the father of seti

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The Father of SETI In 1961, Frank Drake organized a conference at the Greenbank Observatory to discuss the possibility that we could carry out an experimental program designed to detect alien communications. As I planned the meeting, I realized a few days ahead of time we needed an agenda. And so I wrote down all the things you needed to know to predict how hard it's going to be to detect extraterrestrial life. And looking at them it became pretty evident that if you multiplied all these together, you got a number, N, which is the number of detectable civilizations in our

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The Father of SETI. In 1961, Frank Drake organized a conference at the Greenbank Observatory to discuss the possibility that we could carry out an experimental program designed to detect alien communications. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Father of SETI

The Father of SETIIn 1961, Frank Drake organized a conference at the Greenbank Observatory to discuss the possibility that we could carry out an experimental program designed to detect alien communications.

“As I planned the meeting, I realized a few days ahead of time we needed an agenda. And so I wrote down all the things you needed to know to predict how hard it's going to be to detect extraterrestrial life. And looking at them it became pretty evident that if you multiplied all these together, you got a number, N, which is the number of detectable civilizations in our galaxy. This, of course, was aimed at the radio search, and not to search for primordial or primitive life forms.” Frank Drake

Page 2: The Father of SETI

The Drake Equation

N = The number of intelligent civilizations in the Milky Way Galaxy capable of interstellar communication

R* = Rate at which stars form in the Milky Way

f ⨀ = Fraction of those stars that are sun-like

fp = Fraction of those stars that have planets in stable orbits

nE = Number of those planets that fall within the CHZ

fl = Fraction of those planets where life actually evolves

fi = Fraction of those planets where intelligence evolves

fc = Fraction of those planets where intelligent life develops a civilization capable of communication

L = ‘Longevity factor’ ─ how long the civilization exists

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

Page 3: The Father of SETI

The Drake equation allows us to estimate the number of ______.

A.intelligent humans that have been superseded by more intelligent apes

B.habitable planets on which life has arisen

C.years intelligent civilizations manage to survive before going extinct

D.the number of female ducks impregnated each year

E.intelligent civilizations capable of interstellar communication that currently exist in our galaxy

Question

Page 4: The Father of SETI

An Example…• How many students N attend Prof. Cassiday’s class.

• Suppose students walk into class at the rate of …R = 1/minute.

• Further suppose they can ‘stand it’ for no more than …L = 10 minutes … and then they leave

• Let’s plot student attendance vs. time ....

5

10

minutes

5

N

‘Population’ stabilizes at N = Rate Lifetime N = R L

10

Page 5: The Father of SETI

The Drake EquationN = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

The term in the box is the rate Rciv at which intelligent, communicative civilizations emerge in the Milky Way Galaxy.L is their lifetime … how long they live after reaching the stage of intelligence capable of communicating … before they go ‘belly up’ !

Thus, the number of such civilizations alive and communicative in the Milky Way is

N = Rciv x L

Page 6: The Father of SETI

The Drake Equation

• Note: R* = N* / TMW

• N* = The number of stars in the galaxy• TMW = The age of the Milky Way Galaxy

• In words ─ The rate at which stars form in the galaxy is just the total number of stars (N*) divided by how long it took them to form, which is the age of the Milky Way Galaxy (TMW). Substituting these factors into the above yields …

N = (N* / TMW) f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

Page 7: The Father of SETI

N = (N*/TMW) f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L• The number of stars in the Milky Way is relatively

well known … it’s approximately N* = 250 109 stars.

• Next … estimate f⨀

• The age of the Milky Way is relatively well known … it’s approximately TMW = 10 109 years.

• Thus ─ the rate of star formation in the Milky Way is

─ R* = N* /TMW = 250 x 109 /10 109 years = 25/yr.

Page 8: The Father of SETI

33 Stars Within 12.5 LY

• If we knew the distribution of stars as a function of mass (stellar mass distribution function) … then we could make a rough estimate of how many stars are like our Sun.

Page 9: The Father of SETI

Number of stars n per unit mass

Stellar Mass Distribution

Fraction of stars 0.5 < m <1.5 is f⨀ ~ 10% ... But should we include stars in binary systems?

