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In 1950, while working at Los Alamos National Laboratory, the physicist Enrico Fermi had a casual conversation while walking to lunch with colleagues Emil Konopinski, Edward Teller and Herbert York. The men lightly discussed a recent spate of UFO reports and an Alan Dunn cartoon[9] facetiously blaming the disappearance of municipal trashcans on marauding aliens. They then had a more serious discussion regarding the chances of humans observing faster-than-light travel by some material object within the next ten years, which Teller put at one in a million, but Fermi put closer to one in ten. The conversation shifted to other subjects, until during lunch Fermi suddenly exclaimed, "Where are they?" (alternatively, "Where is everybody?")[10] One participant recollects that Fermi then made a series of rapid calculations using estimated figures (Fermi was known for his ability to make good estimates from first principles and minimal data, see Fermi problem.) According to this account, he then concluded that Earth should have been visited long ago and many times over. But if colonization means it increases the likelihood of finding alien artifacts or alien contact you have to factor in that the earth may not have been habitable to colonize at the time the alien was made aware of the earth.
Originally posted by Atlantican
Eventually the rate of uncontrolled (if there's no adequate & timely communication/verification process) replication would smother the universe with probes would it not?
Interesting theory nonetheless but I think any advanced program would use less a cumbersome approach. Again though, interesting theory as maybe one civilization out of potentially billions might just try it that way.
quote from LordBucket
why not allow a probe to make ten copies of itself? 100? Why assume only two?
Originally posted by LordBucket
reply to post by ajmusicmedia
3) Given even only our current level of technology, it should be possible to map out the stars of this galaxy in advance. You could easily eliminate the problems of knowing which stars had already been visited, simply by creating a "flight-plan" in your original probe such that the destinations of each generation of child probe were already decided.
Prof Says Beings From Outer Space Have Visited Earth
Associated Press, November 26, 1962
LOS ANGELES. (AP) - Some of the best scientific minds in the country were stumped when a slender, dark-haired young man chalked on the blackboard this equation:
N equals R FP NE FL FI FC L.
The speaker was Dr. Carl Sagan, a 28 year-old assistant professor of astronomy at Harvard University.
His audience consisted of several hundred members of the American Rocket Society, gathered for his luncheon address.
The equation was his way of expressing the mathematical probability that intelligent beings from outer space have visited earth.
Sagan soberly explained that in his equation N Stands for the number of advanced technical civilizations in the universe possessing the capability of interstellar communication.
R is the mean rate of star formation averaged over the lifetime of the galaxy.
FP is the fraction of stars with planetary systems.
NE is the mean number of planets in each system with environments favorable for the origin of life.
FL is the fraction of such planets on which life does develop.
FI is the fraction of such inhabited planets on which intelligent life with manipulative abilities rises during the lifetime of the local sun.
FC is the fraction of planets populated by intelligent beings on which advanced technical civilizations rises.
And L is the lifetime of this technical civilization.
Sagan said information in his formula is based on current estimates by astronomers. In making calculations, he assigned each symbol an arbitrary numerical value.
As expressed in numbers, Sagan said, the formula means that at least 1 million of the 100 billion stars in our Milky Way galaxy have planets which have developed civilizations capable of travel between the stars.
"Let's say that each of these civilizations sends out one interstellar expedition per year," he said.
"That means that every star, such as our sun, would be visited at least once every million years. In some systems where these beings found life, they would make more frequent visits. There's a strong probability, then, that they have visited earth every few thousand years.
"It is not out of the question that artifacts of these visits still exist or even that some kind of base is maintained, possibly automatically, within the solar system, to provide continuity for successive expeditions.
"Because of weathering and the possibility of detection and interference by the inhabitants of earth it would be preferable not to erect such a base on the earth's surface. The moon seems one reasonable alternative."
"Forthcoming photographic reconnaissance of the moon from space vehicles - particularly of the back - might bear these possibilities in mind."
At a news conference Sagan predicted man himself would be capable of interstellar flight at close to the speed of light "within a century or two."
Asked if he believed in flying saucers, he said: "I do believe there are objects which have hot be identified."
Link
As far as mapping it out, I go back to what I said previously.
We can't possibly see every star in the galaxy.
i think that 2 probes from one would be the case, from a payload and cost point of view
Since the universe is infinite, would it really matter where the probes mapped?
Originally posted by LordBucket
Since the universe is infinite, would it really matter where the probes mapped?
The original scenario assumes we're only visiting this galaxy, not the entire universe.
let's assume an alien civilization has done this;
could we pick up their communications?
If a probe at some time in our past has visited us and
is still emitting a beacon; how can we pick up its signal?