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There Are Probably Alien Civilizations in the Cosmos, but We’ll Never See Them

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Where is everybody? The great physicist Enrico Fermi first posed the challenging question over half

Where is everybody? The great physicist Enrico Fermi first posed the challenging question over half a century ago, wondering why we appear to be alone despite life appearing in the universe. Perhaps the most straightforward answer is that while alien life and even civilizations may be abundant throughout the galaxy, the vast gulfs of time and space that separate us may make us effectively all alone. Here’s the gist of Fermi’s famous paradox. We know for sure that life, and intelligent species capable of great technological civilizations, has appeared at least once in the universe. The proof: we’re it. But the universe doesn’t tend to do things just once. There isn’t one star, or one galaxy, or one hydrogen atom in the cosmos. When the universe allows something to happen, that thing is almost always ridiculously common, mostly because there’s a whole bunch of universe to allow it. So if life happened here—once—then it means that life can’t be rare. In other words, Fermi’s argument goes, there’s nothing special about us. So there must be multitudes of lifeforms and intelligent civilizations across every galaxy throughout the universe. And given that the universe has been around for nearly 14 billion years, there has been more than enough time for life to arise, civilizations to develop, and for those aliens to develop the technology needed to completely colonize an entire galaxy. Even if all those civilizations last for only a relatively fleeting amount of time (say, a million years or so), then at least their technological remnants and ruins should be littered anywhere. And yet, we don’t see anybody. No radio signals from the deep. No signs of alien technology orbiting some distant star. No ruins or remnants to speak of. As far as our observations suggest, we are completely alone. So what gives? Where is everybody? [View in Browser]( [Popular Mechanics]( [SHOP]( [EXCLUSIVE]( [SUBSCRIBE]( [There Are Probably Alien Civilizations in the Cosmos, but We’ll Never See Them]( [There Are Probably Alien Civilizations in the Cosmos, but We’ll Never See Them]( [There Are Probably Alien Civilizations in the Cosmos, but We’ll Never See Them]( Where is everybody? The great physicist Enrico Fermi first posed the challenging question over half a century ago, wondering why we appear to be alone despite life appearing in the universe. Perhaps the most straightforward answer is that while alien life and even civilizations may be abundant throughout the galaxy, the vast gulfs of time and space that separate us may make us effectively all alone. Here’s the gist of Fermi’s famous paradox. We know for sure that life, and intelligent species capable of great technological civilizations, has appeared at least once in the universe. The proof: we’re it. But the universe doesn’t tend to do things just once. There isn’t one star, or one galaxy, or one hydrogen atom in the cosmos. When the universe allows something to happen, that thing is almost always ridiculously common, mostly because there’s a whole bunch of universe to allow it. So if life happened here—once—then it means that life can’t be rare. In other words, Fermi’s argument goes, there’s nothing special about us. So there must be multitudes of lifeforms and intelligent civilizations across every galaxy throughout the universe. And given that the universe has been around for nearly 14 billion years, there has been more than enough time for life to arise, civilizations to develop, and for those aliens to develop the technology needed to completely colonize an entire galaxy. Even if all those civilizations last for only a relatively fleeting amount of time (say, a million years or so), then at least their technological remnants and ruins should be littered anywhere. And yet, we don’t see anybody. No radio signals from the deep. No signs of alien technology orbiting some distant star. No ruins or remnants to speak of. As far as our observations suggest, we are completely alone. So what gives? Where is everybody? Where is everybody? The great physicist Enrico Fermi first posed the challenging question over half a century ago, wondering why we appear to be alone despite life appearing in the universe. Perhaps the most straightforward answer is that while alien life and even civilizations may be abundant throughout the galaxy, the vast gulfs of time and space that separate us may make us effectively all alone. Here’s the gist of Fermi’s famous paradox. We know for sure that life, and intelligent species capable of great technological civilizations, has appeared at least once in the universe. The proof: we’re it. But the universe doesn’t tend to do things just once. There isn’t one star, or one galaxy, or one hydrogen atom in the cosmos. When the universe allows something to happen, that thing is almost always ridiculously common, mostly because there’s a whole bunch of universe to allow it. So if life happened here—once—then it means that life can’t be rare. In other words, Fermi’s argument goes, there’s nothing special about us. So there must be multitudes of lifeforms and intelligent civilizations across every galaxy throughout the universe. And given that the universe has been around for nearly 14 billion years, there has been more than enough time for life to arise, civilizations to develop, and for those aliens to develop the technology needed to completely colonize an entire galaxy. Even if all those civilizations last for only a relatively fleeting amount of time (say, a million years or so), then at least their technological remnants and ruins should be littered anywhere. And yet, we don’t see anybody. No radio signals from the deep. No signs of alien technology orbiting some distant star. No ruins or remnants to speak of. As far as our observations suggest, we are completely alone. So what gives? Where is everybody? [Read More]( [Read More]( [Becoming Lighter and More Lethal, the Army Is Taking Its Abrams Tank to the Next Level]( [Becoming Lighter and More Lethal, the Army Is Taking Its Abrams Tank to the Next Level]( Taking lessons from the Ukraine War, the next M1 Abrams tank will shed weight and gain a slew of new capabilities. [Read More]( [Alternate text] [Alternate text] [What Happens After You Flush: How Wastewater Treatment Plants Transform Sewage Into Safe Water]( [What Happens After You Flush: How Wastewater Treatment Plants Transform Sewage Into Safe Water]( The water from your toilet doesn’t just empty into the Atlantic Ocean like you saw in Finding Nemo. [Read More]( [Why Dusty Military Boneyards Have Become a Purgatory for Expensive U.S. Aircraft]( Why Dusty Military Boneyards Have Become a Purgatory for Expensive U.S. Aircraft]( Warplanes can last for decades, and then remain structurally viable for several decades more. America is one of the few countries rich enough to store its planes rather than scrap them. [Read More]( [Alternate text] [Alternate text] [France Says the iPhone 12 Emits Too Much Radiation. Here’s What You Should Know]( [France Says the iPhone 12 Emits Too Much Radiation. Here’s What You Should Know]( Most cell phones give off negligible radiation, but some could be harmful. [Read More]( [A Teen Died Attempting the ‘One Chip Challenge.’ Are Spicy Foods Really That Dangerous?]( [A Teen Died Attempting the ‘One Chip Challenge.’ Are Spicy Foods Really That Dangerous?]( At a certain point, foods with high levels of capsaicin are practically considered a poison. [Read More]( [Alternate text] [POP Membership]( [LiveIntent Logo]( [AdChoices Logo]( Follow Us [Unsubscribe]( | [Privacy Notice]( | [CA Notice at Collection]( Popular Mechanics is a publication of Hearst Magazines. ©2023 Hearst Magazine Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This email was sent by Hearst Magazines, 300 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019-3779

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