Lex Fridman Podcast - #355 – David Kipping: Alien Civilizations and Habitable Worlds

Episode Date: January 29, 2023

David Kipping is an astronomer at Columbia University, director of the Cool Worlds Lab, and host of the Cool Worlds YouTube channel. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - SimpliS...afe: https://simplisafe.com/lex - Shopify: https://shopify.com/lex to get free trial - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod to get 3 months free EPISODE LINKS: David's Twitter: https://twitter.com/david_kipping David's YouTube: https://youtube.com/@CoolWorldsLab Cool Worlds Lab: https://coolworldslab.com/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (05:10) - Habitable exoplanets (15:30) - Alien life in our Solar System (27:20) - Starship (31:28) - James Webb Space Telescope (44:47) - Binary planets (55:04) - Exomoons and Kepler-1625b (1:08:34) - Discoveries of alien life (1:22:15) - Aliens (2:08:43) - Oort clouds (2:19:30) - Future of astronomy (2:32:45) - Alpha Centauri (2:45:03) - Kardashev scale (2:56:41) - AI and space exploration (3:13:37) - Great Filter (3:24:51) - Colonization of Mars (3:31:35) - Simulation hypothesis (3:43:48) - Advice for young people (3:48:06) - Meaning of life

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The following is a conversation with David Kipping, an astronomer and astrophysicist at Columbia University, director of the Cool Worlds Lab, and he's an amazing educator about the most fascinating scientific phenomena in our universe. I highly recommend you check out his videos on the Cool Worlds YouTube channel. David quickly became one of my favorite human beings. I hope to talk to him many more times in the future. And now a quick few second mention of each sponsor. Check them out in the description. It's the best way to support this podcast. We got Simplestafe for Home Security, Shopify for e-commerce and ExpressVPN for privacy on the internet. She's wise to my friends. And now onto the full ad reads,
Starting point is 00:00:46 as always, no ads in the middle, I find those annoying. So I try my best to make sure we don't have any. But if you skip these, please still check out the sponsors. I mean, without them, this podcast would not be possible. So it's a huge, huge thank you to them for believing this podcast, for supporting it. So it's a huge, huge thank you to them for believing this podcast, for supporting it. And they make good stuff, which is the reason why they're a sponsor.
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Starting point is 00:03:23 at Shopify.com slash Lex. All lowercase. Go to Shopify.com slash Lex to take your business to the next level today. This show is also brought to you by Express VPN, a company that for many, many years brought happiness to my life with a big sexy button that I press and it takes care of everything. I think it's really, really important that you have a VPN and Express VPN has been my favorite is what I really recommend. The thing I love most about it is it does the thing.
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Starting point is 00:04:33 And so, whatever the journey ExpressVPN took, I'm glad they did, because they created an amazing piece of software. Go to ExpressVPN.com slash Lex pod for next 3 months free. This is Alex Reedman podcast to support it. Please check out our sponsors in the description. And now to your friends, here's David Kipping. Your research at Columbia is in part focused on what you call cool worlds. Or worlds outside our solar system where temperature is sufficiently cool to allow for moons, rings, and life to form, and for us humans to observe it. So can you tell me
Starting point is 00:05:26 more about this idea, this place of cool worlds? Yeah, the history of discovering planets outside our solar system was really dominated by these hot planets. And that's just because of the fact they're easier to find. When the very first methods came online, these were primarily the Doppler Spectroscopy method, looking for wobbling stars stars and also the transit method. And these two both have a really strong bias towards finding these hot planets. Now, hot planets are interesting. The chemistry in the atmosphere is fascinating. It's very alien. An example of one that's particularly close to my heart is Trace 2B, whose atmosphere
Starting point is 00:06:05 is so dark, it's less reflective than coal. And so they have really bizarre photometric properties, yet at the same time, they resemble nothing like our own home. And so it said that it's two types of astrophysicists. The astrophysicists who care about how the universe works, they want to understand the mechanics of the machinery of this universe, why did the big bang happen, why is the universe works. They want to understand the mechanics of the machinery of this universe. Why did the big bang happen? Why is the universe expanding? How are galaxies formed? And there's another type of astrophysicist, which perhaps speaks to me a little bit more.
Starting point is 00:06:35 It whispers into your ear, and that is why are we here? Are we alone? Are there others out there? And ultimately, on long this journey, the hot plants aren't going to get us there. When we're looking for life in the universe, it seems to make perfect sense that there should be plants like our own out there, maybe even moons like our own planet around gas giants that could be habitable. And so my research has been driven by trying to find these more miraculous globes that might resemble our own planet. So they're the ones that lurk more in the shadows in terms of how difficult it is to detect. Then much harder, they're harder for several reasons. The method we primarily use is
Starting point is 00:07:13 the transit methods. So this is really eclipses as the planet passes in front of the star. It blocks out some starlight. The problem with that is that not all planets pass in front of their star. They have to be aligned correctly from your line of sight. And so the further away the planet is from the star, the cooler it is, the less likely it is that you're going to get that geometric alignment. So whereas a hot Jupiter, about 1% of hot Jupiter's will transit in front of their star, only about 0.5% maybe even a quarter of a percent of Earth-like planets will have the right geometry to transit.
Starting point is 00:07:46 And so that makes it much, much harder for us. What's the connection between temperature of the planet and geomagic alignment, probability of geomagic alignment? There's not a direct connection, but they're connected via an intermediate parameter, which is their separation from the star. So, the planet will be cooler if it's further away from the star, which in turn means that the probability of getting that alignment correct is going to be less. On top of that, they also transit their star less frequently. So if you go to the telescope and you want to discover a hot Jupiter, you could probably do it in a week or so because the orbit appears of order of one, two, three days. So you can actually get the full orbit two or three times over, whereas if you want to set
Starting point is 00:08:23 an Earth-like planet, you have to observe that star for three, four years. And that's actually one of the problems with Kepler. Kepler was this very successful mission, the NASA launched over a decade ago now, I think, and it discovered thousands of planets. It's still the dominant source of exoplanets that we know about, but unfortunately, it didn't last as long as we would have liked it to. It died after about 4.35 years, I think it was. And so for an Earth-like planet,
Starting point is 00:08:51 that's just enough to catch four transits. Four transits was kind of seen as the minimum. But of course, the more transits you see, the easier it is to detect it, because you build up signal to noise. If you see the same thing, tick, tick, tick, tick, tick, tick, the more ticks you get, the easier it's to find it. And so it was really a shame that Kepler was just at the limit of where we were expecting it to start to see Earth-like planets. And in fact, it really found zero. Zero planets that are around stars like the sun, they're all bit similar to the Earth around the sun, and could potentially be similar to our own planet in terms of its composition.
Starting point is 00:09:26 And so it's a great shame, but that's why it gives astronomers more to do in the future. Just to clarify, the transit method is our primary way of detecting these things. And what it is is when the object passes, accludes the source of light, just a tiny bit, a few pixels. And from that, we can infer something about its mass and size and distance, geometry, all of that.
Starting point is 00:09:54 That's like trying to tell what, at a party, you can't see anything about a person, but you can just see by the way they include others. So this is the method, but it is a super far away. How many pixels of information do we have? Basically, how high resolution is the signal that we can get about these occlusions? You're right in your description. I think just to build upon that a little bit more, it might be almost like your vision is completely blurry. Like you have an extreme, you know, eye prescription.
Starting point is 00:10:29 And so you can't resolve anything. Everything's just blurs. But you can tell that something was there because it just got fainter for a short amount of time. Someone passed in front of a light. And so that light in your eyes would just dim for a short moment. Now the reason we have that problem with blur nurse resolution is just because the stars are so far away. I mean, these are the closest stars of four light years away, but most of the stars Keppel looked at with thousands of light years away. And so there's absolutely no chance
Starting point is 00:10:56 that the telescope can physically resolve the star or even the separation between the planet and the star is too small, especially for a telescope like Kepler, it's only a meter across. In principle, you can make those detections, but you need a different kind of telescope. We call that direct imaging, and direct imaging is a very exciting, distinct way of detecting planets, but it, as you can imagine, is going to be far easier to set planets, which are really far away from their start to do that, because that's going to make that separation really big. And then you'll also want the start to be really close to us, so the nearest stars, not
Starting point is 00:11:31 only that, but you would prefer that planet to be really hot, because the hotter it is, the brighter it is. And so that tends to bias direct imaging towards planets which are in the process of forming. So things which have just formed, the planets still go all of its primordial heat embedded within it and it's glowing, we can see those quite easily. But for the planets more like the Earth, of course, they've cooled down and so we can't see that. The light is pitiful compared to a newly formed planet. We would like to get there with direct imaging. That's the dream is to have the pale blue dark natural photograph other maybe even just a one pixel photograph of it.
Starting point is 00:12:05 But for now, the entire solar system is one pixel with a certainly with transit method most of the telescopes. And so all you can do is see where that one pixel, which contains potentially dozens of planets and the star, maybe even multiple stars, dims for a short amount of time. The dims just a little bit, and from there,
Starting point is 00:12:22 you're going for something. Yeah, I mean, it's like being a detective in the scene, right? It's very, it's indirect clues of the existence of the planet. It's amazingly human's can do that. We're just looking out and these immense distances and looking, you know, if there's alien civilizations out there, like, let's say one exactly like our own, Like, let's say one exactly like our own. Or like, would we even be able to see in Earth that passes in the way of its sun and slightly dims? And that's the only sign we have of that alien human-like civilization out there, is it's
Starting point is 00:12:57 just a little bit of a dimmy. Yeah. I mean, depends on the type of star we're talking about. If it is a star, truly like the sun, the dip that causes is 84 parts per million. I mean, that's just, it's like the same as a, um, it's like a firefly flying in front of like a giant flood light to the stadium or something. That's the kind of the brightness contrast that you're trying to compare to. So it's, it's extremely difficult to take.
Starting point is 00:13:21 And in the very, very best cases, we can get down to that. But as I said, we don't really have any true earth analogues that have been in the exoplanet candidate yet. Unless you relax that definition, you say it's not just doesn't have to be a star just like the sun. It could be a star that's smaller than the sun. It could be these orange dwarves or even the red dwarf stars. And the fact those stars are smaller means that for the same size planet passing in front of it, more light is blocked out.
