Skip to main content

Aliens have probably once existed, according to leading astrophysicists

Some 3,000 planets have been identified outside of our solar system. A whopping 1,284 of those were announced just last month by the team behind the Kepler space telescope. What was once a difficult and uncommon discovery has become something of the norm – new planets seem to pop up regularly. “Improvements in astronomical observation technology have moved us from retail to wholesale planet discovery,” writes University of Rochester professor of astrophysics Adam Frank in an op-ed piece for The New York Times.

Frank’s piece, titled, “Yes, There Have Been Aliens,” argues that, at some point before humans existed, there were probably aliens. Frank refers to an equation conceived in 1961 by a man named Frank Drake (yes, their names are easy to confuse) who was invited to host a conference on the possibilities of communication between solar systems. Drake decided to create an equation for the event, which attempted to calculate how many advanced civilizations existed off of Earth, since the quantity of advanced civilizations increases the chances of interstellar contact.

Recommended Videos

Here’s the Drake equation: N = R* x fp x ne x fl x fi x fc x L

And here’s what it means (bear with us because it gets complicated):

N stands for the number of civilizations that we may be able to communicate with.
R* stands for the average rate at which stars form in our galaxy.
fp stands for the fraction of these stars which have planets.
ne stands for the number of planets that can support life, per star that has planets.
fl stands for the planets that can support life, which actually develop life.
fi stands for the fraction of planets with life, which then develop intelligent life.
fc stand for the fraction of intelligence life that then develops technology to send of detachable signals.
And, lastly, L stands for the length of time that these civilizations can send out detectable signals.

Frank and his team took license to eliminate some of these variables. For example, he writes, “Instead of asking how many civilizations currently exist, we asked what the probability is that ours is the only technological civilization that has ever appeared. By asking this question, we could bypass the factor about the average lifetime of a civilization. This left us with only three unknown factors, which we combined into one ‘biotechnical’ probability: the likelihood of the creation of life, intelligent life and technological capacity.”

A few calculations later, Frank determines that “even if this probability is assumed to be extremely low, the odds that we are not the first technological civilization are actually high. Specifically, unless the probability for evolving a civilization on a habitable-zone planet is less than one in 10 billion trillion, then we are not the first.”

To be clear, and before your gets too exited about meeting ET, Frank’s position isn’t that aliens do exist but that, according to the Drake equation, aliens have existed at some point in the history or the universe.

Dyllan Furness
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Dyllan Furness is a freelance writer from Florida. He covers strange science and emerging tech for Digital Trends, focusing…
This is how the universe will end (according to a theoretical astrophysicist)
kate mack image composite

“Our contemplations of the cosmos stir us,” the late atronomer Carl Sagan once said. “There's a tingling in the spine, a catch in the voice, a faint sensation, as if a distant memory of falling from a great height.” If reflecting on the universe gives you a shiver, thinking about its end can make you quake.

In her new book, The End of Everything: (Astrophysically Speaking), theoretical astrophysicist Dr. Katie Mack starts with the Big Bang — the theory of how the universe began. Its start can tell cosmologists like her a lot about its inevitable end. She cheerfully takes readers through five astrophysics apocalypses: The big crunch, heat death, the big rip, vacuum decay, and the big bounce. To keep you from getting stuck in the quark-gluon plasma (don’t worry, she explains it), Mack keeps everything accessible and conversational. It’s much more fun than you’d expect a book about the end of the universe to be. Don’t let the universe-is-ending existential dread get you down, she seems to say.

Read more
Mars once had rings of its own, new research suggests
Rendering showing a planetary ring system over Mars.

Saturn is the planet in our solar system that's famous for its beautiful rings, but it may once have had competition from our neighbor, Mars.

New research from the SETI Institute and Purdue University suggests that millions of years ago, Mars may have had rings of its own.

Read more
Remember that alien comet? Scientists figured out what it’s made of
Comet 2I/Borisov

Late last year, astronomers grabbed the public's attention when they announced they has observed an alien comet. 2I/Borisov, as it was named, had traveled to our solar system from a different planetary system, making it a very rare visitor. Now, a study of the comet using data from the Hubble Space Telescope has revealed more about its composition and origin.

There was great interest in studying the comet because of its unusual status. "With an interstellar comet passing through our own solar system, it's like we get a sample of a planet orbiting another star showing up in our own back yard," said John Noonan of the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory at the University of Arizona.

Read more