Stephen Hawking announces the “Breakthrough Starshot” initiative in New York in 2016. Dennis Van Tine / Star Max/IPx via AP
But those questions don’t address the larger one: Whether it’s a good idea to find out. Some scientists, most notably Stephen Hawking, are convinced the answer is a firm “No.”
“We only have to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life might develop into something we wouldn’t want to meet,”
Hawking said in 2010. He has compared meeting aliens to Christopher Columbus meeting Native Americans: “That didn’t turn out so well,” he said.
Others have warned of catastrophic consequences ripped from the pages of science fiction: Marauding aliens that could follow our message like a homing beacon, and come here to exploit Earth’s resources, exploit humans, or even to destroy all life as we know it.
“Any civilization detecting our presence is likely to be technologically very advanced, and may not be disposed to treat us nicely. At the very least, the idea seems morally questionable,” physicist Mark Buchanan argued in the journal Nature Physics last fall.
Related:
How Computers Are Learning to Predict the Future
Other astronomers think it’s worth the risk — and they add, somewhat darkly, that it’s too late anyway. We are a loud species, and our messages have been making their way through the cosmos since the dawn of radio.
“If we are in danger of an alien invasion, it’s too late,” wrote Douglas Vakoch, the director of Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence (METI) International, in a rebuttal last fall in Nature Physics. Vakoch, the most prominent METI proponent, argues that if we don’t tell anyone we’re here, we could miss out on new technology that could help humanity, or even protect us from other, less friendly aliens.
David Grinspoon, an author and astrobiologist at the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, says he first thought, “‘Oh, come on, you’ve got to be kidding me.’ It seems kind of absurd aliens are going to come invade us, steal our precious bodily fluids, breed us like cattle, ‘To Serve Man,’ ” a reference to a
1962 episode of “The Twilight Zone” in which aliens hatch a plan to use humans as a food source.
Originally, Grinspoon thought there would be no harm in setting up a cosmic lighthouse. “But I’ve listened to the other side, and I think they have a point,” he adds. “If you live in a jungle that might be full of hungry lions, do you jump down from your tree and go, ‘Yoo-hoo?'”
Many have already tried, albeit some more seriously than others.
In 2008, NASA
broadcast the Beatles tune “Across the Universe” toward Polaris, the North Star, commemorating the space agency’s 50th birthday, the 45th anniversary of the Deep Space Network, and the 40th anniversary of that song.
Later that year, a tech startup working with Ukraine’s space agency
beamed pictures and messages to the exoplanet Gliese 581 c. Other, sillier messages to the stars have included a Doritos commercial and a bunch of Craigslist ads.
Last October, the European Space Agency broadcast 3,775 text messages toward Polaris. It’s not known to harbor any exoplanets, and even if it did, those messages would take some 425 years to arrive; yet the exercise, conceived by an artist, raised alarm among astronomers. Several prominent scientists, including Walkowicz, signed on to a statemenT guarding against any future METI efforts until some sort of international consortium could reach agreement.
Even if we don’t send a carefully crafted message, we’re already reaching for the stars. The Voyager probe is beyond the solar system in interstellar space, speeding toward a star 17.6 light-years from Earth. Soon, if Milner has his way, we may be sending even more robotic emissaries.
Milner’s $100 million Breakthrough Starshot aims to send a fleet of paper-thin space chips to the Alpha Centauri system within a generation’s time. Just last fall, astronomers revealed that a potentially rocky, Earth-sized planet orbits Proxima Centauri, a small red dwarf star in that system and the nearest to our own, just four light years away. The chips would use a powerful laser to accelerate to near the speed of light, to cover the distance between the stars in just a few years. A team of scientists and engineers is working on how to build the chips and the laser, according to Worden.
“If we find something interesting, obviously we’re going to get a lot more detail if we can visit, and fly by,” he says. “Who knows what’s possible in 50 years?”
But some time sooner than that, we will need to decide whether to say anything at all. Ultimately, those discussions are important for humanity, Worden, Walkowicz and Grinspoon all say.
“Maybe it’s more important that we get our act together on Earth,” Grinspoon says. “We are struggling to find a kind of global identity on this planet that will allow us to survive the problems we’ve created for ourselves. Why not treat this as something that allows us to practice that kind of thinking and action?”