Starting point is 00:13:47 And so a very exciting system, for example, is Trapis 1, which has seven planets which are smaller than the Earth and those are quite easily detectable, not with a space-based task, but even from the ground. And that's just because the star is so much smaller that the relative increase in or decrease in brightness is enhanced significantly because that's smaller size. So trap is 1e. It's a planet which is in the right distance for liquid water. It has a slightly smaller size in the earth. It's about 90% of the size of the earth, about 80% of the mass. And it's one of the top targets right now for potentially having life. And yet it raises many questions about what would that environment be like? This is a star which is 1-8th the mass of the sun. It's stars like that take a long time to come off that adolescence.
Starting point is 00:14:37 When stars first form like the sun, it takes them maybe 10, 100 million years to sort of settle into that main sequence lifetime. But for stars like these late M dwarfs as we call them, they can take up to a billion years or more to calm down. And during that period, they're producing huge amounts of x-rays, ultraviolet radiation that could potentially rip off the entire atmosphere. It may desiccate the plants in the system. And so even if water arrived by comets or something, it may have lostcate the plants in the system. And so even if water arrived by comets or something, it may have lost all that water due to this prolonged period of high activity. So we have lots of open-ended questions about these M-dwarf planets, but
Starting point is 00:15:16 they are the most accessible. And so in the near term, if we detect anything in terms of biosignatures, it's going to be for one of these red dwarf stars, it's not gonna be a true Earth twin, as we would recognize it as having a yellow star. Well, let me ask you, I mean, there's a million ways to ask this question, I'm sure I'll ask it, about habitable worlds. Let's just go to our own solar system.
Starting point is 00:15:40 What can we learn about the planets and moons in our solar system that might contain life, whether it's Mars or some of them moons of Jupiter and Saturn? What kind of characteristics, because you say it might not need to be Earth-like, what kind of characteristics might be we'd be looking for? When we look for life, it's hard to define even what life is, but we can maybe do a better job in defining the sorts of things that life does. And that provides some aspects to some avenue for looking for them. Any classically, conventionally, I think we thought the way
Starting point is 00:16:19 to look for life was to look for oxygen. Oxygen is a byproduct of photosynthesis on this planet. We didn't always have it. Certainly, if you get back to the Arcanine period, you have this period called the Great Oxidation event where the Earth floats with oxygen for the first time and starts to saturate the oceans and then the atmosphere. And so that oxygen, if we detects it on another planet, whether it be Mars, Venus, or an exoplanet, whatever it is, that was long thought to be evidence for something doing phytocynthesis. Because if you took away all the plant life on the earth, the oxygen wouldn't just hang around here. It's a highly reactive molecule. It would oxidize things, and so within about a million years, you'd probably lose
Starting point is 00:16:59 all the oxygen on planet Earth. So that was a conventionally how we thought we could look for life. And then we started to realize that it's not so simple because A, there might be other things that life does apart from phytosynthesis. Certainly the vast majority of the Earth's history had no oxygen and yet there was living things on it so that doesn't seem like a complete test. And secondly, could there be other things
Starting point is 00:17:21 that butchews oxygen besides from life? Growing concern has been these false positives in biosignature work. And so one example of that would be for tollicis that happens in the atmosphere. When ultraviolet right hits the upper atmosphere, it can break up water vapor, the hydrogen spits off to the oxygen.
Starting point is 00:17:40 The hydrogen isn't much lighter, atomic species, and so it can actually escape. Certainly planets like the Earth's gravity. That's why we don't have any hydrogen or very little helium. And so that leaves you with the oxygen, which then oxidizes the surface. And so there could be a residual oxygen signature just due to this fatalities process. So we've been trying to generalize, and certainly in recent years there's been other suggestions things we could look for in the solosystem beyond nitrous oxide, basically laughing gas is a product
Starting point is 00:18:09 of microbes. That's something that we're starting to get more interested in looking for, methane gas in combination with other gases can be in important biosignature, phosphine as well, and phosphines particularly relevant to the solosystem because there was a lot of interest for Venus recently. You may have heard that there was a claim of a biosignature in Venus' atmosphere, I think it was like two years ago now. And the the Georgian jury is still out on that.
Starting point is 00:18:38 There was a very provocative claim and signature of a phosphine-like, spectral absorption. But it could have also have been some of the molecule in particular, sulfur dioxide, which is not a biosignature. So this is a detection of a gas in the atmosphere. Yeah. Venus. And it might be controversial several dimensions. So one, how to interpret that.
Starting point is 00:19:05 Two, is this the right guess? And three, is this even the right detection? Is there an error in the detection? Yeah, I mean, how much do we believe the detection in the first place? If you do believe it, does that necessarily mean there's life there? And what gives, how can you have life
Starting point is 00:19:20 in the means of this atmosphere in the first place? Because that's been seen as like a hellhole place for imagining life. But I guess the counter that has been that, okay, yes, the surface is a horrendous place to imagine life thriving. But as you go up in altitude, the very dense atmosphere means that there is a cloud layer where the temperature and the pressure become actually fairly similar to the surface of the earth. And so it may be that there are microbes doing around in the clouds which are producing phosphine. At the moment, this is fascinating. It's got a lot of us reinvigorated about the prospects of going back to Venus and doing another mission there. In fact, there's now two NASA missions, Veritas and DaVinci, which are gonna be going back and before 2030 or the 2030s.
Starting point is 00:20:07 And then we have a European mission, I think that's slated now, and even a Chinese mission might be coming along the way as well. So it might have multiple missions going to Venus, which has long been overlooked. I mean, apart from the Soviets, there really has been very little in the way of exploration of Venus.
Starting point is 00:20:21 That's certainly as compared to Mars. Mars has enjoyed most of the activity from NASA's rovers and surveys. And Mars is certainly fascinating. There's this signature of methane that has been seen there before. Again, there, the discussion is whether that methane is a product of biology, which is possible.
Starting point is 00:20:41 So any of that happens on the earth, or whether it's some geological process that we are yet to fully understand, could be, for example, a reservoir of methane that's trapped into the surface and is leaking out seasonally. So the nice thing about Venus is if there's a giant living civilization there, it'll be airborne so you can just fly through and collect samples with Mars and moons of Saturn and Jupiter. You're going to have to dig under to find the civilizations that are living. Right. Maybe it's easier than Favina's because you can imagine just a balloon floating through the atmosphere or a drone or something that would have the capability of just scooping up and sampling.
Starting point is 00:21:25 or a drone or something that would have the capability of just scooping up and sampling. To dig into the surface of Mars is maybe feasible-ish, especially with something like starship that could launch a huge digger basically to the surface and you could just excavate away at the surface. But for something like Europa, we really are still unclear about how thick the ice layer is, how you would melt through that huge thick layer to get to the ocean. And then potentially also discussions about contamination. The problem with looking for life in the solar system, which is different from looking for life with exoplanets, is that you always were in the risk of, especially if you visit
Starting point is 00:22:03 that, of introducing the life yourself. It's very difficult to completely exterminate every single microbe and spore on the surface of your rover or the surface of your lander. And so there's always a risk of introducing something. I mean, to some extent, there is continuous exchange of material between these planets naturally on top of that
Starting point is 00:22:25 as well. And now we're sort of accelerating that process to some degree. And so if you dig into your ropa's surface, which probably is completely pristine, it's very unlikely that has been much exchange with the outside world for its subsurface ocean, you are for the first time potentially introducing bacterial of spores into that environment that may compete or may introduce spurious signatures for the life you're looking for. And so it's almost an ethical question as to how to proceed with looking for life on those subsurface oceans. And I don't think one we really have a good resolution
Starting point is 00:23:01 for this point. Ethical. So you mean ethical, in terms of concern for the, like for preserving life elsewhere, not to murder it as opposed to a scientific one? I mean, we always worry about a space virus, right? Coming here, or some kind of external source, and we would be the source of that potential contamination.
