How Would We Communicate with Alien Life? - with Carl Sagan

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  • čas přidán 12. 12. 2017
  • If life exists elsewhere in the Universe, would we be able to communicate with it? In this clip from the 1977 CHRISTMAS LECTURES "The planets", Carl Sagan demonstrates how we could send a signal that would make sense to intelligent beings that have evolved independently from us.
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    This video is from our 2017 advent calendar. Watch the full series here: • Transmissions through ...
    Or watch the full lecture here: www.rigb.org/christmas-lecture...
    The Royal Institution 2017 advent calendar ‘Transmissions Through Time’ looks through the lens of CHRISTMAS LECTURES past to share the best demonstrations around the science of communication. From Attenborough and Sagan to Woollard and Fong, we revisit old favourites and find new gems to bring you a little gift of science every day in the lead up to Christmas. bit.ly/RiAdvent17
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Komentáře • 587

  • @Batooony
    @Batooony Před 4 lety +416

    This is why Carl Sagan was so unique, he could explain complicated matters in a way that kids were able to understand, but at the same time it makes me amazed as an adult

    • @rolomovement9811
      @rolomovement9811 Před 3 lety +6

      are you sure that kids understood?

    • @dpt300
      @dpt300 Před 3 lety +17

      @@rolomovement9811 lol a few kids understood.
      Most were bored and had no concept of what was being said. ... Ironically exactly like most adults navigating society today :(

    • @ultramutt8278
      @ultramutt8278 Před 3 lety +12

      Andrew: possibly the bored kids in the vid actually ARE the adults of today to whom you refer...

    • @valiyar7541
      @valiyar7541 Před 3 lety +4

      @Oskars Lielmanis I'm 12 and I understood.

    • @radscorpion8
      @radscorpion8 Před 3 lety +1

      he chose topics that COULD be explained to 12 year old kids lol. You simply can't explain actually complicated ideas, like the fundamental theorem of calculus, using pictures and slides.

  • @richardgfrench5357
    @richardgfrench5357 Před 5 lety +565

    A student tracked this down for me - I was one of the graduate students. What this video doesn't show is that we had 48 hours to decode the message (or fail), and be recorded after the fact by the BBC, whatever the outcome. Failure was not an option, but success wasn't guaranteed - what was fun was that each grad student made a separate contribution (although I confess that I'm not sure that my insights were that profound, or that if we reassembled now we'd be able to do it again!

    • @Phobos_Anomaly
      @Phobos_Anomaly Před 5 lety +56

      You guys still did great. Not sure I could have done it! Also, what an honor to study under such a legend!

    • @youtubeuser2887
      @youtubeuser2887 Před 5 lety +7

      Nostalgia....

    • @AdeelKhan1
      @AdeelKhan1 Před 3 lety +6

      Formaldehyde: So the molecules have a particular radio frequency and that's the frequency we should use. What is the source of this information?

    • @richardgfrench5357
      @richardgfrench5357 Před 3 lety +38

      @@AdeelKhan1 I think it wasn't much before this event that astronomers had detected the presence of formadelhyde in interstellar clouds in our galaxy - every molecule has its own 'fingerprint' of frequencies of that it can absorb or emit, and from measurements on Earth in laboratories the radio frequency of formaldehyde had been measured. This made it possible to identify this rather simple molecule as having been produced in abundance in clouds of gas and dust in the Milky Way. The idea was that the signal we had decoded had been sent at LOTS of different frequencies, but at a very slow rate so that it was easy to detect and decode. It was like a billboard on the highway saying 'tune your radio dial to WQXR to hear the latest news.' The recipient would then know where to listen for the real message that would contain much more information. One of the challenges of this kind of imagined alien communication is figuring out where to tune your radio dial, and this was an ingenious solution.

