I attended a seminar earlier today given by a senior scientist in the New Horizons project. Who incidentally has grown old and conspicuously gray waiting for the proposals to be accepted, the instruments built, and the probe launched... and now his project is almost done, the probe is a week out from Pluto!
[On the downside, downloading the data from the flyby will take like fifteen months. Turns out the best you can do with a thirty-watt transmitter from the neighborhood of Pluto is a download rate of about 300 baud...]
I'll throw out some highlights from what I heard there, the parts that might interest people, later.
Purple wrote:Those are all good answers that make sense. I can't complain. But I do have one thing to genuinely ask. Do we actually, genuinely and sincerely actually look for actual alien life? I always thought that was a gimmick to sell people on handing more money to space research.
Short answer:
Yes.
Longer answer, which will only make sense if you engage the parts of your brain that
hopefully matured after you turned twelve...
Almost every science probe mission we send to Mars, to asteroids, to comets, to the Jovian planets, or even to the moon, gives us information we CAN use to better understand what alien life might look like, where we might look for it, and so on.
If there is life in our solar system anywhere other than on Earth, it will be hard to find- tiny, durable microbes, or organisms swimming around in an ocean buried under ten kilometers of ice, or some such. It's not going to involve Marvin the Martian walking in front of our camera and waving 'hello!'
Before we could locate such things, we need to have a lot of information about the basic nature of the worlds we're exploring. We need good models of the physical structure and composition of these worlds. We need to understand what kind of energetic processes are going on on (and inside) these worlds, that might fuel the chemical reactions that drive life. We need to know where to look, and where not to look.
Therefore, every probe we send teaches us things which are important in order to refine and advance the search for life.
That does NOT mean the people who build the probes expect Marvin the Martian to walk in front of the camera and wave 'hello,' because that is not going to happen. It does NOT mean spending millions (or even thousands) on some kind of 'life form detector,' because there's no such thing as a life form detector.
If you are as intellectually mature as you need to be to participate in this conversation, I hope you find that to be an informative answer.
Purple wrote:I guess I should have been specific. I know that we are looking and IIRC have found alien microbes and stuff. I was asking about things beyond that. As in, actual aliens. I don't think anyone is searching for those except the SETI telescopes supposedly listening in for their radio signals.
That's because there are no such aliens to be found in any conveniently accessible place in our solar system, and we lack the means to go exploring other star systems.
I'm not sure what you think is going on here. Do you think there are people walking around on Mars and we just have to... find them, somehow, and we will have "discovered aliens?"
Because as I mentioned, that's not how it works. If there are aliens to be found, they are in other star systems, or they are buried under miles of ice, or they are microbes. Or possibly two or more of those three things at the same time.
Before we can even
begin to look for such creatures in any way
besides listening to the sky in the hope that they send radio signals, we need a great deal more of the kind of knowledge our existing probes are gathering.
Purple wrote:I know. I was not asking if it was likely that we'd find any but if anyone was even considering actually looking for it.
Exactly what form do you think such a search would take? Should we wander into our backyards, yelling at the sky "HELLO? Aliens? Are you there?" Should we attune our psychic powers to find them by clairvoyance? Or what?
Broomstick wrote:It wasn't "change for the sake of change", it was for consistency in how we classify objects. Rather like how brontosaurus was changed to apatosaurus awhile back, although you might say "brontosaurus" is the common English name for the extinct dinosaur whose scientific name is Apatosaurus excelsus.
Nitpick: they changed their mind and concluded that the 'brontosaurus' was in fact different enough to qualify as a distinct species from the rest of the 'apatosaurus' family, so the genus
Brontosaurus is back.
Yaaay!