Starting point is 00:23:20 Or the other direction. Yeah. I mean, that whatever survives in such harsh conditions, might be pretty good at surviving all conditions. It might be a little more resilient and robust, so it might actually take a ride on us back home. Possibly. I mean, I'm sure that some people would be concerned about that. I think we would hopefully have some containment procedures, if we did sample return, or you mean you don't even really need a sample return. These days you can pretty much send it like a little micro laboratory to do the planet, to do with the experiments, you know, in situ and then just send them back to your planet,
Starting point is 00:23:56 the data. And so I don't think this is necessary, especially for a case like that, where you might have contamination concerns that you have to bring samples back. Although probably if you brought back your open sushi, it would probably sell for quite a bit with the billionaires in your city. Sushi. Yeah. I would love from an engineering perspective just to see all the different candidates and designs for like the scooper for for Venus and the scooper for Europa and Mars. I haven't really looked deeply into how they actually, like the actual engineering of collecting samples because that's the engineering of that. It's probably essential for not either destroying life or polluting it with our own microbes
Starting point is 00:24:42 and so on. So that's a good, interesting, engineering challenge. I usually, for rovers, and stuff, focus on the robot, on the sort of the mobility aspect of it, on the robotics, the perception, and the movement, and the planning, and the control. But there's probably the scoopers, probably where the action is,
Starting point is 00:24:58 the microscopic sample collection. So basically, you have to first clean your vehicle, make sure it doesn't have any earth-like things on it, and then you have to put it into some kind of thing that's perfectly sealed from the environment so if we bring it back or we analyze it, it's not It's not going to bring anything else external in. Yeah, I don't know. It would be that would be an interesting engineering design there. Yeah, I mean curiosity has been I don't know, there'll be an interesting design there. Yeah, I mean, Curiosity has been leaving these little pods on the surface, quite recently and there's some neat photos you can find online. And they kind of look like lightsaber helps, which, so, yeah, to me, I think I tweeted something
Starting point is 00:25:38 like, you know, this weapon is your life. Like, don't lose it curiosity, because it's just dumping these little vials everywhere. And it's, yeah, it is scooping up these things. And the intention is that in the future there will be a sample return mission that will come and pick these up. But it's, I mean, the engineering behind those things is so impressive. The thing that blows me away, the most has been the landings, especially, I'm trained to be a pilot at the moment. So that's the sort of, you know, watching landings has become like my pet hobby on YouTube at the moment and how not to do it, how to do it
Starting point is 00:26:07 with different levels of conditions and things. But with the, you know, we think about landing on Mars, just the light travel time effect means that there's no possibility of a human controlling that descent. And so you have to put all of your faith and your trust in the computer code, or the AI AI or whatever it is that you've put on board that thing to make the correct descent. And so there's this famous period called seven minutes of hell where you're basically waiting for that light travel time to come back to know whether your vehicle successfully landed on the surface of not. And during that period, you know in your mind so mutaneously that it is doing these multi stages of deploying its parachute, deploying the crane, activating its jets to come down and controlling its
Starting point is 00:26:54 descent to the surface, and then the crane has to fly away, so it doesn't accidentally hit the rover. And so there's a series of multi-stage points where any of them go wrong, you know, the whole mission could go awry. And so the fact that we are fairly consistently able to build these machines that can do this autonomously is to me one of the most impressive accidentional that NASA have achieved. Yes, the unfortunate fact about physics is the takeoff is easier than the landing. Yes, the unfortunate fact about physics is the takeoff is easier than the landing. Yes, and you mentioned Starship, one of the incredible engineering feats that you get to see is the reusable rockets that take off what they land. They land using control and they do so perfectly
Starting point is 00:27:39 and sometimes when it's synchronous, it's beautiful to see. Then with Starship, you see the chopsticks that catch the ship. I mean, there's so much incredible, Jean-Hierre, but you mentioned starships is somehow helpful here. So what's your hope with starship? What kind of science might it enable? Possibly. There's two things. I mean, it's the launch cost itself, which is hopefully going to mean per kilogram. It's going to dramatically reduce the cost of the sort of the level, even if it's a factor of 10 higher than what Elon originally promised. This is going to be a revolution for the cost to launch. That means you could do all sorts of things. You could launch large telescopes, which could be basically like JDST, but you don't even have to fold them up. JDST had this whole issue with a design
Starting point is 00:28:23 that it's six and a half meters across. And so you have to, there's. GDBSD had this whole issue with a design that it's 6.5 meters across. And so you have to, there's no fuselage, which is that large at the time there is four wasn't large enough for that. And so they had to fold it up in this kind of complicated origami. And so a large part of the cost was figuring out how to fold it up, testing that it unfolded correctly, repeated testing, and you know, there was something like 130 fail points or something during this unfolding mechanism. And so all of us were holding our breath during that process. But if you have the ability to just launch, you know, arbitrarily large masses, at least
Starting point is 00:28:55 comparatively compared to JBST and very large mirrors into space, you can more or less repurpose ground-based mirrors. The Hubble Space Telescope mirror and the JBLST mirrors are designed to be extremely lightweight, and that increased their cost significantly. They have this kind of honeycomb design on the back to try and minimize the weight. If you don't really care about weight because it's so cheap, then you could just literally
Starting point is 00:29:21 grab many of the existing ground-based mirrors across telescopes, across the world, form me to five me find mirrors, and just pretty much attach them to a chassis and have your own space-based telescope. I think the Breakthrough Foundation, for instance, is an entity that has been interested in doing this sort of thing. And so that raises the prospects of having not just one WBST that just, you know, WBST is a fantastic resource, but it's split between all of us, cosmonologists, star formation, astronomers, those of us studying exoplanets, those of us wanting to study, you know, the ultra deep fields and the origin of the first galaxies, the expansionary of the universe. Everyone has to share this resource, but we could potentially each have one
Starting point is 00:30:06 JDST each that is maybe just studying a handful of the brightest exoplanet stars and measuring their atmospheres. This is important because if you, we talked about this plant trap is one E earlier. That planet, if JDST is tested and tried to look for biosignatures by which I mean oxygen, nitrous oxide methane It would take it of order of 200 transits to get even a very marginal what we call two and a half sigma detection of those which basically nobody would believe with with that and 100 transits. I mean this thing transits once every six days You're talking about sort of four years of staring at the same star with one telescope.
Starting point is 00:30:47 There'd be some breaks, but it'd be hard to schedule much else because you have to continuously catch each one of these transits to build up your signal to noise. And so Jesus is never going to do that. In principle, technically, Jidwistee could technically have the capability of just about detecting a biosignature on an Earth-like planet around a non-son-like star, but still, impressively, we have basically the technology to do that, but we simply cannot dedicate all of its time practically to that one resource.
Starting point is 00:31:17 So, Starship opens up opportunities like that of mass-producing these kinds of telescopes, which will allow us to survey the life in the universe, which of course is one of the grand goers of astronomy. I wonder if you can speak to the bureaucracy, the political battles, the scientific battles for time on the James Webb telescope. There must be a fascinating process of scheduling that. All scientists are trying to collaborate, figure out what the most important problems are. And there's an interesting network of interfering
Starting point is 00:31:52 scientific experiments, probably, to somehow optimize over. It's a really difficult process. I don't envy the tech that are going to have to make this decision. We call it the tech, the time allocation committee, that make this decision. And I've served on these before. And it's very difficult. I mean, typically for Hubble, we were seeing at least 10, sometimes 20 times the number of proposals
Starting point is 00:32:14 for telescope time versus available telescope time. For GDST, there has been one call already that has gone out. We call it cycle one. And that was over subscribed by, I think something like 6 to 1, 7 to 1. And the cycle two, which is just been announced, fairly recently in the deadline is actually the end of this month. So my team are totally laser focused on writing our proposals right now. That is expected to be much more competitive, probably more comfortable to a hubble saw. And so it's hard, more competitive than the cycle one, you said already, because that's already more competitive than the first cycle. So I said the first cycle of James Webb was about six to one,
Starting point is 00:32:52 and this is probably more like 20 to one. I would explain. These are all proposals by scientists and so on, and it's not like you can schedule it any time, because if you're looking for transit times, yeah, you have a time-critical element. Yes, time-critical element. And they're conflicting in non-obvious ways,
Starting point is 00:33:10 because the frequency is different, the duration is different. There's probably computational needs. There are different types of sensors, the direction pointing, all that. Yeah, it's hard. And there are certain programs like doing a deep field study where you just more or less point the telescope and that's pretty open. I mean, you're just accumulating photons. You can just point at that patch of the sky whenever the telescope is not doing anything
Starting point is 00:33:34 else and just get to your month, let's say a month of integration time as your goal over the lifetime of JBLST. So that's maybe a little bit easier to schedule. It's harder, especially for us looking at cool worlds, because as I said earlier, these plants transit very infrequently. So we have to wait, if you're looking at the earth transiting the sun, and alien watching us, they would only get one opportunity per year
Starting point is 00:33:57 to do that observation. The transit lasts for about 12 hours. And so if they don't get that time, it's hard. That's it. If it conflicted with another proposal that wants to use another time critical element, it's much easier for plants like these hot plants or these close implants because they transit so frequently, there's maybe a hundred opportunities. And so then the attack can say, okay, they want 10 transits, there's a hundred opportunities here. It's easier for us to give us to give them time. We're almost in the worst case scenario. We're proposing to let for X and means around two cool planets. And so we really only have
Starting point is 00:34:35 one bite of the cherry for each one. And so our sales pitch has been that these are extremely precious events. And more importantly, J.D. Gris T is the only telescope, the only machine humanity has ever constructed, which is capable of finding moons akin to the moons in our solar system. Kepler can't do it, even Hubble can't do it. J.D. is the first one. And so there is a new window to the universe because we know these moons exist. They're all over the place in the solar system. You have the moon, you have I.O. Calisto, Europa, Ganymede, Titan, lots of moons are fairly similar size, sort of 30% the size of the Earth, and this
Starting point is 00:35:16 telescope is the first one that can find them. And so we're very excited about the profound implications of ultimately solving this journey we're on in astronomy, which is to understand our uniqueness. We want to understand how common is the solar system. Are we the way, are we the architecture that frequently emerges naturally, or is there something special about what happened here? I think this is not the worst case,
Starting point is 00:35:40 the best case, it's obvious, it's super rare. So you have to, like, I would, so I love scheduling from a computer science perspective. That's my background. So algorithmically, just solve a schedule problem. I will schedule the rarest things first. And obviously, this is the J.D.L.S.T. is the first thing that can actually detect a cool world.
Starting point is 00:35:58 So this is a big new thing. You can show off that new thing. Happens rarely, schedule it first. It's perfect. You should be in the talk. Yeah, I will follow my application after we're done with this. that new thing happens rarely, schedule it first. It's perfect. You should be in the talk. This is the stuff. I will follow my application after we're done with this. This part of me is the OCD part of me is the computational aspect that I love scheduling.
Starting point is 00:36:14 Computing device. Because you have that kind of scheduling on supercomputers, that scheduling problem is fascinating. How do you prioritize computation, how do you prioritize science, data collection, sample collection, all that kind of stuff. It's actually kind of fascinating. Because data in ways you expect and don't expect will unlock a lot of solutions to some fascinating mysteries. And so collecting the data and doing so in a way that maximizes the possibility of discoveries really interesting, like from a computational perspective.
Starting point is 00:36:46 I agree, there's a real satisfaction in extracting the maximum science per unit time. Exactly. Out of your telescope. That's the tax job. Yeah. But the taker are not machines, they're not a piece of computer code. They will make their selections based off human judgment. And a lot of the telescope is certainly within the field of exoplanets, because there's different fields of astronomy,
Starting point is 00:37:09 but within the field of exoplanets, I think a good expectation is that most of the telescope time that James Rossi have will go towards atmosphere retrieval, which is sort of alluded to earlier, you know, like detecting molecules in the atmospheres, not biocinantious, because as I said, it's really not designed to do that. It's pushing GiddyrST probably too far to expect to do that. But it could detect, for example, a carbon dioxide rich atmosphere on trapezoid. That's not a biocinacure, but you could prove it's like a venus in that case, or maybe like a Mars in that case, like both those have carbon dioxide rich atmospheres.
Starting point is 00:37:42 Doesn't prove or disproved existence of life either way, but it is our first characterization of the nature of those atmospheres. Maybe we can even tell the pressure level and the temperature of those atmospheres. So that's very exciting, but we are competing with that. And I think that science is completely mind-blowing and fantastic.
