There Are More Than 36 Alien Civilizations In The MILKY WAY!

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  • čas přidán 14. 05. 2024
  • It’s the oldest and the greatest cosmic question of all: Are we alone in the Universe?
    Given the fact that there are countless alien worlds with conditions similar to Earth, almost nobody believes life on our planet is unique.
    In the expansive reaches of the Milky Way, over 300 million planets boast conditions akin to those found on Earth. Thus, a more pertinent query emerges: Does our galaxy harbor companionship amidst its vastness?
    For over six decades, the Drake Equation stood as our sole tool in addressing this quandary. It hinted at the possibility of civilizations ranging from a thousand to a hundred million within the Milky Way.
    Now, scholars at the University of Nottingham propose a novel calculation grounded in "cosmic evolution." Their findings suggest the likelihood of a minimum of 36 active intelligent civilizations inhabiting our galactic home.
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Komentáře • 6

  • @devakaushik8257
    @devakaushik8257 Před 26 dny

    36 biradari 🤙🏻

  • @d.warrenstiles
    @d.warrenstiles Před 25 dny +1

    Pure speculation. While it is possible that intelligent life exists somewhere else in the universe the probability is low. There are many life probability criteria, greater than ten which need to be met in order for intelligent life to emerge. Running the math, meeting all ten criteria, lowers the odds of life emerging to an incredibly small number. Statisticians would look at that number and conclude that it is virtually impossible. But we know it happened at least once so it is likely to happen again. Apparently life wants to exist. When and where remains a mystery.

    • @redz2984
      @redz2984 Před 25 dny +1

      Look up the drake equation

    • @MaximoToro
      @MaximoToro Před 24 dny

      Yeah, but an incredibly small number, multiplied by an unbelievably large number still amounts to a lot. I mean, there's possibly 2T+ galaxies in the known universe, with 100+B stars each, and now we're seeing that most stars have planets. If the criteria for intelligent life ends up being something like 0.00000000000001% chance, well, just multiply that by an astronomically high number and it's suddenly not that crazy to think there could be thousands (maybe millions) of planets with intelligent life out there. The sheer size of the known universe is truly beyond comprehension. And that's just what we know. It seems to keep growing every time our tools of observation improve. It wasn't that long ago that we thought the Milky Way Galaxy was the entire cosmos. Now we know there's probably 2+T galaxies. TRILLION. To put one trillion into context: it would take 32 THOUSAND YEARS to count to one trillion seconds. Of course our egos want us to feel special and think "obviously we're the only ones in the universe!, i mean, we haven't seen anything, have we? We looked, saw nothing, therefore they don't exist"... The "looking" we've done is pathetically small. When you look at how far our first radio signals have traveled out into space, and realize they've 'only' traveled about 125 light years, and out Milky Way galaxy is approx 100,000 light years across, and the closest galaxy to us (Andromeda) is abour 2.5M light years across.... It's a bit silly to ask "why haven't they responded yet?!"