0( )n m n m -2.35• There are many

more small stars in the galaxy than there are large stars!

Page 10: The Father of SETI

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

Stable orbits of planets in multiple star systems are almost impossible. Over time, the planet would either be ejected into space, crash into one of the stars, or be thrown into a highly elliptical orbit.

Unless the two stars are very far apart, binary stars cannot have planets. This eliminates perhaps half the sun-like stars in the sky … and there is one more problem.

What about multiple star systems?

Page 11: The Father of SETI

Galactic Habitable Zone

Sun-like stars must fall within the Galactic Habitable Zone (GHZ)… • not way out from the galactic center in

order to have enough ‘heavy’ elements to form planetary systems

• not too close to the galactic center where stars are packed too close together and there is too much radiation.

Page 12: The Father of SETI

• About 50% of the stars lie outside the GHZ, which eliminates them… so putting together all the factors …

• f⨀ = 0.10 x 0.50 x 0.50 = 0.025

The right mass

No binaries

In GHZ

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

• Next up … fp … the fraction of sun-like stars that have planets.

Page 13: The Father of SETI

• Most Sun-like stars form in hot, open clusters like the Orion Nebula and only about 10% of them form where there is enough dust to form planetary systems!

• Thus, too little dust reduces fp by 90% … fp ~ 0.10

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

Page 14: The Father of SETI

To support life, a planet must be in the habitable zone. nE ~ 1 for our solar system …

N = N* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc fL

But current estimates of the thickness of the CHZ indicates that we were lucky and that a planet like Earth falling within the habitable zone has a chance as low as 1% . We’ll pick the geometric mean … nE ~ 0.10.

Page 15: The Father of SETI

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

If a planet forms within the HZ, chances are good that it will have liquid water and that some kind of life will emerge … it did on Earth.

• Thus, we estimate fl ~ 1

Page 16: The Father of SETI

Life on Earth appears to have arisen quite easily and quite rapidly after the Earth became habitable. This suggests that the factor flife in the Drake equation—the probability that life arises on a habitable planet—could be close to _______.

A.1.0B.0.25C.0D.0.5E.10

Question

Page 17: The Father of SETI

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

For 2.5 billion years on Earth, life did not evolve past single-celled organisms. Is the development of complex (and intelligent) life rare? (fi<<1)

Does evolution inevitably lead to at least one intelligent organism on a planet? (fi=1)

Page 18: The Father of SETI

N = R* f ⨀ fp nE fl fi fc LThere are other factors besides ‘forming within the CHZ’ that limit the evolution of intelligent life. For example … What if the Earth had no moon?

Page 19: The Father of SETI

0 2 4 6 8 10 Million Years ago

Mars

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

• Planets without large moons may have the direction of their spin axis shift over time. This may produce long term climatic shifts.

Page 20: The Father of SETI

The tidal effect of the Moon may have helped trigger the convection on the Earth that led to the multi-plate tectonics!Consider Venus, about Earth’s size, but no moon. The crust is like a lid that doesn’t move much horizontally, and the magma and heat are blocked by this lid on the surface. The Earth instead has rolling convective motion that drags the crust, and then the crust plunges back down into the mantle and gets recycled.

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

Page 21: The Father of SETI

If you would take away the Moon suddenly, it would change the global altitude of the ocean! Right now there is a distortion which is elongated around the equator, so if we didn’t have this effect, suddenly a lot of water would be redistributed toward the polar regions.

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

Page 22: The Father of SETI

The eyesight of many mammals is sensitive to moonlight. The level of adaptation of night vision would be very different without the Moon. Many of these species have evolved in such a way that their night vision could work in even partial lunar illumination, because that’s when they are most active. But they can be more subjected to predators, too, so there is a balance between your ability to see and your ability not to be seen. The Moon has completely changed evolution in that aspect.

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

Page 23: The Father of SETI

The Earth would be rotating more rapidly! The Sun does cause tides in the Earth's oceans, but its tidal effects are weaker than those of the Moon. The initial rotation period of the Earth was about 6 hours ─ without a Moon, it would have slowed to about 10 hours due to solar tides.