    • @AdeelKhan1
      @AdeelKhan1 Před 3 lety +9

      @@richardgfrench5357 Formaldehyde appears to be a precursor to amino acids as the foundational building block of life. I see, so you are saying that it absorbs or emits a certain radio frequency. So it's a precursor channel, which if were an alien signal, is a suggestion to tune into a particular frequency. Because there are indeed be many frequencies. If I understood correctly. So we are talking about a precursor signal.

  • @ameremortal
    @ameremortal Před 6 lety +213

    Carl Sagan was the biggest influence in my life. I had hope back then. Wow... How I miss this great man...

  • @Novasky2007
    @Novasky2007 Před 3 lety +73

    Alien 1: huh its a formaldehyde molecule
    Alien 2: I think they want us to preserve their species once they are all dead.

  • @lilbbasedgodiscool
    @lilbbasedgodiscool Před 5 lety +265

    "Beep BEEP beep beep BEEP!" -- Carl Sagan, 1977

    • @dougboggio7098
      @dougboggio7098 Před 3 lety +2

      D Q contact...........prime numbers......?

    • @CurtisDensmore1
      @CurtisDensmore1 Před 3 lety +3

      He was singing 3 frequencies, not 2. I just have to take advantage of an opportunity to correct him.

    • @alexstorr3357
      @alexstorr3357 Před 3 lety

      Finally I have discovered who composed the track Mr Krabs requested!

    • @zetetick395
      @zetetick395 Před 3 lety

      That's a LOT of swears in one sentence, Dr Sagan! @.@

    • @lifes40123
      @lifes40123 Před 3 lety

      Beep beep bop bop boop - mr krabs

  • @wolvenar
    @wolvenar Před 6 lety +133

    At risk of sounding like the previous comments, Mr. Sagan became one of the most influential in my life and one I hold in highest regard. I seriously miss his influence on our world.

    • @busTedOaS
      @busTedOaS Před 3 lety +6

      unlike his physical body, Carl Sagan's influence on our world lasts as long as we care to preserve it.

    • @AlokKumar-tk1ty
      @AlokKumar-tk1ty Před 2 lety +1

      @@busTedOaS true today it's ag great need for humans all around earrh

    • @Jinka1950
      @Jinka1950 Před 2 lety

      So true for me…….heartbreaking he’s gone

  • @CybranM
    @CybranM Před 6 lety +210

    Carl Sagan really is the best

    • @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time
      @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time Před 6 lety +4

      And is book Cosmos!!!

    • @JoeLaFon3
      @JoeLaFon3 Před 6 lety +4

      CybranM the way he educates paved the way for the likes of Tyson, Greene, and many other personalities who now do it well like Sagan did

  • @hyperian_one
    @hyperian_one Před 3 lety +30

    Living in Ithaca from 1972 until 1984 I had the distinctly awesome pleasure to listen to this gentleman lecture us a Cornell in person, numerous times.

  • @dr.lairdwhitehillsfunwitha67

    He was my advisor. I owe him a lot.

  • @ShadowsHeat
    @ShadowsHeat Před 6 lety +143

    Wish he was still around

  • @os2171
    @os2171 Před 6 lety +423

    Carl Sagan is responsible of me becoming a scientist. Profoundly in dept.

    • @AlexandriaTheGreat
      @AlexandriaTheGreat Před 3 lety +45

      Bruh... profoundly in department? Do you mean debt?

    • @positronundervolt4799
      @positronundervolt4799 Před 3 lety +43

      Shoulda taken a language class first.

    • @AlexandriaTheGreat
      @AlexandriaTheGreat Před 3 lety +4

      positron underVolt , game point

    • @Ryanstuff
      @Ryanstuff Před 3 lety +9

      He's also responsible for Hugo Weavings rendition of the agent Smith character from The Matrix.

    • @AlexandriaTheGreat
      @AlexandriaTheGreat Před 3 lety +4

      Ryan Peters I want this to be true and so I must pull from my reserves of skepticism. ❤️

  • @ricomajestic
    @ricomajestic Před 3 lety +22

    I could listen to Sagan speak for hours. Great speaker, story teller and lecturer!

