Where are all the aliens? | Stephen Webb

4,375,638 views ・ 2018-08-16

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:13
I saw a UFO once.
0
13200
2176
00:15
I was eight or nine,
1
15400
1896
00:17
playing in the street with a friend who was a couple of years older,
2
17320
3336
00:20
and we saw a featureless silver disc hovering over the houses.
3
20680
4656
00:25
We watched it for a few seconds,
4
25360
1776
00:27
and then it shot away incredibly quickly.
5
27160
3256
00:30
Even as a kid,
6
30440
1216
00:31
I got angry it was ignoring the laws of physics.
7
31680
2840
00:35
We ran inside to tell the grown-ups,
8
35160
2256
00:37
and they were skeptical --
9
37440
1576
00:39
you'd be skeptical too, right?
10
39040
2080
00:42
I got my own back a few years later:
11
42120
1736
00:43
one of those grown-ups told me,
12
43880
1496
00:45
"Last night I saw a flying saucer.
13
45400
1816
00:47
I was coming out of the pub after a few drinks."
14
47240
2576
00:49
I stopped him there. I said, "I can explain that sighting."
15
49840
2816
00:52
(Laughter)
16
52680
1016
00:53
Psychologists have shown we can't trust our brains
17
53720
2896
00:56
to tell the truth.
18
56640
1216
00:57
It's easy to fool ourselves.
19
57880
1816
00:59
I saw something,
20
59720
1616
01:01
but what's more likely --
21
61360
1376
01:02
that I saw an alien spacecraft,
22
62760
2016
01:04
or that my brain misinterpreted the data my eyes were giving it?
23
64800
3920
01:10
Ever since though I've wondered:
24
70200
1576
01:11
Why don't we see flying saucers flitting around?
25
71800
3016
01:14
At the very least,
26
74840
1216
01:16
why don't we see life out there in the cosmos?
27
76080
2856
01:18
It's a puzzle,
28
78960
1216
01:20
and I've discussed it with dozens of experts
29
80200
2456
01:22
from different disciplines over the past three decades.
30
82680
3136
01:25
And there's no consensus.
31
85840
1856
01:27
Frank Drake began searching for alien signals back in 1960 --
32
87720
4336
01:32
so far, nothing.
33
92080
1896
01:34
And with each passing year,
34
94000
1416
01:35
this nonobservation,
35
95440
1536
01:37
this lack of evidence for any alien activity gets more puzzling
36
97000
5656
01:42
because we should see them, shouldn't we?
37
102680
3000
01:47
The universe is 13.8 billion years old,
38
107120
3776
01:50
give or take.
39
110920
1256
01:52
If we represent the age of the universe by one year,
40
112200
3496
01:55
then our species came into being about 12 minutes before midnight,
41
115720
4576
02:00
31st December.
42
120320
1240
02:02
Western civilization has existed for a few seconds.
43
122120
3656
02:05
Extraterrestrial civilizations could have started in the summer months.
44
125800
3720
02:10
Imagine a summer civilization
45
130600
2736
02:13
developing a level of technology more advanced than ours,
46
133360
4256
02:17
but tech based on accepted physics though,
47
137640
2136
02:19
I'm not talking wormholes or warp drives -- whatever --
48
139800
3936
02:23
just an extrapolation of the sort of tech that TED celebrates.
49
143760
4520
02:28
That civilization could program self-replicating probes
50
148880
3576
02:32
to visit every planetary system in the galaxy.
51
152480
2640
02:35
If they launched the first probes just after midnight one August day,
52
155840
4520
02:41
then before breakfast same day,
53
161200
2256
02:43
they could have colonized the galaxy.
54
163480
2120
02:46
Intergalactic colonization isn't much more difficult,
55
166640
2576
02:49
it just takes longer.
56
169240
1240
02:51
A civilization from any one of millions of galaxies
57
171080
2936
02:54
could have colonized our galaxy.
58
174040
2360
02:56
Seems far-fetched?
59
176960
1736
02:58
Maybe it is,
60
178720
1216
02:59
but wouldn't aliens engage in some recognizable activity --
61
179960
5096
03:05
put worldlets around a star to capture free sunlight,
62
185080
4256
03:09
collaborate on a Wikipedia Galactica,
63
189360
3176
03:12
or just shout out to the universe, "We're here"?
64
192560
2920
03:16
So where is everybody?