Starting point is 00:38:02 We have a completely different objective, which is in our case, to try and look for the first evidence of these small moons around these planets, potentially even moons, which could be habsable, of course. So I think it's a very exciting goal, but attack has to make a human judgment, essentially about which science are they most excited by,
Starting point is 00:38:23 which one has the highest promise of return, the most highest chance of return. And so that's hard because if you look at a planetary atmosphere, well, you know, most of the time the plant has an atmosphere already. And so there's almost a guaranteed success that you're going to learn something about the atmosphere by pointing to a UST adip. Whereas in that case, there's a harder sell. We are looking for something that we do not know for sure exists yet or not. And so we are pushing the telescope to do something which is inherently more risky. Yeah, but the existence, if shown, already gives a deep lesson about what's out there in the universe. But that means that other stars have similar types of variety as we have in our solar system.
Starting point is 00:39:09 They have an I-O, they have Europa and so on, which means like there's a lot of possibility for icy planets, for water, for plants that enable planets to move it. I mean, that's super exciting because that means everywhere through our galaxy and beyond, there is just innumerable possibility for weird creatures. I agree. Light forms. You don't have to convince me. I mean, NASA has been on this quest for a long time and it's sometimes called E to Earth. It's the frequency of Earth like usually they say planets in the universe. How common are planets similar to our Earth?
Starting point is 00:39:50 In terms of ultimately, we'd like to know everything about these planets, in terms of the amount of water they have, how much atmosphere they have, but for now, it's kind of focused just on the size and the distance from the star, essentially. How often do you get similar conditions to that? That was Kepler's primary mission and it really just kind of flurted with the answer, didn't quite get to a definitive answer. But I would say, look, if we're looking, if that's our primary goal, to look for Earth-like, I would say, worlds,
Starting point is 00:40:20 then moons has to be a part of that, because we know that Earth- from the capital day to the preliminary results that Earth like planets around sunlight stars is not An inevitable outcome. It seems to be something like a one to ten percent outcome So it's not particularly inevitable that happens But we do often see about half of all sunlight stars have either a mini Neptune a Neptune or a Jupiter in stars have either a mini Neptune, a Neptune or a Jupiter in the haplorzone of their stars. That's a very, very common occurrence that we see. Yet we have no idea how often they have moons around them, which could also be habitable. And so there may very well be, if even one in five of them has an Earth like moon or even a Mars like moon around them, then there would be more habitable real estate
Starting point is 00:41:05 in terms of X amunes than X-O plants in the universe. So you can essentially, 2X, 3X, 5X, maybe 10X, the number of habitable worlds out there in the universe, our current estimate for like the Drake equation. Absolutely. So this is a one way to increase the confidence and increase the value of that parameter. And just know where to look.
Starting point is 00:41:27 I mean, we would like to know where should we listen for technosignatures? Where should we be looking for biosignatures? Not only that, but what role does the moon have in terms of its influence on the planet? We talked about these directly image telescopes earlier. These missions that want to take a photo to quote Carl Sagan, the pale blue dot of our planet, but the pale blue dot of an exoplanet. And that's the dream to one day capture that. But as impressive as the resolution is that we are planning and conspiring to design
Starting point is 00:41:59 for the future generations telescopes to achieve that, even those telescopes will not have the capability of resolving the earth and the moon within that. It will be a pale blue dot pixel, but the moon's gray, grayness will be intermixed with that pixel. And so this is a big problem because one of the ways that we are claiming to look for life in the universe is a chemical diseoculubrium. So you see two molecules that just shouldn't be there. They normally react with each other, or even one molecule that's just too reactive
Starting point is 00:42:29 to be hang around the atmosphere by itself. So if you had oxygen and methane hanging out together, those would normally react fairly easily. And so if you detected those two molecules in your pale blue dot spectra, you're like, okay, we have evidence for life, some things metabolizing on this planet. However, the challenge is, what if that moon was Titan? Titan has a methane-rich
Starting point is 00:42:52 atmosphere, and what if the pale blue dot was in fact a planet devoid of life, but it had oxygen because of water undergoing this fatalities reaction, splitting into oxygen hydrogen separately. So then you have all of the hallmarks of what we would claim to be life, but all along you were tricked. It was just a moon that was deceiving you. And so we are never gonna do, we're never gonna, I would claim, really understand
Starting point is 00:43:18 the, or complete this quest of looking for life by a signature's universe, unless we have a deep knowledge of the prevalence and role that moons have. They may even affect the habitability of the planets themselves. Of course, I reign moon, it's freakishly large. By mass ratio, it's the largest moon in the solar system. It's a 1% mass moon. If you look at Jupiter's moons, I like 10th power minus 4, much smaller. And so I wrote moon, it seems to stabilize the
Starting point is 00:43:45 oblique of our planet. It gives rise to tides, especially early on when the moon was closer, those tides would have covered entire continents. And those rock pools that would have been scattered across the entire plateau may have been the origin of life on our planet. The moon forming impact may have stripped a significant fraction lithosphere of the Earth, which without a plate tectonics may not have been possible, we'd heard a stagnant lid because there's just too much lithosphere stuck on the top of the planet.
Starting point is 00:44:12 And so there are speculative reasons, but intriguing reasons as to why a large moon may be not just important, but central to the question of having the conditions necessary for life. So moons can be habitable in their own right, but they can also play significant influence on the habitability of the planets they orbit. And further, they will surely interfere with our attempts to detect life remotely from afar. So taking a tangent upon a tangent, you've written about binary planets, what's and that they're surprisingly common? Or they might be surprisingly common? What's the difference in a large moon and binary planets? What are binding planets? What what's
Starting point is 00:45:04 interesting to say here about giant rocks flying this space and orbiting each other? The thing that's interesting about binary objects is that they're very common in the universe. Binary stars are everywhere. But the majority of stars seem to live in binary systems. When we look at the outer edges of the solar system, we see binary kuiper bell objects,
Starting point is 00:45:25 all the time asteroids, basically bound to another. Pluto, Sharon, is kind of an example of that. It's a 10% mass ratio system. It almost is by many definitions, a binary planet, but now it's a dwarf planet. So, I don't know what you call that now. But we know that these,
Starting point is 00:45:42 the universe likes to make things impairs. So you're seeing our son is an in-sell. So most things are dating, they're in relationships and ours is alone. It's not a complete freak of the universe to be alone, but it is more common for some like stars. If you can't up all the sun next stars in the universe, about half of the sun next stars systems are in binary or trinary systems and you the half are single. But It's more common for some like stars. If you can't tell all the sunnets stars in the universe, about half of the sunnets star systems are in binary or trinary systems, and you the half are single. But because those binaries are two or three stars,
Starting point is 00:46:12 then cumulatively, maybe like a third of all, some like stars are single. I'm trying hard to not anthropomorphize the relationship with the stars that are with each other. But yeah, the triple is good. Yeah, I've met those folks also. So is there something interesting to learn about the habitability, the how that affects the probability of habitable worlds,
Starting point is 00:46:35 when they kind of couple up like that in those different ways? Well, it depends where to went at stars of the planet. Certainly if stars couple up, that has a big influence on the how toability. Of course, this is very famous from Star Wars, Tatooine in Star Wars is a binary star system and you have Luke Skywalker looking at the sunset and seeing two stars come down. And for years, we thought that was purely a product of George Lucas's incredibly creative mind. And we didn't think that planets would exist around binary star systems.
Starting point is 00:47:05 It seems like two tumultuous and environment for a quiescent planetary disk, circumstantial disk to form planets from. And yet, one of the astounding discoveries from Kepler was that these appear to be quite common. In fact, as far as we can tell, they're just as common around binary stars as single stars. The only caveat to that is that you don't get plants close into binary stars. They have like a clearance region on the inside where plants, maybe they form there, but they don't last. They are dynamically unstable in that zone. But once you get out to about the distance at the Earth or bits of the sun or even a little bit closer in you start to find planets emerging And so that's the right distance for liquid water
Starting point is 00:47:50 So I had a distance for potentially life on those planets and so there may very well be plenty of haptal planets around the binary stars Binary planets is a little bit different binary planets. I don't think we have any serious connection of have any serious connection of planet minority to habitability. Certainly when we investigated it, that wasn't our drive, that this is somehow the solution to life in the universe or anything. It was really just a, like all good science questions,
Starting point is 00:48:15 a curiosity-driven question. What's the dynamic, are they legit or meeting each other as they orbit the star? So the formation mechanism proposed here, because it's very difficult to form to protoplanets close to each other like this. They were generally merged within the disk and so that's why you normally get single planets. But you could have something like Jupiter and Saturn form at separate distances. They could dynamically be scattered into one another and basically not quite collide but have a very close on encounter.
Starting point is 00:48:46 Because tidal forces increase dramatically as the distance decreases between two objects, the ties can actually dissipate the kinetic energy and bring them bound into one another. When you first hear that, you think that seems fairly contrived that you'd have the conditions just right to get these ties to cause a capture, but numerical simulations have shown that about 10% of planet planet encounters are shown to produce something like binary planets, which is a startling prediction. And so that seems adults with naively the exoplanet catalogue for which we know of so far are no binary plants.
Starting point is 00:49:25 And we propose one of the resolutions to this might be that the binary plants are just incredibly difficult to detect, which is also counterintuitive, because remember how they form us through this tidal mechanism. And so they form extremely close to each other. So the distance that IA is away from Jupiter, just a few plant through radii, they're almost touching one another, and they're just tidally locked, facing each other for eternity. And so in that configuration, as it transits across the star, it kind of looks like you can't really resolve this two planets.
Starting point is 00:49:54 It just looks like one planet to you that's going across the star. The temporal resolution of the data is really good enough to distinguish that. And so you'd see one transit, but in fact, it's two planets very close together, which are transiting at once. And so, yeah, we wrote a paper just recently where we developed some techniques to try and get around this problem and hopefully provide a tool where we could finally look for these planets. The problem of detection. Yes. That was our focus was how do you get around this merging problem? Whether they're right there or not, we don't know.
Starting point is 00:50:29 We're planning to do a search for them, but it remains an open question. I think just one of those fun astrophysics curiosity questions, whether binary planets exist in the universe. Because then you have binary Earths, you can have binary Neptune, all sorts of wild stuff that would, you know, float the sci-fi imagination. I wonder what the physics on a binary planet feels like.
