🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 05:17:51 UTC No. 16143333
Where are all the Aliens !?
Anonymous at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 06:13:43 UTC No. 16143389
The fact we haven't even detected transmissions yet proves there's no intelligent life in the galaxy. We'd be able to at least detect chatter. It took the first stars billions of years to create the elements needed for life. It also took us billions of years to develop intelligence so it's probably the same for everyone else.
Humans will be like the fish that walked onto water and diverged into reptiles, mammals, dinosaurs, synapsids, amphibians, etc. except all on different planets. We'll bring animals and plants with us that will also diverge. That will be the alien life
Anonymous at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 06:23:27 UTC No. 16143402
>>16143389
It took 4.5 billion years for Earth to develop radio technology and we've only been using it for about 120 years. It's unlikely anyone else is out there transmitting detectable radio signals in this narrow time window.
Cult of Passion at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 06:26:42 UTC No. 16143408
If I was an extra-terrestrial I would only listen for Ω-Rays (maximal energy capacity for Light). As there would only be one organic source for this in the Universe and planet Earth is the opposite end of the (beyond visible) universe.
Anything else is "industrialized civilization at best".
Anonymous at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 06:32:53 UTC No. 16143416
>>16143402
We'd be able to detect at least something if there were aliens. Literally anything, not just radio waves. Yet there is absolute silence on all fronts of our search. We might not be alone in the galaxy but we're the only intelligent life. Other intelligent life must be in other galaxies or on other ends of the universe. You also have to think about how lucky it was for us have existed long enough to become intelligent.
Anonymous at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 06:40:03 UTC No. 16143423
>>16143416
Maybe the ayys built Dyson Spheres which block their radio transmissions
Cult of Passion at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 06:46:13 UTC No. 16143426
>>16143423
>Dyson Spheres
The equivalent to a 100' long sword to a bronze age peasant.
The energy needed to build planets worth of technology to encapsulate a fucking star?!?!
Just BUILD a better planet and fuel it with another planet, call it a "gas tank planet". Utterly counter-logical on a scale beyond comprehension.
Cult of Passion at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 06:49:27 UTC No. 16143432
>>16143423
Use Organic Lateral Fusion in plants to produce higher elements using sunlight, use element as fuel. Would be super dope if it could make the Helium for space travel or whatev.
[hands in pockets, kicks a pebble]
The Nova Shere or idk, if you want or whatever.
Anonymous at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 08:03:54 UTC No. 16143483
>>16143416
>We'd be able to detect at least something if there were aliens. Literally anything
Or what if we're still at the beginning of our search and our ability to detect them is very limited?
Consider that in our solar system, the moons of the gas giants far outnumber the small rocky planets. The same is likely true for other solar systems, moons should vastly outnumber planets, with a statistical likelihood of moons with life outnumbering planets with life.
But so far, we don't have a single confirmed exomoon detection. Just some exomoon candidates
Anonymous at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 08:29:44 UTC No. 16143515
>>16143333
In your ass, probing.
Anonymous at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 09:32:51 UTC No. 16143559
>>16143416
>We'd be able to detect at least something if there were aliens
Not necessarily.
Anonymous at Wed, 24 Apr 2024 09:33:52 UTC No. 16143561
>>16143423
Radio transmissions are blocked by interstellar dust. Our broadband radio transmissions literally do not even reach Alpha Centauri, and narrowband transmissions would only practically be picked up if you were the intended target, and a handful of those have been received from space.
Anonymous at Thu, 25 Apr 2024 05:16:10 UTC No. 16144781
>>16143561
this, desu baka senpai.
We think of ourselves at emitting tons of signals into space and loudly broadcasting our presence, yet in reality we are basically invisible to any potential nearby ayy lmaos.
If they are more than about 100 light years away, and something about earth catches their attention, they still might look at earth and go "Oh, there's some photosynthesis there, whatever, boring" and move on
Anonymous at Thu, 25 Apr 2024 06:16:51 UTC No. 16144836
>>16143426
The ayys likely build their "dyson sphere" out of energy fields so there's no need to encase the star with physical matter to capture its energy. They can then convert the waste heat to matter so there is nothing for us to detect. A million year old technological civilization will do things we can't even imagine, as we will someday if our own civilization doesn't collapse.
Anonymous at Thu, 25 Apr 2024 06:21:29 UTC No. 16144841
>>16144836
>energy fields that collect energy from a star the same way solar panels built from matter would do
That's quite a leap. Complete fantasy technology that's magic for all intents and purposes, where you have no idea how it would work
Cult of Passion at Thu, 25 Apr 2024 06:25:01 UTC No. 16144847
>>16144841
I mean...if you can manufacture solar systems.....why wouldnt you just make a holodeck planet powered by a planet sized fusion reactor or something? The whole operation is at a scale beyond reason, people dont live on 1,000 square miles of untouched forest.
Its like....a poor man's idea of a rich person's goals who would "buy a thousand pizzas a day".
Anonymous at Thu, 25 Apr 2024 06:34:41 UTC No. 16144856
>>16144847
They need the entire output of their star to power the matrioshka brain to run their holodeck program. Simulating a planet takes a lot of juice since people will want to live in multiple different kinds of virtual worlds. Also a star doesn't require as much maintenance and upkeep as a giant fusion reactor would.
Anonymous at Thu, 25 Apr 2024 18:52:18 UTC No. 16145635
>>16143333
observing
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Apr 2024 00:33:52 UTC No. 16146115
>>16143333
>Where are all the Aliens !?
On their own planets, asking the same question.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Apr 2024 00:37:11 UTC No. 16146122
>>16143561
>Radio transmissions are blocked by interstellar dust
Not just interstellar dust.
We forgot that stars (such as the sun) are huge EM emitters, drowning out any potential signals unless the source is very close.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Apr 2024 00:56:38 UTC No. 16146149
>>16146122
You can extract information regardless of signal disruption levels
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Apr 2024 06:12:47 UTC No. 16146415
>>16144841
>Complete fantasy technology that's magic for all intents and purposes
This is required for any sufficiently advanced technology
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Apr 2024 06:43:15 UTC No. 16146440
>>16143333
There are an infinite number of ways intelligent alien life forms can exist. We are also in one of those infinite worlds, but we cannot see any others because our consciousness is so specialized and local to Earth. We wouldn't be able to observe alien life even if it was in our face.
While it might be true that we're alone in this universe, there's proof that aliens exist in the multiverse. These aliens would just be us, in a slightly different timeline, with the ability to travel across space and time throughout the multiverse. Instead of 5 fingers, may 3? Something like that.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Apr 2024 06:50:35 UTC No. 16146449
>>16143333
Inside of you.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Apr 2024 08:03:26 UTC No. 16146530
>>16143333
they don't exist. we are alone
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Apr 2024 12:16:36 UTC No. 16146708
>>16143333
My personal theory is that interstellar travel on a scale necessary for colonization is impossible. If advanced Alien civilizations do exist, their members are very few in number and confined to a small region in Space. They are nearly immortal and lead utterly hedonistic lives with every whim of theirs catered to by advanced machines.
Anonymous at Fri, 26 Apr 2024 14:51:22 UTC No. 16146915
>>16143333
chilling at their underwater bases