  • @alejandrobetancourt4902
    @alejandrobetancourt4902 Před 6 lety +780

    Those bored grade schoolers didn't know what they had in front of them.

    • @sbalogh53
      @sbalogh53 Před 6 lety +28

      Especially the one in the brown shirt. lol

    • @lumigg2556
      @lumigg2556 Před 3 lety +25

      dude even the Sagan's students had a hard time tryin to figuring out what this thing was, I think you're expecting too much for the grade schoolers lol

    • @Eclipse1369
      @Eclipse1369 Před 3 lety +1

      Alejandro Betancourt - he’s a legend

    • @anglojojo
      @anglojojo Před 3 lety +6

      @David Lamb why the hate bruhh? Carl was a star man, a curios one that was highly evolved as a human being.

    • @johncronin9540
      @johncronin9540 Před 3 lety +7

      @@lumigg2556 He wasn’t asking the grade school children to decipher it; he was showing them how his grad students figured it out. It was a demonstration of one method of communicating with an extraterrestrial species. Humans have trouble communicating with each other, especially with language barriers, even though ultimately virtually all human languages are related to each other.
      The problem is how does one communicate (using radio waves, a form of light, and thus traveling at the speed of light) with alien beings, who would obviously not understand ANY human language. Sagan was involved in the design of the plaque on the Pioneer Probes, and the record on the Voyager Probes, which are headed out of our Solar System forever, and may, deep into the future, be picked up by some interstellar aliens. How would one communicate with them? So Sagan has had a lot of opportunity to examine this question. And the scheme developed for his grad students was used in his novel, “Contact”. (The movie is good, the book, even better.)

  • @xebatansis
    @xebatansis Před 6 lety +85

    Look at all these young children getting educated on such an adult matter. It' s really nice to see.

    • @Franco_justAhuman
      @Franco_justAhuman Před 5 lety +23

      Well to be honest , most of them looked like they'd rather be sniffing glue than be there.

    • @idealbacon
      @idealbacon Před 5 lety +1

      Lmfao

    • @CurtisDensmore1
      @CurtisDensmore1 Před 3 lety +2

      They were miserable. Such a waste.

    • @esquilax5563
      @esquilax5563 Před 3 lety

      Happens every year at the RI Christmas Lectures, they're great

    • @johnbull1568
      @johnbull1568 Před 3 lety +1

      These Christmas lectures were televised on the BBC at the time. I used to watch them every year, although I am slightly too young to have seen Carl Sagan's lectures. It's been something of a pleasure to discover all the old lectures, and those in the intervening decades.

  • @Eliphas_Leary
    @Eliphas_Leary Před 6 lety +97

    Cheer up, folks! Carl Sagan still IS a great influence on many, and he STILL inspires a lot of people to continue his work. That's why he smiles in most pictures... ;o)

  • @ssabykoops
    @ssabykoops Před 5 lety +26

    I love how years later we see this exact example of first contact used in his book/movie Contact ,.,.

    • @nkq5568
      @nkq5568 Před 3 lety +1

      I was thinking the same thing. What a treat to see the experiment unfold and how it influenced his novel and the film. What a genius. So clear in his thinking. I can only marvel.

    • @wagner55
      @wagner55 Před 3 lety

      Wow I’m not alone on this one

  • @janeck.8695
    @janeck.8695 Před 3 lety +6

    Carl Sagan = one of the greatest brains of the 20th century.

  • @dewelr121
    @dewelr121 Před 3 lety +8

    Carl Sagan is responsible for making me fall in love with astronomy

  • @sbalogh53
    @sbalogh53 Před 6 lety +40

    2:07 He was forced to come to this lecture and would rather be watching the football.