65
196920
1200
03:18
It's a puzzle because we do expect these civilizations to exist, don't we?
66
198760
5416
03:24
After all, there could be a trillion planets in the galaxy --
67
204200
3176
03:27
maybe more.
68
207400
1360
03:29
You don't need any special knowledge to consider this question,
69
209600
4376
03:34
and I've explored it with lots of people over the years.
70
214000
3896
03:37
And I've found they often frame their thinking
71
217920
2976
03:40
in terms of the barriers that would need to be cleared
72
220920
3096
03:44
if a planet is to host a communicative civilization.
73
224040
4240
03:49
And they usually identify four key barriers.
74
229120
3816
03:52
Habitability --
75
232960
1376
03:54
that's the first barrier.
76
234360
1416
03:55
We need a terrestrial planet in that just right "Goldilocks zone,"
77
235800
4616
04:00
where water flows as a liquid.
78
240440
2240
04:03
They're out there.
79
243400
1256
04:04
In 2016, astronomers confirmed there's a planet in the habitable zone
80
244680
4576
04:09
of the closest star,
81
249280
1456
04:10
Proxima Centauri --
82
250760
1776
04:12
so close that Breakthrough Starshot project plans to send probes there.
83
252560
5056
04:17
We'd become a starfaring species.
84
257640
2880
04:21
But not all worlds are habitable.
85
261480
1616
04:23
Some will be too close to a star and they'll fry,
86
263120
2336
04:25
some will be too far away and they'll freeze.
87
265480
2120
04:28
Abiogenesis --
88
268800
1216
04:30
the creation of life from nonlife --
89
270040
1775
04:31
that's the second barrier.
90
271839
1281
04:34
The basic building blocks of life aren't unique to Earth:
91
274000
3896
04:37
amino acids have been found in comets,
92
277920
2736
04:40
complex organic molecules in interstellar dust clouds,
93
280680
3096
04:43
water in exoplanetary systems.
94
283800
2600
04:47
The ingredients are there,
95
287160
1256
04:48
we just don't know how they combine to create life,
96
288440
2656
04:51
and presumably there will be worlds on which life doesn't start.
97
291120
3160
04:55
The development of technological civilization is a third barrier.
98
295840
3680
05:00
Some say we already share our planet with alien intelligences.
99
300600
4776
05:05
A 2011 study showed that elephants can cooperate to solve problems.
100
305400
4800
05:10
A 2010 study showed
101
310840
1536
05:12
that an octopus in captivity can recognize different humans.
102
312400
4280
05:17
2017 studies show that ravens can plan for future events --
103
317360
3896
05:21
wonderful, clever creatures --
104
321280
2736
05:24
but they can't contemplate the Breakthrough Starshot project,
105
324040
3216
05:27
and if we vanished today,
106
327280
2256
05:29
they wouldn't go on to implement Breakthrough Starshot --
107
329560
2856
05:32
why should they?
108
332440
1376
05:33
Evolution doesn't have space travel as an end goal.
109
333840
2760
05:37
There will be worlds where life doesn't give rise to advanced technology.
110
337160
4560
05:43
Communication across space -- that's a fourth barrier.
111
343040
2856
05:45
Maybe advanced civilizations choose to explore inner space
112
345920
3776
05:49
rather than outer space,
113
349720
2336
05:52
or engineer at small distances rather than large.
114
352080
3520
05:56
Or maybe they just don't want to risk an encounter
115
356600
2856
05:59
with a potentially more advanced and hostile neighbor.
116
359480
4136
06:03
There'll be worlds where, for whatever reason,
117
363640
2176
06:05
civilizations either stay silent or don't spend long trying to communicate.
118
365840
4640
06:12
As for the height of the barriers,
119
372600
2096
06:14
your guess is as good as anyone's.
120
374720
2400
06:18
In my experience,
121
378080
1256
06:19
when people sit down and do the math,
122
379360
2056
06:21
they typically conclude there are thousands of civilizations in the galaxy.
123
381440
4880
06:27
But then we're back to the puzzle: Where is everybody?
124
387640
2720
06:32
By definition,
125
392055
1361
06:33
UFOs -- including the one I saw --
126
393440
2336
06:35
are unidentified.
127
395800
1296
06:37
We can't simply infer they're spacecraft.
128
397120
3736
06:40
You can still have some fun playing with the idea aliens are here.
129
400880
3480
06:45
Some say a summer civilization did colonize the galaxy
130
405000
3856
06:48
and seeded Earth with life ...
