-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
World stocks mostly slide, consolidating Fed-fuelled gains
-
Crypto firm Tether bids for Juventus, is quickly rebuffed
-
UK's king shares 'good news' that cancer treatment will be reduced in 2026
-
Can Venezuela survive US targeting its oil tankers?
-
Salah admired from afar in his Egypt home village as club tensions swirl
-
World stocks retrench, consolidating Fed-fuelled gains
-
Iran frees child bride sentenced to death over husband's killing: activists
-
World stocks consolidate Fed-fuelled gains
-
France updates net-zero plan, with fossil fuel phaseout
-
Stocks rally in wake of Fed rate cut
-
EU agrees recycled plastic targets for cars
-
British porn star to be deported from Bali after small fine
-
British porn star fined, faces imminent Bali deportation
-
Spain opens doors to descendants of Franco-era exiles
-
Indonesia floods were 'extinction level' for rare orangutans
-
Thai teacher finds 'peace amidst chaos' painting bunker murals
-
Japan bear victim's watch shows last movements
-
South Korea exam chief quits over complaints of too-hard tests
-
French indie 'Clair Obscur' dominates Game Awards
-
South Korea exam chief resigns after tests dubbed too hard
-
Asian markets track Wall St record after Fed cut
-
Laughing about science more important than ever: Ig Nobel founder
-
Vaccines do not cause autism: WHO
-
Crypto mogul Do Kwon sentenced to 15 years for fraud: US media
-
'In her prime': Rare blooming of palm trees in Rio
-
Make your own Mickey Mouse clip - Disney embraces AI
-
OpenAI beefs up GPT models in AI race with Google
-
Dark, wet, choppy: Machado's secret sea escape from Venezuela
-
Cyclone causes blackout, flight chaos in Brazil's Sao Paulo
-
2024 Eurovision winner Nemo returns trophy over Israel's participation
-
US bringing seized tanker to port, as Venezuela war threats build
-
Make your own AI Mickey Mouse - Disney embraces new tech
-
Time magazine names 'Architects of AI' as Person of the Year
-
Floodworks on Athens 'oasis' a tough sell among locals
-
OpenAI, Disney to let fans create AI videos in landmark deal
-
German growth forecasts slashed, Merz under pressure
-
Thyssenkrupp pauses steel production at two sites citing Asian pressure
-
ECB proposes simplifying rules for banks
-
Stocks mixed as US rate cut offset by Fed outlook, Oracle earnings
-
Desert dunes beckon for Afghanistan's 4x4 fans
-
Breakout star: teenage B-girl on mission to show China is cool
-
Chocolate prices high before Christmas despite cocoa fall
-
Austria set to vote on headscarf ban in schools
-
Asian traders cheer US rate cut but gains tempered by outlook
-
AI's $400 bn problem: Are chips getting old too fast?
-
Oracle shares dive as revenue misses forecasts
-
US stocks rise, dollar retreats as Fed tone less hawkish than feared
-
Divided US Fed makes third straight rate cut, signals higher bar ahead
-
Machado to come out of hiding after missing Nobel ceremony
Where are all the aliens?: Fermi's Paradox explained
Astronomers raised hopes that humanity might not be alone in the universe by announcing on Thursday they have detected the most promising hints yet of life on a distant planet.
But given the age and vastness of the universe, a different question has long puzzled some scientists: why haven't we already come in contact with aliens?
"Where is everybody?" Enrico Fermi asked fellow famous physicists including Edward Teller over lunch in 1950.
This quandary was named Fermi's Paradox.
"It's a numbers game," Jason Wright, the director of the extraterrestrial intelligence centre at Pennsylvania State University, told AFP.
The Milky Way is around 10 billion years old and is home to more than 100 billion stars.
This suggests there is likely a mind-boggling number of potentially habitable planets in our home galaxy alone.
That could include K2-18b, where astronomers said Thursday they have detected signs of a chemical that is only produced by microbial life on Earth.
Wright said Fermi's Paradox essentially suggests that -- given enough time -- "every alien species will eventually have their own Elon Musk who will go out and settle the next star over".
That we have not yet heard from aliens is known as "the mystery of the great silence".
- So what are the theories? -
At least 75 speculative solutions to Fermi's Paradox have been proposed so far, according to a 2015 book, though Wright guessed more have been added since.
First, it is possible that humanity has not yet detected alien life because there isn't any -- we are truly alone.
Many scientists feel this is unlikely.
Some 87 percent of over 1,000 scientists in relevant fields surveyed in Nature Astronomy earlier this year agreed there is at least a basic form of extraterrestrial life.
More than 67 percent agreed that intelligent aliens are out there.
Of course, it is also possible that aliens are already here and we have not noticed -- or that it has been covered up.
Or interstellar space could just be too difficult to traverse, the distances too vast, the resources needed too great.
- What if there is a 'great filter'? -
Another theory is that there is some kind of "great filter" that prevents life -- or intelligent life -- from occurring in the first place.
Or perhaps there is some kind of barrier that stops civilisations from advancing beyond a certain point.
For example, once civilisations develop the technology to travel through space, they might tend to destroy themselves with something like nuclear weapons.
Or maybe they burn through their planet's natural resources, or make their climate unliveable.
Some of these theories seem to be influenced by fears for human civilisation -- the one example we have of intelligent life.
But Wright felt this was unlikely because any such barrier would have to be the same across the whole universe.
It would also have to make the species go totally extinct every time, otherwise they would eventually bounce back and try again at space travel.
- Are we in a zoo or planetarium? -
There are even more galaxy-brained ideas.
Under the "zoo" hypothesis, technologically advanced aliens would be leaving humans alone to observe us from afar, like animals in a zoo.
The "planetarium" hypothesis posits that aliens could be creating an illusion that makes space seem empty to us, keeping us in the dark.
- ...or a 'dark forest'? -
This theory got its name from the second book in Chinese author Cixin Liu's science-fiction series "The Three-Body Problem".
It posits that the universe is a "dark forest" in which no one wants to reveal their presence lest they be destroyed by others.
There are other hypotheses that aliens prefer to "transcend" to another plane of existence -- which some have compared to virtual reality -- so don't bother with interstellar travel.
- Why would they all be the same? -
But there is a big problem with many of these "so-called solutions," Wright said.
They tend to assume that all the hypothetical kinds of aliens across the universe would all behave in the same way -- forever.
This has been dubbed the "monocultural fallacy".
Wright, who has used SETI telescopes to search for radio signals or lasers from the stars, also pushed back against the idea that humanity would necessarily have already picked up on any alien signal.
Aliens could be sending out messages using all sorts of unknown technology, so maybe the galaxy is not as silent as we think, he said.
"Those of us looking for life in the universe generally don't think of the Fermi paradox or the great silence as such a big problem."
A.Mykhailo--CPN