  • @vishalrao7010
    @vishalrao7010 Před 3 lety +6

    Carl Sagan is the legend which lives on for ever in our minds... Love from India

  • @jaideeprai230
    @jaideeprai230 Před 2 lety +5

    We will always miss this amazing Soul. He not only had tremendous knowledge & an analytical mind but also the power to deliver in his mesmerising talks on the universe. It was as if he took you on a journey. God Bless his departed soul. There will never be another like him. ✊✊✊✊✊

  • @wasimskhan
    @wasimskhan Před 2 lety +3

    Carl Sagan was one of the most eloquent persons ever, gifted with an uncanny ability to articulate most complex ideas and deliver with such ease that a 9 year old me could understand. Love you, dear Carl.

  • @michellemartinez7515
    @michellemartinez7515 Před 3 lety +8

    Carl Sagan is still a great influencer, recently i read his book "A pale blue dot" and he inspired me to study astronomy and Physics, what a Great man!

  • @kiddo280
    @kiddo280 Před 3 lety +10

    “Either way we win”... wise words Carl.

  • @JohnnytNatural
    @JohnnytNatural Před 3 lety +23

    Aliens: Why are they sending us message of Mickey Mouse?
    Also Aliens: Tune into Looney Tunes and spend decades trying to decipher it

  • @RCDesertRat
    @RCDesertRat Před 3 lety +12

    We need Carl Sagan today more than ever to counter the war on science

    • @reindervantil2582
      @reindervantil2582 Před rokem

      There is no war on science. There is a battle against biased prejudiced corrupt science which we can see in the covid19 scam and the climate scare scam. Follow the money and you find out that those people who want to shove that so called science in our throats are the same people making billions of dollars by doing so. Science has become corrupt. In the covid19 scamdemic and in the climate scare scam real scientists have been silenced, deplatformed, demomnized and fired from their jobs. Carl Sagan is turning around in his grave

    • @octaviussludberry9016
      @octaviussludberry9016 Před 6 měsíci

      I think Richard Dawkins, Noam Chomsky, Margaret Geller, Alan Guth, Neil Degrasse Tyson, Jane Goodall, Peter Higgs etc etc...are all doing just fine in Sagan's absence.

  • @marco1173
    @marco1173 Před 3 lety +4

    I could listen to Carl Sagan speak all day long, everyday.

  • @SiMyt848
    @SiMyt848 Před 6 lety +43

    I love the archive's video serie!

  • @davidpatterson2178
    @davidpatterson2178 Před 5 lety +4

    Carl Sagan. The best of the best. Not nearly enough people like him today. A great communicater.

  • @JoeLaFon3
    @JoeLaFon3 Před 6 lety +40

    I love this series. Keep em coming

  • @Epochal_Enigmas
    @Epochal_Enigmas Před 5 lety +15

    Wouldn't it be funny when we've tried our best to figure out such a complex way to communicate with them, and then when they arrived, they just telepathically learn our language and speak with it fluently?

    • @MuantanamoMobile
      @MuantanamoMobile Před 3 lety

      Can you give an example of any animal or organism ever communicating by "telepathy"?

    • @louithrottler
      @louithrottler Před rokem +1

      @@MuantanamoMobile My dog keeps telling you that you smell funny. Gonna answer him or what?

  • @oddviews
    @oddviews Před 3 lety +5

    Carl Sagan, for sure, one of my heroes of the 20th (and 21st) century

  • @aaronbrandes7456
    @aaronbrandes7456 Před 3 lety +2

    Carl Sagan is not a national treasure, he was a treasure of humanity.

  • @fireangel6038
    @fireangel6038 Před 6 lety +14

    I love his voice

  • @ckn711
    @ckn711 Před 3 lety +5

    I wish I had Mr. Sagan as a professor.

  • @piccadilyroad66
    @piccadilyroad66 Před 4 lety +5

    If I were first high schooler at that time, maybe I'll be loved to join on these class, It's totally interesting lecture 😀

  • @fasteddy07
    @fasteddy07 Před 2 lety +2

    Had it been up to me to decode the message, I’d still be working on it today, some 44 years later.