131
408880
2000
06:51
others, that we're living in a cosmic wilderness preserve --
132
411800
2856
06:54
a zoo.
133
414680
1240
06:56
Yet others --
134
416480
1496
06:58
that we're living in a simulation.
135
418000
2176
07:00
Programmers just haven't revealed the aliens yet.
136
420200
2320
07:03
Most of my colleagues though argue that E.T. is out there,
137
423680
4336
07:08
we just need to keep looking,
138
428040
1616
07:09
and this makes sense.
139
429680
1576
07:11
Space is vast.
140
431280
1776
07:13
Identifying a signal is hard,
141
433080
2816
07:15
and we haven't been looking that long.
142
435920
2600
07:19
Without doubt, we should spend more on the search.
143
439160
3136
07:22
It's about understanding our place in the universe.
144
442320
3336
07:25
It's too important a question to ignore.
145
445680
3320
07:29
But there's an obvious answer:
146
449840
2096
07:31
we're alone.
147
451960
1296
07:33
It's just us.
148
453280
1616
07:34
There could be a trillion planets in the galaxy.
149
454920
3496
07:38
Is it plausible we're the only creatures capable of contemplating this question?
150
458440
4480
07:43
Well, yes, because in this context,
151
463840
2616
07:46
we don't know whether a trillion is a big number.
152
466480
2360
07:50
In 2000, Peter Ward and Don Brownlee proposed the Rare Earth idea.
153
470040
5296
07:55
Remember those four barriers
154
475360
1816
07:57
that people use to estimate the number of civilizations?
155
477200
3856
08:01
Ward and Brownlee said there might be more.
156
481080
2120
08:03
Let's look at one possible barrier.
157
483840
1696
08:05
It's a recent suggestion by David Waltham,
158
485560
2656
08:08
a geophysicist.
159
488240
1240
08:10
This is my very simplified version
160
490000
2456
08:12
of Dave's much more sophisticated argument.
161
492480
2600
08:16
We are able to be here now
162
496240
2016
08:18
because Earth's previous inhabitants enjoyed
163
498280
2656
08:20
four billion years of good weather --
164
500960
2176
08:23
ups and downs but more or less clement.
165
503160
2640
08:26
But long-term climate stability is strange,
166
506960
2496
08:29
if only because astronomical influences
167
509480
2416
08:31
can push a planet towards freezing or frying.
168
511920
4056
08:36
There's a hint our moon has helped,
169
516000
2176
08:38
and that's interesting
170
518200
2176
08:40
because the prevailing theory is
171
520400
1656
08:42
that the moon came into being when Theia,
172
522080
2496
08:44
a body the size of Mars,
173
524600
1616
08:46
crashed into a newly formed Earth.
174
526240
2736
08:49
The outcome of that crash could have been a quite different Earth-Moon system.
175
529000
4120
08:54
We ended up with a large moon
176
534120
2256
08:56
and that permitted Earth to have both a stable axial tilt
177
536400
3856
09:00
and a slow rotation rate.
178
540280
3176
09:03
Both factors influence climate
179
543480
1656
09:05
and the suggestion is that they've helped moderate climate change.
180
545160
3600
09:09
Great for us, right?
181
549440
1240
09:11
But Waltham showed that if the moon were just a few miles bigger,
182
551360
3736
09:15
things would be different.
183
555120
1616
09:16
Earth's spin axis would now wander chaotically.
184
556760
3336
09:20
There'd be episodes of rapid climate change --
185
560120
2896
09:23
not good for complex life.
186
563040
2376
09:25
The moon is just the right size:
187
565440
2216
09:27
big but not too big.
188
567680
3056
09:30
A "Goldilocks" moon around a "Goldilocks" planet --
189
570760
2416
09:33
a barrier perhaps.
190
573200
1520
09:35
You can imagine more barriers.
191
575200
1816
09:37
For instance,
192
577040
1216
09:38
simple cells came into being billions of years ago ...
193
578280
3040
09:42
but perhaps the development of complex life
194
582480
3296
09:45
needed a series of unlikely events.
195
585800
2896
09:48
Once life on Earth had access to multicellularity
196
588720
2576
09:51
and sophisticated genetic structures,
197
591320
2056
09:53
and sex,
198
593400
1256
09:54
new opportunities opened up:
199
594680
1536
09:56
animals became possible.