Starting point is 00:50:51 It might be true, you'll have to think about that. I wonder if there's some interesting dynamics. I think it feels multiple, or gravity feels different at different parts of the surface of the sphere, when there's another large sphere that's in shape. I would think that the force would be fairly similar because the shape of the object would deform to a flat geopotential, essentially a uniform geopotential, but it would lead to a distorted shape for the two objects. I think they would become ellipsoids facing one another. So it would be pretty wild when you, you know, people like the
Starting point is 00:51:25 flat earth or spherical earth, you fly from space and see your football shaped earth. Yeah, it's your whole planet. Finally, there's proof. And I want to how difficult it would be to travel from one to the other because you have to overcome the one. No, it might be kind of easy. Yeah, I mean, that's so close to each other, that helps. And I think the most critical factor would be how massive is the planet? That's always, I mean, one of the challenges with escaping planets, there was a fun paper on my colleague's road that suggested
Starting point is 00:51:53 that super-earth planets may be inescapable. If you were a civilization that were born on a super-earth, the surface gravity is so high that the chemical potential energy of hydrogen or methane, whatever fuel you're using, simply is at odds with the gravity of the planet itself. And so you would, you know, our current rocket, I'm not sure with a fraction, but maybe like 90% of the rocket is fuel or something by mass. These things would have to be like the size of the geyser pyramids of fuel with just a
Starting point is 00:52:24 tiny tip on the top in order just to escape that planetary atmosphere. And so it has been argued that if you live on a super earth, you may be forced to live there forever. There may be no escape unless you invent a space elevator or something, but then how do you even build the infrastructure and space to do something like that in the absence of a successful rocket program. And so the more and more we look at our earth and think about the sorts of problems we're facing,
Starting point is 00:52:57 the more you see things about the earth which make it ideally suited in so many regards, it's almost spooky, that we not only live on a planet which has the right conditions for life, for intelligent life, for sustained fossil fuel industry just happens to be in the ground. We have plenty of fossil fuels to get our industrial revolution going. But also the chemical energy contained within those fossil fuels and hydrogen and other fuels is sufficient that we have the ability to escape our planetary atmosphere and planetary gravity to have a space program. And we also happen to have a celestial body which is just within reach the moon, which doesn't necessarily have to be true. Where the moon not there, what effect would that have had on our aspirations of a space program in the 1960s? Would
Starting point is 00:53:39 that have ever been a space race to Mars or to Venus? It's a much harder, certainly for a human program that seems almost impossible with 1960s technology to imagine, haveales or divinas. It's a much harder, certainly for a human program, that seems almost impossible with 1960's technology to imagine, have become diversion. It's almost as if somebody constructed a set of challenging obstacles before us, challenging problems to solve. They're challenging, but they're doable. And there's a sequence of them. Gravity is very difficult to overcome, but we have given the size of Earth.
Starting point is 00:54:07 It's not so bad that we can still actually construct propulsion systems that could escape it. And the same with climate change, perhaps. I mean, climate change is the next major problem facing our civilization, but we know it is technically surmountable. You know, it's, it's, it's, it's, it is, it does seem sometimes like there has been a series of challenges laid out to progressist towards a mature civilization that can one day perhaps expand to the stars. I'm a little more concerned about nuclear weapons, AI and natural or artificial pandemics, but yes,
Starting point is 00:54:39 climate change. Yeah, plenty, plenty of, plenty of finance that we need to cross. And we can argue about the severity of each other. But there is no doubt that we live in a world that has serious challenges that are pushing our intellects now will to the limit of whether we're really ready to progress to the next stage of our development. So thank you for taking the tangent and there will be a million more. But can we step back to Kepler 1625b? What is it? And you've talked about this kind of
Starting point is 00:55:11 journey, this effort to discover exo moons. So moons out there or small, cool objects out there. Where does that effort stand and what is couple of 1625 B? Yeah, I mean, I've been searching for my experiments for most of my professional career and I think a lot of my colleagues think I'm kind of crazy to still be doing it, you know after After five years of not finding anything I think most people would probably try doing something else. I even had people say it to me. They said You know, professors, a cocktail party, took me to the side and MIT professor.
Starting point is 00:55:48 And he said, you know, you should just look for hot Jupyter. They're everywhere. It's really, you can write papers. It's so easy to find. And I was like, yeah, but hot Jupyter's just, they're not interesting to me. I want to do something that I feel intellectually pushes me to the edge. And it is maybe a contribution that not no one else could do, but maybe is not certainly
Starting point is 00:56:13 the thing that anybody could do. I don't want to just be the first to something for the sake of being first. I want to do something that feels like a meaningful intellectual contribution to our society. And so, you know, this actually, I mean, problem has been haunting me for years to try and solve this. Now, as I said, we looked for years and years using Kepler. And the closest we ever got was just a hint for this one star. Kepler 1625 has a Jupiter light planet in orbit of it. And that Jupiter light planet is on a 287-day period.
Starting point is 00:56:42 So it's almost the same distance as the Earth around the sun, but for a Jupiter. So that was already unusual. I don't think people realize that Jupiter-like planets are quite rare in the universe. Certainly mini-net tunes and net tunes are extremely common, but Jupiter's only about 10% of sun-like stars have Jupiter's around them as far as we can tell. When you say Jupiter, which aspect of Jupiter? In terms of its mass and its semi-draxer. So anything beyond about half an AU, so half the distance of the Earth and the Sun,
Starting point is 00:57:13 and something of order of a tenth of a Jupiter mass, that's the mass of Saturn, up to say 10 Jupiter masses, which is basically where you start to get to brown dwarfs. Those types of objects appear to be someone unusual. Most solar systems do not have Jupiters, which is really interesting because Jupiters, again, like the Moon, seems to have been a pivotal character in the story of the development of our solar system,
Starting point is 00:57:38 perhaps especially having a large influence of the development of the late-heavy bombardment and the rate of asteroid impacts that we receive and things like this. Anyway, to come back to 1625, this, this juped-like planet had a hint of of something in the data. But what I mean by that is when we looked at the transit, we got the familiar decrease in light that we always see when a plant tracinth in front of the star. But we saw something extra, just on edges, we saw some extra dips around the outside. It was right at the hairy edge of detectability. We didn't believe it because
Starting point is 00:58:12 I think one of the challenges of looking for something for 10 years is that you become your own greater skeptic. And no matter what you're shown, you're always thinking, I've been falling in love so many times and it's not working out. You convince yourself it's never going to happen. Not for me. This just isn't going to happen. I saw that and I didn't really believe it because I didn't dare let myself believe it. But being a good scientist, we knew we had an obligation to publish it, to talk about the result, and to follow it up and to try and resolve what was going on.
Starting point is 00:58:49 So we asked for Hubble Space Telescope time, which was awarded in that case, so we were one of those lucky 20 that got telescope time, and we stared at it for about 40 hours continuously. And to provide some context, the dip that we saw in the capidata correspond to a Neptune-sized moon, a Jupiter-sized planet, which was another reason why I was skeptical as I, that we didn't have that in the solar system, that seemed so strange. And then when we got the Hubble data, it seemed to confirm exactly that. There was two really striking piece of evidence in the data that suggested this moon was there. Another was a fairly clear second dip in light, pretty clearly resolved
Starting point is 00:59:31 by Hubble, it was about a five-sigma detection. And on top of that, we could see the planet didn't transit when it should have done. It actually transcended earlier than we expected it to, by about 20 minutes or so. And so that's a hallmark of a gravitation interaction between the planet and the moon. We actually expected that. You can also expect that if the moon transits after the planet, then the planet should come in earlier than expected, because the Barry center, the center of mass, lives between the two of them, kind of like on a balancing arm between them. And so we saw that as well. So the face signature matched up, the mass of the moon was measured to be Neptune mass, and the size of the moon was measured to be Neptune radius. And so everything just really lined up, and we spent months and months
Starting point is 01:00:18 trying to kill it. This is my strategy for anything interesting. We just try to throw the kitchen sinker there and say, we must be tricked by something. And so we tried looking at the centroid motion of the telescope, but the different wavelength channels have been observed, the pixel level information. And no matter what we did, we just couldn't get rid of it. And so we submit it to science. And I think at the time science, we just wanted the top journal said to us,
Starting point is 01:00:44 would you mind calling your paper discovery of an ex-amoon? And I had to push back and we said, no, we're not calling it that. I don't even despite everything we've done, we're not calling a discovery, we're calling it evidence for an ex-amoon. Because for me, I would want to see this repeat two times, three times, four times, before I really would bet my house that this is the real deal. And maybe, and I do worry, as I said, that perhaps that's my own skepticism, self-skeptism going too far. But I think it was the right decision. And since that paper came out, there has been continuous interest in the subject. Another team independently analyzed that star and recovered, actually pretty much exactly the same results.
Starting point is 01:01:27 This is us the same dip, the same, the same wobble of the planet. And a third team looked at it and they actually got something different. They saw the dip was diminished compared to what we saw. They saw a little hint of a dip but not as pronounced as what we saw. And they saw the wobble as well. So there's been a little bit of tension about analyzing the reduction of the Hubble data. And so the only way my mind to resolve this is just to look again. We actually did propose to Hubble straight after that. And we said, look,
Starting point is 01:01:59 if our model is right, if the moon is there, it came in late last time. It translated after the planet. Because of the orbit, we can calculate that it should transit before the planet next time. If it's not there, if it doesn't transit before, and if we even if we see a dip afterwards, we know that's not our moon. It's obviously some instrumental effect with the data. We had a causal prediction as to where the moon should be. And so I was really excited about that, but we didn't get the telescope time.
Starting point is 01:02:27 And fortunately, if you go further into the future, we no longer have the predictive capability, because it's like predicting the weather. You might be able to predict the weather next week to some level of accuracy, but predicting the weather next year becomes incredibly hard. The uncertainty has just grown and compound as you go forward into the future more and more.