  • @UFOUAPMagnet
    @UFOUAPMagnet Před 3 lety +2

    As a person who recognizes, and decodes impossible messages for a living, this talk is wonderful.

  • @TheDarrenSR
    @TheDarrenSR Před 3 lety +1

    It is a pity he is gone, My dad enjoyed astronomy astronomy programs watching Carl Sagan's programs when i was growing in teen years and I enjoyed watching with him. Good quality of programs of they day you don't get this today quality.

  • @gsxrplatinum
    @gsxrplatinum Před 5 lety +1

    This is an OUTSTANDING video!!!!!

  • @alexandervega408
    @alexandervega408 Před 3 lety +2

    This is incredible.

  • @asgardiangod23
    @asgardiangod23 Před 6 lety

    This is awesome. I love seeing your videos on my bell notifications lol

  • @austin5060
    @austin5060 Před 2 lety

    The quality of this is amazing for a Sagan video.

  • @Deft1-007
    @Deft1-007 Před 2 lety

    Still amazed by his approach to teaching n explaining!!

  • @tobinhays652
    @tobinhays652 Před 3 lety +1

    I am not a scientist by any means. I found that absolutely fascinating.

  • @muskyelondragon
    @muskyelondragon Před 6 lety +3

    Carl was an inspiration

  • @daxxonjabiru428
    @daxxonjabiru428 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice of Bill Nighy to step in and assist.

  • @houstonpromotion
    @houstonpromotion Před 4 lety +18

    Math is a universal language everyone knows math to some extent EVERYONE

  • @smalltown4855
    @smalltown4855 Před 3 lety

    you can see how he used this approach in the film Contact. one of my favourites.

  • @kjamison5951
    @kjamison5951 Před 3 lety +6

    This assignment in 1977...
    In 1985 Carl Sagan releases his novel, “Contact”, where an alien species sends a message which, when decoded, reveals a video image and hidden in the message is a three dimensional drawing of a device that allows one person to travel to the origin of the message as a first step in interstellar contact...
    In 1996, the World loses Carl Sagan.
    In 1997, Jodie Foster stars in the motion picture adaptation.

  • @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time

    Really nice video!!!

  • @jlinnlinn4241
    @jlinnlinn4241 Před 2 měsíci

    Really enlightening video. Thanks.

  • @ingenuity168
    @ingenuity168 Před 5 lety

    I absolutely adore his voice!

  • @BrokenKoolAid
    @BrokenKoolAid Před 2 lety +2

    While this is interesting to think about, it relies on many assumptions. The most prominent being that if we are putting a beacon out there for a more advanced intelligence to intercept, wouldnt that intelligence have already put out a beacon of its own that we are ignorant of? It seems to me that a higher intelligence would have a more efficacious strategy to start communication with us than we would have to initiate communication with it. We are the ones that need to pay attention and identify information with intent... aka meaning thats everywhere around us.

  • @sheronkirkus3615
    @sheronkirkus3615 Před 3 lety

    Wow. I learned something today about decoding those crazy 1's and 0's. I'm an artistic type that has a tempestuous relationship with math and physics. My brain does not compute. But if anyone could teach me...it would be Sagan. What a trip back in time to hear his voice again. The country was different then. Miss it. Thanks for uploading this little gem.

  • @thesunreport
    @thesunreport Před 6 lety +49

    2:07 .... I can't believe I'm missing Scooby Doo for this...
    xD

  • @tonyfrantz9942
    @tonyfrantz9942 Před 4 lety

    Absolutely amazing

  • @michellevey9608
    @michellevey9608 Před 2 lety

    The smartest person/communicator ever in my opinion.

  • @rodddossantos1437
    @rodddossantos1437 Před 3 lety

    Carl Sagan is and will always be my hero.