200
596240
1360
09:58
But maybe it's the fate of many planets
201
598240
2816
10:01
for life to settle at the level of simple cells.
202
601080
3840
10:06
Purely for the purposes of illustration,
203
606760
3096
10:09
let me suggest four more barriers to add to the four
204
609880
3056
10:12
that people said blocked the path to communicative civilization.
205
612960
3920
10:17
Again, purely for the purposes of illustration,
206
617760
3256
10:21
suppose there's a one-in-a-thousand chance of making it across each of the barriers.
207
621040
4256
10:25
Of course there might be different ways of navigating the barriers,
208
625320
3136
10:28
and some chances will be better than one in a thousand.
209
628480
2776
10:31
Equally, there might be more barriers
210
631280
1856
10:33
and some chances might be one in a million.
211
633160
2256
10:35
Let's just see what happens in this picture.
212
635440
2080
10:39
If the galaxy contains a trillion planets,
213
639120
2576
10:41
how many will host a civilization capable of contemplating like us
214
641720
5496
10:47
projects such as Breakthrough Starshot?
215
647240
2200
10:50
Habitability --
216
650480
1256
10:51
right sort of planet around the right sort of star --
217
651760
2816
10:54
the trillion becomes a billion.
218
654600
2336
10:56
Stability --
219
656960
1336
10:58
a climate that stays benign for eons --
220
658320
3416
11:01
the billion becomes a million.
221
661760
1856
11:03
Life must start --
222
663640
1200
11:05
the million becomes a thousand.
223
665600
2216
11:07
Complex life forms must arise --
224
667840
2256
11:10
the thousand becomes one.
225
670120
2576
11:12
Sophisticated tool use must develop --
226
672720
1856
11:14
that's one planet in a thousand galaxies.
227
674600
2000
11:17
To understand the universe,
228
677480
1576
11:19
they'll have to develop the techniques of science and mathematics --
229
679080
3216
11:22
that's one planet in a million galaxies.
230
682320
2096
11:24
To reach the stars, they'll have to be social creatures,
231
684440
2656
11:27
capable of discussing abstract concepts with each other
232
687120
2816
11:29
using complex grammar --
233
689960
1896
11:31
one planet in a billion galaxies.
234
691880
3216
11:35
And they have to avoid disaster --
235
695120
1736
11:36
not just self-inflicted but from the skies, too.
236
696880
4056
11:40
That planet around Proxima Centauri,
237
700960
2936
11:43
last year it got blasted by a flare.
238
703920
2320
11:47
One planet in a trillion galaxies,
239
707200
1936
11:49
just as in the visible universe.
240
709160
2760
11:54
I think we're alone.
241
714480
1200
11:57
Those colleagues of mine who agree we're alone
242
717240
2296
11:59
often see a barrier ahead --
243
719560
3136
12:02
bioterror,
244
722720
1256
12:04
global warming, war.
245
724000
1560
12:06
A universe that's silent
246
726320
3016
12:09
because technology itself forms the barrier
247
729360
3416
12:12
to the development of a truly advanced civilization.
248
732800
3936
12:16
Depressing, right?
249
736760
1440
12:19
I'm arguing the exact opposite.
250
739240
1680
12:22
I grew up watching "Star Trek" and "Forbidden Planet,"
251
742560
2576
12:25
and I saw a UFO once,
252
745160
1776
12:26
so this idea of cosmic loneliness I certainly find slightly wistful.
253
746960
6080
12:34
But for me,
254
754240
2096
12:36
the silence of the universe is shouting,
255
756360
1936
12:38
"We're the creatures who got lucky."
256
758320
1720
12:40
All barriers are behind us.
257
760800
1856
12:42
We're the only species that's cleared them --
258
762680
2416
12:45
the only species capable of determining its own destiny.
259
765120
4416
12:49
And if we learn to appreciate how special our planet is,
260
769560
3200
12:53
how important it is to look after our home
261
773840
2136
12:56
and to find others,
262
776000
1816
12:57
how incredibly fortunate we all are simply to be aware of the universe,
263
777840
4816
13:02
humanity might survive for a while.
264
782680
2336
13:05
And all those amazing things
265
785040
1656
13:06
we dreamed aliens might have done in the past,
266
786720
2856
13:09
that could be our future.
267
789600
1200
13:11
Thank you very much.
268
791640
1256
13:12
(Applause)
269
792920
3520
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7