Are We Alone in the Universe? We’re Close to Finding Out | Lisa Kaltenegger | TED

66,139 views ・ 2025-02-13

TED


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We live in an incredible time of exploration,
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on the verge of finding out whether we are alone in the cosmos or not.
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This is one of the biggest questions humankind has ever asked.
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And now, for the first time,
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we have a tool that could find out.
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Because the James Webb Space Telescope is a telescope large enough
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to be able to catch light from planets like ours,
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as small as ours, but circling other stars light-years away.
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Because this search is a search over vast cosmic distances,
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even light needs years
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to travel these trillions of miles between stars.
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So when you look up at the sky at night, you look back in time.
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Let's imagine you were on a planet circling our neighboring star,
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about four light-years away.
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Then you would see the Earth tonight, like it was four years ago.
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On a planet 70 million light-years away,
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you could still see the dinosaurs roam here.
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And it also means that out in the sky,
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there is a star whose light arrives tonight,
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that was sent out when you were born.
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Your personal connection to the cosmos.
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So these distances are vast,
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but astronomers, throughout time,
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have managed to unravel and reveal mysteries of the cosmos,
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because light and matter interact.
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So light carries energy,
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and if it hits a molecule with just the right energy,
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that molecule will start to swing and rotate.
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So it's really the missing light,
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the light that doesn't make it to my telescope,
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that tells me which molecules the light encountered before it got to me.
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It's a little bit like a passport stamp
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that tells you where a traveler was before arriving here.
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So when you look at this incredible image of the Pillars of Creation
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taken by the James Webb Space Telescope,
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it is gorgeous.
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But if you analyze the light,
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you realize that we are watching a stellar nursery,
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where we see stars emerge and ignite.
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And when you look at stars in our night sky,
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you reveal another astonishing truth --
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that you and me, all of us, are made of ancient stardust.
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Because it took the heat in the core of a star
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and the violent explosion at the end of its lifetime
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to make the atoms that made you and me.
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So on a fundamental level,
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we are connected to each other and to the cosmos around us.
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And now, for the first time,
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we get to search for other organisms somewhere else
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that might be made of ancient stardust, too.
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But when you try to find life in the universe,
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it is incredibly hard,
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because planets are so much smaller,
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and they are close to their bright and big stars.
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And we don’t only want to find planets like ours,
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we want to look in their air and on their surface for signs of life.
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So what we do is we wait
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until the planet crosses our line of sight to its star,
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and the light from its star hits,
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smashes into the atmosphere of the planet before it gets to my telescope.
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So I can look for these passport stamps
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to figure out what's in the air of planets very far away,
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and the light fingerprint.
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The best light fingerprint we have for life on the Earth
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is the combination of oxygen and methane for carbon-based life,
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with a water solvent,
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on a planet in the temperate zone around its star.
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But I was really curious:
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How long could this light fingerprint tell you that there’s life on our planet?
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And so I figured out that, for about two billion years,
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the biosphere has painted signs of life into our atmosphere.
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So for half of Earth's existence,
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you could tell that there is life on our planet.
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And if life does this somewhere else too,
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for the first time, we have now a chance to spot it.
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And so searching for life in the universe
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actually made me see our planet completely differently.
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Here, for example, you see biota
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that colors these amazing hot sulphur springs in New Zealand
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this gorgeous orange color,
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and it lets you start to think
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about how different these other planets could be.
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There could be could be planets completely covered in oceans,
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with waves that never break on a shore.
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Or planets half in eternal sunlight and half in perpetual night.
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Or planets that are covered with a purple landscape.
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Because purple bacteria is very sturdy, it can thrive under red sunlight.
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So eight out of ten stars out there are actually small red stars.
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So purple might be the new green,
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when searching for life in the cosmos.
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But we know that one out of five sun-like stars
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has a planet that could potentially be like ours.
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So with 200 billion stars in our Milky Way alone,
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that means we have billions and billions of possibilities.
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I founded the Carl Sagan Institute at Cornell
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to bring thinkers and creative minds from many different fields and backgrounds
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and ways of life together
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to create the toolkit to find life in the cosmos.
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And so we created a spectral database,
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a light-fingerprint database for habitable worlds.
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And in case you're wondering, actually, Jurassic worlds,
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where space dinosaurs might roam somewhere else,
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are actually easier to find than a modern Earth,
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because there was more oxygen when the dinosaurs lived here.
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I'm not saying there are space dinosaurs,
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but I'm just saying if you ever wanted there to be, I'm giving you options.
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(Laughter)
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But when you search,
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then one of the questions that came was also if there's life in the cosmos.
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Of course, I don't know that yet.
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But if there's life in the cosmos,
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could somebody be looking at us with just the same technology we have?
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And there's a space in the sky,
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a strip where you have just the right vantage point
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to see the Earth go in front of the Sun.
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And it encapsulates about 1,000 stars within 300 light-years,
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what's really our cosmic background.
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And so the question is, where could we be the aliens?
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Is there life in the cosmos? I don't know.
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We don't know yet, but I really want to find out,
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because the cosmos is 13.8 billion years old,
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but we all get to live in the most exciting time,
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where the search for life on other planets went from impossible to possible.
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And it's at the edge of technical capability,
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but we're already designing larger telescopes
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that could catch more light of these planets
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to find out if there’s life out there
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calling another planet home.
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From a tiny town in Austria,
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when I looked up at the stars
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and wondered if they could be suns to their planets,
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to now sitting in Carl Sagan's old office at Cornell,
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the journey has been challenging, inspiring
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and full of wonder,
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because those thousands of new stars,
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new suns [in] the sky,
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hold a breathtaking promise
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that our adventure of exploration has just begun.
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So go out at night and find your favorite star,
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and allow yourself to wonder, what if we're not alone?
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Thank you.
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(Cheers and applause)
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