  • @cjshakes
    @cjshakes Před 5 lety +2

    This really made me realize how much technology helps in teaching. Its hard to see without a comparison to the past. I bet visualization in 3D was extremely hard in the past and is now something we take for granted. What other things might become easy to visualize in the future? (thus leading to more people being able to understand it and become interested in it)

  • @joyl7842
    @joyl7842 Před 3 lety +4

    "either way, we win"
    Indeed!

  • @caasieu
    @caasieu Před 3 lety

    Sagan explaining pixels and basics of graphical computing hh,awesome...

  • @marcherm
    @marcherm Před 3 lety +2

    When reason takes a cue from art: confronted with the sheer impossibility of language, turn to use images.

  • @gipbwok2008
    @gipbwok2008 Před 2 lety +2

    That Kathy is smart! She realized it's a 31x31x31 cube and correctly guessed it's formaldehyde. I wonder what she accomplished in her career.

  • @archer7199
    @archer7199 Před 3 lety

    He's my all time fav.

  • @ronaldjones5589
    @ronaldjones5589 Před 3 lety +1

    I watch this episode time and time again, and it still makes my blood race

  • @jaridwilliams739
    @jaridwilliams739 Před 3 lety +1

    i really have to give credit to sagan, the day i saw his video on light speed posted on youtube 14 years ago was when i started asking why

  • @jasondantzler2708
    @jasondantzler2708 Před 3 lety

    Good thing celestial & terrestrial beings are patient with us. They understand that our emotions can often frustrate us and get in the way of communication. Most things are a lifelong marathon, consistent learning, not exactly an event. Though there can be major events that help us.

  • @basketvector7311
    @basketvector7311 Před 3 lety

    The original and still the best

  • @Baci302
    @Baci302 Před rokem

    Fascinating!

  • @b.hagedash7973
    @b.hagedash7973 Před 6 lety +15

    Takes me back to glorious Saturday afternoons whiled away with Hoffman's elixir and Sagan's Cosmos.

  • @steverodak2230
    @steverodak2230 Před 3 lety +3

    Human beings have a hard time communicating with each other, let alone aliens from another planet.

  • @avisingh9871
    @avisingh9871 Před 3 lety

    I can listen him all day.

  • @Cybernaut551
    @Cybernaut551 Před 3 lety +2

    This is good social skills advice!

  • @_DarkEmperor
    @_DarkEmperor Před 3 lety +2

    Such optimism... Carl Sagan clearly has not read "His Master's Voice" and "Solaris" by Lem.

  • @brennonguilbeau569
    @brennonguilbeau569 Před 3 lety +1

    This guy is awesome.

  • @theomegaconcern9564
    @theomegaconcern9564 Před 4 lety +1

    The kid at 2:06 is a grumpy boy lol

  • @waynester71
    @waynester71 Před rokem +1

    Contact was a really good movie.. I perfectly plausible possibility to the existence of alien intelligent life..

  • @daftabhi5645
    @daftabhi5645 Před 3 lety +6

    The question is, who is that Cathy lady. She basically figured most of this out

  • @originalwhispersfromthedivine1

    …. It’s all fascinating 🧐 aren’t we all ‘alien’ to one another and having to ‘learn’ how to communicate properly with one another ?
    Bugs 🕷 🐛 🐜 animal 🦓 🦔 🦒 or human… we are all learning to live and communicate with each other 💖✨

  • @AnweshSatpathy
    @AnweshSatpathy Před 4 lety

    share the whole lecture please

  • @bostangpalaguna228
    @bostangpalaguna228 Před 3 lety

    Able to figure out the message is very cool

  • @warpath3427
    @warpath3427 Před 3 lety

    Genius iin explaining in easy methods

  • @MrLifesavers1
    @MrLifesavers1 Před 3 lety

    2:08 - the body language of the kid in the sweater is great. I bet he bragged about it later, telling his friends that he enjoyed Professor Sagan's lecture.

  • @skyylow
    @skyylow Před rokem +1

    The next space telescope is named after Carl Sagan. It's mission is to search for life.