Starting point is 01:02:44 How are you able to know where the movie positioned? So you're able to tell the orbiting like geometry and frequency? Yeah, so from the, basically from the wobbles of the planet itself, that tells us the orbital motion of the moon. It's the reflex motion of the moon. But isn't it planet? Isn't it just an estimate to where... Like, I'm concerned about you making a strong prediction here because like, if you don't get if you don't get the moon where the moon leads on the next time around, if you did get a Hubble plan, couldn't that mean something else if you didn't see that. Like, because you said it would be an instrumental. I feel, I feel the strong urge to disprove your, which is a really good imperative, it's a good way to do science, but like, this is such a noisy signal, right? Or blurry signal,
Starting point is 01:03:39 maybe, low resolution signal, maybe that's the point. Yeah, I mean, it's a five-sigma signal. So that's that's the slightly uncomfortable edge. I mean, it's often said that for any detection of a first new phenomena, you really want like a 20, 25 sigma detection. Then there's just no doubt that what you're seeing is real. This was at that edge. I mean, I guess it's comparable to the Higgs boson,
Starting point is 01:04:00 but the Higgs boson was slightly different because there was so much theoretical impetus as to expect a signal at that precise location. A Neptune-sized moon was not predicted by anyone. No one, there was no papers you can find that expect Neptune-sized moons around Jupiter-sized planets. So I think we were inherently skeptical about its reality for that reason.
Starting point is 01:04:18 But this is science in action. And when we, you know, we fit the wobbles, we fit the dips, and we have this 3G geometric model for the motion of the orbit. And projecting that forward, we were, we found that about 80% of our projections led to the moon to be before. So it's not 100%.
Starting point is 01:04:36 Sure. There is, there was maybe 20% of the cases it was over here. But to me, that was a hard enough, a hard enough projection that we felt confident that we could refute the exit, which was what I really wanted to refuteable. It's the basis of science, a false-fible hypothesis. How can you make progress in science if you don't have a false-fible, testable hypothesis? And so that was the beauty of this particular case.
Starting point is 01:05:00 So there's a numerical simulation with a moon that fits the data that we observed and then you can now make predictions based on that simulation. Yeah, that's so cool. Okay, it's fun. These are like little solar systems that we can simulate on the computer and imagine their motions, but we are pushing things to the very limits of what's possible and that's double edged sword.
Starting point is 01:05:24 It's both incredibly exciting intellectually, but you're always risking, to some degree, the pushing too far. So I'd like to ask you about the recent paper you're co-authored, an exomune survey of 70 cool giant exoplanets, and the new candidate coupler, 1708BI. I would say there's like three or four candidates at this point, of which we have published two of them. And to me, I have to quite compelling and deserve follow-up observations. And so to get a confirmed detection, at least in our case, we would need to see it repeat
Starting point is 01:06:02 for sure. One of the problems with some of the other methods that have been proposed is that you don't get that repeatability. So, for instance, an example of a technique that would lack that would be gravitational microlensing. So it is possible with a new telescope coming up in the future, called the Roman Space Telescope, which is basically a repurpose by satellite that's the size of the Hubble mirror getting up into space. It will stare at millions of stars simultaneously and it will look to see, instead of whether any of those stars get dimmer for a short amount of time, which will be a transit, it will look for the opposite, it will look to see if anything get brighter.
Starting point is 01:06:38 And that brightness increases caused by another planetary system passing in front and then gravitationally lensing light around it to cause a brightening. And so this is a method of discovering an entire solar system, but only for a glimpse, you just get a short glimpse of it passing like a ship sailing through the night, just that one photo of it. Now the problem with that is that it's very difficult, you know, the physics of gravitational lensing are not surprisingly quite complicated.
Starting point is 01:07:09 And so there's many, many possible solutions. So you might have a solution, which is this could be a red dwarf star with a Jupiter-like planet around it. That's one solution. But another solution is that it's a free floating planet, a rogue planet, like Jupiter, with an Earth-like moon around it. And those two solutions are almost indistinguishable. Now ideally, we would be able to repeat the observation.
Starting point is 01:07:33 We'd be able to go back and see, well, if the moon really is there, then we could predict its mass, its predicted its motion, and expect it to be maybe over here next time or something. With mycolonzing, it's a one snapshot event. And so for me, it's intriguing as a way of revealing something about the exome population, but I always come back to transits because it's the only method we really have that's absolutely repeatable that we'll be able to come back and prove everyone, prove to everyone that look on the 70th of October, the moon will be over here and the moon will look like this and we can actually capture that image. And that's what we see with, of course, many exo-platforms.
Starting point is 01:08:07 So we wanna get to that same point of full confidence, full confirmation, the slam dunk detection of these exo-munes. But yeah, it's been a hell of a journey to try and push the field into that direction. And is there some resistance to the transit method? Not into the transit. I just say to exo-munes.
Starting point is 01:08:28 So the transit method is by far the most popular method for looking for exo-plants. But as I've alluded to, exo-munes is kind of a niche topic within the discipline of exo-plants. And that's largely because there are people I think are waiting for those slam dunks. And it was like the, if you go back to the first exoplanet discovery that was made in 1995 by Misha Mayor and Didi Akkeler's, I think it's true at the time that they
Starting point is 01:08:56 were seen as mavericks, that the idea of looking for plants around stars was considered fringe science. And you know, I'm sure many colleagues told them, why don't you do something more safe like study eclipsing stars to binary star systems? We know those exist. So why are you wasting your time looking for planets? You're going to get this alien monocore or something. And you'll be seen as a fringe maverick scientist. And so I think it was quite difficult for those early planet hunters to get legitimacy and be taken seriously. And so very few people risked their careers to do it, except for those that we were involved and to try or had maybe the career, maybe like ten years or something, so they didn't
Starting point is 01:09:36 have to necessarily worry about the implications of failure. And so once that happened, once they made the first discoveries overnight, everyone and their dog was going into exoplanets and all of a sudden the whole astronomy community shifted and huge numbers of people that were once upon a time studying eclipse in binaries changed to becoming exoplanet scientists. And so that was the first wave of exoplanet scientists. We're now in a second wave or even a third wave where people like me to some degree kind of grew up with the idea of exoplanets as being normal. I was 11 years old, I guess,
Starting point is 01:10:11 when the first exoplanet was discovered. And so to me it was a fairly normal idea to grow up with. And so we've been trained in exoplanets from the very beginning. And so that brings a different perspective to those who have maybe transitioned from a different career path. And so I suspect with exomoons and probably technosignatures, astrobiology, many of the topics which I've seen at the fringes of what's possible,
Starting point is 01:10:44 they will all open up into becoming mainstream one day, but there's a lot of people who are just waiting, waiting for that assuredness that there is a secure, career net out of them before they commit. Yeah, it does seem to me that Exomboons open wider or open for the first time, the door to aliens. So more seriously academically studying, all right, let's look at like alien worlds. So I think it's still pretty fringe to talk about alien life, even now like on Mars and the moons and so on. You're kind of like, you know, it will be nice, but imagine the first time to discover
Starting point is 01:11:23 a living organism, that's going to change. Then everybody will look like an idiot for not focusing everything on this. Because the possibility of the things will, it's possible in my, it might be super boring. It might be very boring bacteria. But even the existence of life elsewhere. Yeah. Some, I mean, that changes everything. That means life is everywhere. Yeah. If you need now that in five years, 10 years, the first life would be discovered elsewhere. You knew that in advance. It would surely affect the way you approach your entire career. As a, especially someone junior in astronomy, you would surely be like, well, this is clearly going to be the direction I have to dedicate my classes and my training and my education
Starting point is 01:12:02 towards that direction. All the new textbooks, all the... Right. You're right. I mean, I think there's a lot of value to hedging, like, allocating some of the time to that possibility, because the kind of discovery will, the kind of discoveries we might get in the next few decades, it feels like we're in the verge of getting a lot of really good data and having better and better tools that can process that data.
Starting point is 01:12:30 So there's just going to be a continuous increase of the kind of discoveries that will open. But a slam dunk, that's hard to come by. Yeah, I think a lot of us are anticipating, and we're already seeing it, to some degree, with Venus and the phosphine incident. But we've seen it before with Bill Clinton, it's in the White House lawn, and out saying life from Mars, and there are inevitably going to be spurious claims, or at least claims which are ambiguous to some degree. There will be for sure a high profile journal, like Nature or Science, that will one day publish a paper saying,
Starting point is 01:13:09 by a signature discovered or something like that on Trappist One or some other planet. And then there will be years of back and forth in the literature. And that might seem frustrating, but that's how science works. It's in it. That's the mechanism of science at play, of people scrutinizing the results to intent, skepticism. And it's like a crucible. You burn away all the relevance as until whatever is left is the truth. And so you're left with this product, which is that, okay, we either believe or don't believe that by its images are there.
Starting point is 01:13:36 So there's inevitably going to be a lot of controversy and debate and argument about it. We just have to anticipate that. And so I think you have to basically have a thick skin to some degree academically to dive into that world. And you're seeing that with phosphine, it's been uncomfortable to watch from the outside the kind of dialogue that some of the scientists have been having with each other about that because they get a little aggressive. Yeah, you can understand why because... Jalice?
Starting point is 01:14:11 I don't know. I think that's me saying that you. That's me talking. I'm sure there's some envy and jealousy involved on the behalf of those who are not part of the original discovery. But there's also, in any case, just leave the particular people of the involvement of Venus alone, in any case of making a claim of that magnitude, especially life, because life is pretty much one of the biggest discoveries of all time, you can imagine scientifically,
Starting point is 01:14:43 you can see, and I'm so conscious of this in myself when I get close to, as I said, even the much smaller goal of setting an exo moon, the ego creep in. And so as a scientist, we have to be so guarded against our own egos, you see the lights in your eyes of a noble prize or the fame and fortune and being remembered in the history books. And we all grew up in our training learning about Newton and Einstein, these giants of the field, Feynman, Maxwell. And you get the idea of these individual contributions which get immortalized for all time. And that's seductive. It's why many of us with the skill set to go into maybe banking instead decided, actually there's something about the idea of being immortalized and contributing
Starting point is 01:15:30 towards society in a permanent way that is more attractive than the financial reward of applying my skills elsewhere. So to some degree, that ego can be a benefit because it brings in skillful people into our field who might otherwise be tempted by money elsewhere. But on the other hand, the closer you get towards when you start flirting with that noble prize in your eyes or you think you're on the verge of seeing something, you can lose objectivity. A very famous example is Barnard Star. there was a planet claimed there by Peter van der Kemp, I think it was in 1968, 1969.
