square kilometer region of the Pacific Ocean where the object was located.