  • @josemiguelaeriro2015
    @josemiguelaeriro2015 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant

  • @treznich
    @treznich Před 3 lety

    Thank God for people like that carry us all into the future.

  • @johnfitzgerald2339
    @johnfitzgerald2339 Před 3 lety

    Cool to see a vintage Stony Brook University sweatshirt on kid in center @ 4:02. It looks like his little-brother to his right had one on too.

  • @danielsteel5251
    @danielsteel5251 Před 6 lety +6

    The third, and in fact generic, alternative is that that particular scientific endeavor neither "succeeds" nor "fails" conclusively (i.e., never halts).
    In this case, the body of scientific knowledge got through ancillary hypotheses and experiments, as well as the body of methods and techniques (and even physical technologies) developed in conjunction with (or co/incidentally, alongside) the former developments/advances -- all, at least originally, in the aim of deciding the hypothesis -- _all accrue without limit._ The ROI for R&D is strictly positive. Always.
    In other words: Science is a win-win-win enterprise.

    • @martinzitter4551
      @martinzitter4551 Před 6 lety

      More like dog-eat-dog.

    • @danielsteel5251
      @danielsteel5251 Před 6 lety

      We're all in this together. Happy New Year to you.
      Enjoy: czcams.com/video/G9EJE1ad36Q/video.html
      EDIT: But also this: thefutureofourworld.ytmnd.com

  • @franciscocosentino4228
    @franciscocosentino4228 Před 2 lety +2

    Carl Sagan is the reason I regret becoming a tax lawyer. Thank you Carl wherever you are!

  • @mrdeathgaming1457
    @mrdeathgaming1457 Před 2 lety

    Where is the rest of Sagans full lectures in HD pls?

  • @fburton8
    @fburton8 Před 6 lety

    This is gold dust.

  • @thomthumbe
    @thomthumbe Před 3 lety

    I think Dr. Sagan would be impressed at how many “channels”, or rather frequencies we are able to “listen” to at once. I don’t think it improbable at all that 50 years from now, listening to or rather being able to monitor frequencies from DC to Daylight all at one time will be possible while the antenna is pointed at one spot in the sky. And either the antenna rapidly moves to different spots, or perhaps dozens or even hundreds of antennas could provide instantaneous surveillance of most, if not the entire sky. Or rather, building on what Dr Sagan alluded....our ability to read all the local highway billboards and hear all the local radio stations, all at once, isn’t too far fetched? Perhaps this is nothing more than a pipe dream.

    • @IPlayWithFire135
      @IPlayWithFire135 Před 3 lety

      No you're right. New telescopes are going up all over the world. And the new move in SETI is to use all the resources of the internet to sift and store this data. Pretty soon, what you're describing will be fully realized.

  • @anaguma90
    @anaguma90 Před 2 lety +1

    One of the greatest humans to ever live in my mind

  • @rotntv
    @rotntv Před 3 lety +1

    Not one single child today has the patience, curiosity, or attention span to sit through this presentation the way these kids in the video did. Quietly. Respectfully. Intrigued.
    I really hate the way things have gone in this country... Pop culture has replaced all culture.

  • @userwl2850
    @userwl2850 Před 6 lety

    This... Dawkins...and Simon Conway Morris where the best Xmas lectures ever.

  • @Kargoneth
    @Kargoneth Před 8 měsíci

    Why is this video clip of a higher quality than the video of the full lecture?

  • @robb6188
    @robb6188 Před 6 lety

    At 2:40 in, when you see the grad student at the head of the table, it's the Mitch Taylor character from the 1985 movie, Real Genius, that you're thinking of. Played by Gabe Jarret. You're welcome. I know it was bugging you too.

  • @neilrichardson7454
    @neilrichardson7454 Před rokem +1

    If one person in that video went into a STEAM career because of this man, then mission accomplished 🙂

  • @SageModeisOn
    @SageModeisOn Před 3 lety +1

    Scientists : There's life and we can communicate with this number message
    Aliens : eats message