Starting point is 01:16:09 And at the time it would have been the first ever exoplanet ever claimed. And he felt assured that this planet was there. He was actually using the wobbling star method, but using the positions of the stars to see them to claim this exoplanet. It turned out that this planet was not there, subsequent analyses by both dynamicists and theorists and those looking at the instrumental data, established fairly unanimously that there was no way this planet was really there, but Peter van der Kempensister did it was there despite overwhelming evidence that was accruing against him.
Starting point is 01:16:45 And even to the day he died, which was, I think, in the early 90s, he was still insisting this planet was there, even when we were starting to make the first genuine exoplanet discoveries. And even at that point, I think Hubble had even looked at that star and had totally ruled out any possibility of what he was talking about. And so that's a problem. How do you get to a point as a scientist where you just can't accept anything that comes, otherwise, because it starts out with the dream of fame and then it ends in a stubborn refusal to ever back down.
Starting point is 01:17:20 Of course, the flip side of that is sometimes you need that to have the strength to carry a belief against the entire scientific community that resists your beliefs. And so it's a double-edged sword. That can't happen, but I guess the distinction here is evidence. Yes. So, in this case, the evidence was so overwhelmed, it wasn't really a matter of interpretation. It was, you had to collect, you'd observe this start with the same,
Starting point is 01:17:50 the same start with maybe 10, even 100 times greater precision for a much longer period of time. And there was just no doubt at this point that this planet was a mirage. And so that's why you have to be very careful. I always say, don't ever name my wife,, my daughter named this planet after me that you discover. I can't ever name a planet after you because I'll be, I won't be objective anymore. How could I ever, how could I ever turn around to you and say that planet wasn't real that I named after you?
Starting point is 01:18:19 So you're somebody that talks about and is clearing your in your way of being, that you love the process of discovery, that joy, the magic of just, you know, seeing something in a new observation and new idea, right? But I guess the point is when you have that great feeling, is to then switch on the skepticism, like to start like testing what does this actually mean? Is this real? What are the possible different interpretations that could make this a lot less grand than I first imagined? And so both have the wander and the skepticism on one brain.
Starting point is 01:18:59 Yeah, I think generally the more I want something to be true, the more I inherently doubt it. And I think that just comes from, you know, I grew up with a religious family and was just sort of indoctrinated to some degree, like many children are, that, okay, this is just normal, that, you know, this is a garden, this is the way the world is, God created the earth. And then, as I became more, you know, well-read and illiterate of what was happening in the world scientifically. I started to doubt. And it really just struck me that the hardest thing to let go of when you do decide not to
Starting point is 01:19:33 be religious anymore. It's not really like a lightbulb moment, but it just kind of happens over my over 11 to 13, I think for me, it was happening. But it's that sadness of letting go of this beautiful dream which you had in your mind of eternal life, for behaving yourself on earth. You would have this beautiful heaven that you could go to and live forever. And that's very attractive. And for me personally, that was one of the things that pulled me against it. It's like it's too good to be true. And it's very convenient that this could be so.
Starting point is 01:20:11 And I have no evidence directly in terms of scientific sense to support this hypothesis. And it just became really difficult to reconcile my growth as a scientist. And I know some people find that reconciliation. I have not. Maybe I will one day. But as a general guiding principle,
Starting point is 01:20:33 which I think I've attained from that experience, was that I have to be extremely guarded about what I want to be true, because it's going to sway me to say things which are not true if I'm not careful. And that's not what we're trying to do with scientists. So you felt from a religious perspective that there was a little bit of a gravitational field in terms of your opinions, like it was affecting how you could be as a scientist.
Starting point is 01:21:01 Like as a scientific thinker, obviously, we're young. Yeah. as a scientist, like as a scientific thinker, obviously, we're young. Yeah, I think that's true. That whenever there's something you want to be true, it's the ultimate seduction intellectually. And I worry about this a lot with UFOs and it's true already with things like Venus, Vosphene and searching for ashybological signals. We have to guard against this all the way through from however we're looking for life, however we're looking for whatever this big question is.
Starting point is 01:21:36 There is a part of us, I think I would love that to be life in the universe. I hope there is life in the universe, but I'm somewhat, it's been on records several times, it's being fairly firm about trying to remain consciously agnostic about that question. I don't want to make up my mind about what the answer is before I've collected evidence to inform that decision. That's how science should work. If I only know what the answer is, then what am I doing? That's not a scientific experiment anymore. You've already decided,
Starting point is 01:22:09 so what are you trying to let, what's the point of doing the experiment if you really know what the answer is? There's no point. It's still complicated because, so if I'm being honest with myself, when I imagine the universe, so first thing I imagine about our world is that we humans and me certainly is one particular human. No, very, my first assumption is I know almost nothing about how anything works. So first of all, that actually applies for things that humans do know, like quantum mechanics, all the things that there's different expertise that I just have not dedicated to. Even that's starting point.
Starting point is 01:22:51 If we take all of knowledge as human civilization, we know almost nothing. That's the assumption I have. It seems like we keep discovering mysteries. It seems like human history is defined by moments when we said okay we pretty much figured it all out and then you realize a century later when you said that you didn't figure out anything okay so that's like a starting point the second thing I have is I feel like the entirety of the universe is just filled with alien civilizations. Statistically, there's the important thing that enables that belief for me is that they don't have to be human-like. They can be anything. And it's just the fact that life
Starting point is 01:23:39 exists and just seeing the way life is on earth that it just finds a way. It finds a way in so many different complicated environments. It finds a way. Whatever that force is, that same force has to find a way elsewhere also. But then if I'm also being honest, and I don't know how many hours in a day I spend seriously considering the possibility that we're alone. I don't know when my heart is in mind or filled with wonder, I think about all the different life that's out there.
Starting point is 01:24:14 But to really imagine the world alone, like really imagine all the vastness that's out there we're alone, not even bacteria. I would say you don't have to believe that we are alone, not even bacteria? I would say you don't have to believe that we are alone, but you have to admit it's a possibility of our ignorance of the universe so far. You can have a belief about something in absence of evidence, and Karthagin famously described that as the definition of faith. If you believe something when there's no evidence, you have faith at this life in the universe, but you can't demonstrate, you can't prove it mathematically, you can't show me evidence of that. But is there some mathematically
Starting point is 01:24:56 and math is a funny thing. Is there, I mean, the way physicists think, like intuition, so basic reasoning, is there some value to that? Well, I'd say there's certainly, you can certainly make a very good argument. I think you've kind of already made one. Just the vastness in the universe is the default argument that people often turn to. Surely there should be others out as hard to imagine. There are a quarter of 10 to the 22 stars in our observable universe. And so really the question comes down to what is the probability of one of those 10 to
Starting point is 01:25:30 22 planets, let's say, Earth like planets, if they all have Earth like planets, going on to form life spontaneously. That's the process of A by Genesis, the spontaneous emergence of life. Also, the word spontaneous is the funny. Well, okay, maybe we weren't used spontaneous, but not being, they say, seeded by some, sure, some other civilization or something like this. It naturally emerges. Because even the worst spontaneous makes it seem less likely.
Starting point is 01:26:00 Yeah, like there's just this chemistry and an extremely random process. Right, it could be a very gradual process. So about millions of years of growing complexity in chemical networks. Maybe there's a force in the universe that pushes it towards interesting complexity, pockets of complexity, that ultimately creates something like life which we can't possibly define yet. And sometimes it manifests itself into something that looks like humans, but it could be at totally different kind of computational information processing system that we're too domed to even visualize. Yeah, I mean, certainly, I mean, it's kind of way that complexity develops at all, right? Because it seems like the opposite to our physical intuition, if you're training a physics, of entropy,
Starting point is 01:26:40 that things should, you know, complexity is hard to spontaneously, or should it say spontaneously, it's hard to emerge in general. And so that's an interesting problem. I think there's been, certainly from evolutionary perspective, you do see growing complexity. And there's a nice argument, I think, is by Gold, who shows that if you have a certain amount of complexity, it can either become less complex or more complex to random mutation. And the less complex things are stripping away something, something that was necessary potentially to their survival. And so in general, that's going to be not particularly useful in its survival. And so it's going to be detrimental to stripper weight, significant amount of its useful traits. Whereas if you add something, the most typical thing that you add is probably not useful at all,
Starting point is 01:27:26 it's probably just doesn't really affect it survival negatively, but it neither does it provide any significant benefit. But sometimes on rare occasions, of course, it will be of benefit. And so, if you're, I have a certain level of complexity, it's hard to go back in complexity, but it's fairly easy to go forward with enough bites at the cherry. You will eventually build up and complexity. That tends to be why we see complexity grow in certainly in an evolutionary sense, but also perhaps it's operating in chemical networks that led to the emergence of life. I guess the real problem I have with the numbers game just to combat to that is that we are talking about a certain probability of that occurring.
Starting point is 01:28:07 It may be to go from the primordial soup, however you want to call it, the ingredients that the earth started with, the organic molecules, the probability of going from that initial condition to something that was capable of Darwinian natural selection that maybe we could define as life, the probability of that is maybe 1%, 1% of the time that happens. In which case you're right, the universe will be absolutely teaming with life, but it could also be 10 to the power of minus 10,
Starting point is 01:28:34 in which case it's one per galaxy, or 10 to the power of minus 100, in which case the vast majority of universes even do not have life within it. Or 90%. Or 90%. You said 1 life within it. Or 90%. Or 90%. You said 1%, but it could be 90% if the conditions, the chemical conditions
Starting point is 01:28:50 of a planet are correct, or a moon are correct. I admit that. It could be any of those numbers. And the challenges we just have no rigorous reason to expect why 90% is any, because we're talking about a probability of a probability, what is 90% more apreori likely than 10 to the power minus 20? Well, the thing is we do have an observation and of one of Earth.
Starting point is 01:29:18 And it's difficult to know what to do with that, what kind of intuition you build on top of that, because on Earth, it seems like life finds a way in all kinds of conditions, in all kinds of crazy conditions. And it's able to build up from the basic chemistry, you could say, okay, maybe it takes a little bit of time to develop some complicated technology like mitochondria, I don't know, like, photosynthesis, fine, but it seems to figure it out and like do it extremely well. Yeah, but I would say you're describing a different process.