What consequences might follow from such a fast rotation?

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

Page 24: The Father of SETI

What if the Earth had no Jupiter @ 5 AU?

Devastating impacts would be more frequent!

N = N* f ⨀ fp nE fl fi fc fL

Page 25: The Father of SETI

Suppose a 10 km – sized asteroid did not strike the Earth

65 Mya …

Page 26: The Father of SETI

The Dinosaurs Would Have Had Us for Lunch!

Page 27: The Father of SETI

Suppose Western Science Never Emerged …

No other civilization ever pursued the idea of constructing mathematical models to explain the observed behavior of nature.

Given all these caveats … it appears that the evolution of intelligence is not a given! We guess fi ~ 0.1

Page 28: The Father of SETI

Assuming primitive life emerges on a planet, why is the emergence of intelligence not a given, i.e., fi < 1? (We picked 0.1)

A. It took ~4 billion years for intelligent life to emerge on Earth under favorable circumstances, which might be extremely rare.

B.The Earth acquired a sizeable Moon … by accident … that stabilized its axis of rotation, which established a stable environment for life for billions of years.

C.The Earth was close … but not too close … to a giant planet, Jupiter, that protected it from frequent devastating impacts.

D. If an impact hadn’t triggered the extinction of dinosaurs 65 million years ago, intelligent humans would never have evolved.

E. All of the above were contributing factors.

Question

Page 29: The Father of SETI

What fraction of intelligent life communicates? Some may not develop the technology to do so or it may choose not to do so…

N = N* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc fL

This is hard to believe … if a civilization reaches the stage of ‘operational intelligence’ it is almost impossible to imagine that it will not develop the technology to communicate and will not wish to do so …

fc ~ 1

Page 30: The Father of SETI

The Drake Equation

R* = Rate stars form in Milky Way

f ⨀ = Fraction that are sun-like

fp = Fraction that have planets

nE = Number of planets within CHZ

fl = Fraction where life evolves

fi = Fraction that become intelligent

fc = Fraction that communicate

N = R* f⨀ fp nE fl fi fc L

R* = 25/yr

f ⨀ = 0.025

fp = 0.1nE = 0.1

fl = 1

fi = 0.10

fc = 1

25

0.625

.0625

6.25 x 10-3

6.25 x 10-3

6.25 x 10-4

6.25 x 10-4

R (per yr)

The rate at which intelligent, communicative civilizations form in the Milky Way is…Rciv = 6.25 x 10-4 / yr and N = Rciv x L (L = ?)

The value of Rciv is highly uncertain … thus, it really makes no sense to quote the number to 3 decimal place accuracy, so we’ll round it off to Rciv ~ 10-3 /yr and N = Rciv L ~ 10-3 L

Page 31: The Father of SETI

N = N* f⨀ np fl fi fc L

Earth spent the first 4.5 billion years of its life without hosting a civilization. Humans achieved the technology to communicate ~ 50 years ago. How long will we continue to exist ??

Extreme Optimistic Case: We continue as a civilization until the HZ moves beyond Earth :

L = 109 yrs and N = 10-3 L = 1,000,000 Extreme Pessimistic Case: We destroy ourselves in the

next 50 years: L = 100 yrs and N = 10-3 L = 0.1

The average lifetime of species is currently estimated to be ~ 1 ─ 10 Myr! Assuming that human longevity is no better than average, we’ll guess that L ~ 1 miilion years!

Page 32: The Father of SETI

Factor Us ─ ET Class

Drake-Sagan(Optimistic)

Trefil & Hart(Pessimistic)

R* = N*/TMW 25 / yr 30 / yr 20 / yr

f⨀ 0.025 0.1 0.001

nE 0.1 1 0.1

fl 1.0 1 0.005

fi 0.1 1/3 0.0001

fC 1.0 1 0.1

Rciv 10-3 /yr 1 /yr 10-10 /yr

L 1 million yr 1 billion yr 100 yr

N = Rciv L 1000 1 billion 10-8

Other Estimates

Page 33: The Father of SETI

How Many ET’s ?Drake and Sagan ????

ET 1080 Estimate ????

N = 10-3 L