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  by Adam Smith
 June 15, 
			2020
 
			from
			
			TheIndependent Website 
			
			
			Spanish version
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 New 
			calculations could shed light
 
			on the fate of 
			our own species and planet... 
			
 
 There could be more than 30
			
			alien civilizations in our galaxy, 
			researchers have found in a major study.
 
 A new paper (The 
			Astrobiological Copernican Weak and Strong Limits for Intelligent 
			Life) looked to understand how many planets in our 
			neighborhood could be home to alien life, by assuming that life 
			develops on other planets in a similar way to how it develops on 
			Earth, and matching that to planets that could be home to similar 
			evolution.
 
 It found that there could be dozens of active civilizations waiting 
			to be found in our Milky Way.
 
			  
			But it could also shed 
			light on our own fate, and suggest our prospects for long-term 
			survival are lower than we may have thought. 
				
				"There should be at 
				least a few dozen active civilizations in our Galaxy under the 
				assumption that it takes 5 billion years for intelligent life to 
				form on other planets, as on Earth," Christopher Conselice of 
				the University of Nottingham said in a statement.
 "The idea is looking at evolution, but on a cosmic scale. We 
				call this calculation the Astrobiological Copernican Limit."
 
			The Astrobiological 
			Copernican limits come in two forms. 
				
				One is the 'Weak' 
				limit, which suggests that intelligent life forms on a planet 
				any time after 5 billion years.    
				The other is the 
				'Strong' limit where life formed between 4.5 billion and 5 
				billion years years ago. 
			The new research used the 
			latter, and also assumed that these new species would need to 
			develop in metal-rich environments. 
				
				This is because human 
				beings developed near a metal-rich environment, due to the metal 
				present in 
				the Sun.
 Previous research from 2012 suggests a suitable "minimum stellar 
				metallicity" required for the formation of planets that would be 
				similar to Earth.
 
 Researchers were then able to use those assumptions about where 
				life (similar to ours) may form to understand how many 
				planets in our Milky Way would be able to satisfy those 
				conditions.
 
			Detecting any 
			civilizations in our galaxy is strongly dependent on how well we can 
			pick up signals being sent into space. 
				
				These include radio 
				transmissions from satellites and television.  
			If these technological 
			civilizations last as long as ours, which has been sending out 
			signals for the last century or so, then it is estimated there could 
			be 36 ongoing intelligent civilizations. 
			While that might be the case, interacting with them would be 
			difficult. The average distance to any possible civilization would 
			be 17,000 light years, which makes communication very 
			challenging.
 
 The other scenario is that we are the 'only' intelligent life in 
			the galaxy (sic), and that civilizations die out before we can 
			detect them.
 
				
				"Our new research 
				suggests that searches for extraterrestrial intelligent 
				civilizations not only reveals the existence of how life forms, 
				but also gives us clues for how long our own civilization will
				(could) last," Professor Conselice said.   
				"If we find that
				
				intelligent life is common then 
				this would reveal that our civilization could exist for much 
				longer than a few hundred years, alternatively if we find that 
				there are no active civilizations in our Galaxy it is a bad sign 
				for our own long-term existence.    
				By searching for 
				extraterrestrial intelligent life - even if we find nothing 
				- we are discovering our own future and fate." 
			The new study (The 
			Astrobiological Copernican Weak and Strong Limits for Intelligent 
			Life) was led by the University of Nottingham and 
			published today in The Astrophysical Journal.
 This is not the only recent news to imply the development of 
			intelligent life in the galaxy.
 
 Scientists have found a potential habitable planet called 'Proxima 
			b' around the star
			
			Proxima Centauri, approximately 4.2 
			light years from the Sun.
 
 It receives comparable amounts of energy to that the Earth gets from 
			the Sun.
 
			  
			If there is liquid form 
			on the planet, it could harbor 'life' (like ours), but 
			researchers said there is still much to be done before that can be 
			confirmed, such as checking for the atmosphere and chemicals that 
			could support life. 
			  
			  
			  
			  
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