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Source: en.wikipedia.org...
The stellar disk of the Milky Way Galaxy is approximately 100,000 light-years (9×1017 km) (6×1017 mi) in diameter, and is considered to be, on average, about 1,000 ly (9×1015 km) thick.
Originally posted by GeechQuestInfo
I may be wrong and don't mean to be the negative poster but if I remember correctly and for what I could tell reading your OP (haven't slept in a day so I'm a bit groggy) the drake equation hypothesizes how many intelligent civilazations are in the milky way galaxy. Well the milky way galaxy is 100,000 light years across. So using your numbers below, the 120,000 possible communicating civilizations, they could be closer than you think if spaced out evenly. Closer than 1 light year even.
I'm not math wiz or physicist, but one of the few people if not the only UFOlogist I even care to listen to is Stanton Friedman. He's stated before that if we were able to accelerate a craft at 1G (9.8 meters per second) constantly that we could reach the speed of light in 1 year. Pretty neat. Theoretically, it may be possible for a nuclear fusion reactor
of some sort to have the energy to do that. Also, if you were able to travel 99.9% of light it would take the occupants on board a craft only 20 months to go 37 light years.
Originally posted by ChicUFO
I feel like it is simply a thought exercise that has no real answer.
Originally posted by area6
It is a very long shot.
The Drake Equation allows us to guess at the average time a communicating civilization might last, but not when they existed ...
So say such a civilization can last 10,000 years. If they are a 100,000 light years away, we may both be gone before we hear each other's signals.
And if they came and went 200 million years ago, their signals reached our planet long before we were here.
It's not just where are they or how many of them are out there ... but WHEN are they. This narrows down the possibility quite a lot.
fL is fraction of the planet's life during which the communicating civilizations live
oniongrass is right, Fl does take the when into account, sort of. The equation doesn't need to account for the exact distance and signal travel time for each civilization because it's dealing in statistics that factor that in.
Originally posted by oniongrass
Originally posted by area6
It is a very long shot.
The Drake Equation allows us to guess at the average time a communicating civilization might last, but not when they existed ...
I think this is taken roughly into account already in the Drake Equation:
fL is fraction of the planet's life during which the communicating civilizations live
Originally posted by ChicUFO
What the Drake equation did is force scientists who thought that man was the only intelligent species to admit that there may be others. The equation proves that there must be others somewhere no matter how low you estimate it.