Starting point is 01:29:53 I mean, maybe I'm at fault for separating these two processes, but to me you're describing basically natural selection evolution at that point, whereas I'm really describing a biogenesis, which is to me a separate distinct process. Do you limit it to human scientists? Yes, but why would he be a separate process? Why? Why is the birth of life a separate process from the process of life? Why is the... I mean, we're uncomfortable with the... we're comfortable with a big bang, we're uncomfortable with the first thing, I think. Like, where does this come from? Right.
Starting point is 01:30:28 So, I think, I would say, I just twist that question around and say, what, you're saying, why is it a different process? Why, and I would say, why shouldn't it be a different process, which isn't really a good defense except to say that we have, we have knowledge of how natural evolution works. We think we understand that process. We have almost no information about the earlier stages of how life, immersion, and planet. It may be that you're right, and it is a part of a continuum. It may be that it is also a distinct, improbable set of circumstances that led to the emergence
Starting point is 01:31:02 of life. As a scientist, I'm just trying to be open-minded to both possibilities. If I assert that life must be everywhere, to me, you run the risk of experiment as bias. If you think you know what the answer is, if you look at an Earth-like planet and you're a preconditioned to think there's a 90% chance of life on this planet, it's going to, at some level, affect your interpretation of that data, whereas if I, however critical you might be of the agnosticism that I impose upon myself, remain open to both possibilities, then I trust in myself to make a fair assessment as to the reality of the evidence for life. Yeah, but I wonder sort of scientifically and that's really beautiful to hear and inspiring to hear.
Starting point is 01:31:54 I wonder scientifically how many firsts we truly know of, know of. And then we don't eventually explain as actually a step number one million in a long process. So I think that's a really interesting thing if there's truly first in this universe. Like, for us, whatever happened at the Big Bang is a kind of first, the origin of stuff. But it just, again, it seems like history shows that we'll figure out that it's actually a continuation of something. But then physicists say that time is emergent and that our causality in times is a very human kind of construct that is very possible
Starting point is 01:32:37 that all of this, so there could be really firsts of a thing to which we attach a name. So whatever we call life, maybe there is an origin of it. Yeah, and I would also say, I'm opening third of you, we're being part of a continuation, but the continuation may be small broader,
Starting point is 01:32:54 and it's a continuation of chemical systems and chemical networks. And what we call this one particular type of chemistry and this behavior of chemistry life, but it is just one manifestation of all the trillions of possible permutations in which chemical reactions can occur. And we assert specialness to it because that's what we are. And so this is also true of intelligence.
Starting point is 01:33:19 You could extend the same thing and say, you know, we're looking for intelligent life in the universe and then you start up, where do you define intelligence? Where's that continuum of something that's really like HR, we alone? There may be a continuum of chemical systems, a continuum of intelligence is out there. And we have to be careful of our own arrogance of assuming specialness about what we are that we are some distinct category of Phenomena, whereas the universe doesn't really care about what category we are It's just doing what it's doing and doing everything in you know infinite infinite diversity and infinite combinations essentially what it's doing And so we are we are taking this one slice, no, this has to be treated separately. And I'm open to the idea that it could be a truly separate phenomenon,
Starting point is 01:34:11 but it may just be like a snowflake, every snowflake is different. It may just be that this one particular iteration is another variant of the vast continuum. Yeah, maybe the algorithm of natural selection itself is an invention of earth. I kind of also tend to suspect that this, this, whatever the algorithm is, it kind of operates at all levels throughout the universe. But maybe this is a very kind of peculiar thing that where there's a bunch of chemical systems that compete against each other Somehow for survival under limited resources, and that's a very earth-like thing. We have a nice balance of there's a large number of resources enough to have a bunch of different kinds of systems competing, but not so many that
Starting point is 01:35:04 They they get lazy. Yeah. Maybe that's why bacteria were very lazy for a long time. Maybe they didn't have much competition. Quite possibly. I mean, I tried to, as fun as it is to get into the speculation about the definitions of life and what life does and this gross network of possibilities. Honestly, for me, the strongest argument for remaining agnostic is to avoid that bias
Starting point is 01:35:33 and assessing data. And we've seen it, I mean, first of all, I talked about my channel, and maybe last year or two years ago, you know, who's a very famous astronomer who in the 19th century was claiming the evidence of canals on Mars. And from him, from his perspective, and even at the time, culturally, it was widely accepted that Mars would, of course, have life. I mean, I think it seems silly to us, but it was kind of similar arguments to what we use now about exoplanets, that well, of course, there must be life in the universe. How could it just be here? And so it seemed obvious to people that when you look at Mars with its polar caps, even you know, its atmosphere had seasons, it seemed obvious to them that that too would be a place where life not only was present but had emerged to a civilization which actually was fairly comparable
Starting point is 01:36:19 to technology to our own because it was building canal systems. Of course, the canal system seems a bizarre technical signature to us, but it was a product of. Of course, the canal system seems a bizarre technosignature to us, but it was a product of their time. To them, that was the cutting edge in technology. It should be a warning shot, actually a little bit for us, that if we think solar panels or building star links or whatever, space mining is like an inevitable technosignature, that may be laughably antiquated compared to what other civilizations far more advanced than it's maybe doing. And so Henry Percival Law, he was, he I think was a product of his time that he thought life was there inevitably he even wrote
Starting point is 01:36:54 about it extensively. And so when he saw these lines, these linear on the surface of Mars, to him it was just obvious they were canals. And he was, that was experimented by us playing out. He was told for one that he had basically the greatest eyesight out of any of his peers, an off-mologist had told him that in Boston that his eyesight was absolutely spectacular, so he just was convinced everything he saw was real. And secondly, he was convinced there was life there. And so to him, it just added up. And then that kind of wasted, you know, decades of research of treating the idea of mass being inhabited by this canal, civilization. But on the other hand, it's maybe not a waste because it is a lesson in history of how we should be always unguarded against our own preconceptions and biases about what,
Starting point is 01:37:42 whether life is out there and furthermore what types of things life might do if it is there. If I were running this simulation, which you should also talk about, because you make the case against it, but if I were running this simulation, I would definitely put you in a room with an alien and just to see mentally free cal for hours at a time. Oh, I, for sure would have thought
Starting point is 01:38:02 you will be convinced that you've lost your mind. I mean, no, not that, but I mean, like if we discover life, we discovered interesting new physical phenomena. I think the right approach is definitely to be extremely skeptical and be very, very careful about things you want to be true. That's the, I'm not like some extreme denialist of evidence. If there was compelling evidence for life or another planet, I would be the first one to be celebrating that and be shaking hands with
Starting point is 01:38:30 the alien on the White House lawn, whatever. I grew up with Star Trek and that was my fantasy was to be capped in Kirk and fly across the stars, meaning of the civilization. So there's nothing more I'd want to be true, as I said. But we just have to guard against it when we're assessing data. But I have to say I'm very skeptical that we will ever have that star track moment. Even if there are other civilizations out there, they're never going to be at a point, which
Starting point is 01:39:02 is in technological lockstep with us, similar level of development, even intellectually the idea that they could have a conversation with us even through a translator. I mean, we can't communicate with Humbat Wales, we can't get with dolphins in a meaningful way, we can sort of bark orders at them, but we can't have abstract conversations with them about things. And so the idea that we will ever have that fulfilling conversation, I'm deeply skeptical of. And I think a lot of us have drawn to that. It is maybe a replacement for God to some degree, that that father figures civilization that might step in, teach us the air of our
Starting point is 01:39:41 ways, and bestow wisdom upon our civilization. But they could equally be a giant fungus that doesn't even understand the idea of socialization because it's the only entity on its planet. It just swells over the entire surface and it's incredibly intelligent because maybe each node communicates with its share that creates a giant neural net. But it has no sense of what communication even is. And so alien life is out there, surely going to be extremely diverse. I'm pretty skeptical that we'll ever get that fantasy moment I always had as a kid
Starting point is 01:40:17 of having a dialogue with other civilization. So dialogue, yes, what about noticing them? What about noticing signals? Do you hope? So one thing we've been talking about is getting signatures by signature, technical signatures about other planets maybe I for extremely lucky in our lifetime to be able to meet life forms Get evidence of living or dead life forms on Mars or the of Jupiter and Saturn, what about getting signals from out of space and to stellar signals?
Starting point is 01:40:47 What kind of, what would those signals potentially look like? That's a hard question, Trance, because we are essentially engaging in zine psychology to some degree. What are the activities of another civilization? But a lot of that is in that word, zine psychology, apology, is the interrupt mean.
Starting point is 01:41:05 Well, maybe I'm just fabricating that word really, but trying to guess the machinations and motivations of another intelligent being that was completely evolutionary divorced from us. So it's like you said exo-moves, exo-psychology, exosolar. Yeah, yeah. Alien psychology is another way of maybe making it more grounded, but the, we can't really guess at their motivations too well, but we can look at the source of behaviors we engage in and at least look for them.
Starting point is 01:41:37 We're always guilty that when we look for biosignatures, we're really looking for, and even when we look for planets, we're looking for templates of Earth. When we look for biosignatures, we're looking for templates of earth-based life. When we look for technasing, we tend to be looking for templates of our own behaviors or extrapolations of our behaviors. So there's a very long list of technasing, which is that people have suggested we could look for. The earliest ones were, of course, radio beacons. That was sort of project Osmer that Frank Drake was involved in, and I'm trying to look for radio signatures, which could either be just like blurting out high-power radio signals saying, hey, we're here, or could even have encoded within them, galactic encyclopedias for us to unlock, which has always been
Starting point is 01:42:21 the allure of the radio technique. But there could also be unintentional signatures. For example, you could have something like the satellite system that we've produced around the Earth's artificial satellite system, Starlink type systems we mentioned. You could detect the glint of lights across those satellites as they orbit around the planet. You could detect a geostationary satellite belt which would block out some light as the planet, you could set a geostationary satellite belt which would block out some light as the planet transferred across the star. You could detect solar panels potentially spectrally on the surface of the planet. Heat island effects New York is hotter than New York state by a couple of degrees because the heat island effect of the city and so you could thermally map different planets
Starting point is 01:43:01 and detect these. So it's a large array of things that we do that we can go out and hypothesize we could look for. And then on the further side of the scale, you have things which go far beyond like capabilities such as warp drive signatures, which have been proposed. You get these bright flashes of light, or even gravitational wave detections from LIGO could be detected. of light, even gravitational wave detections from LIGO could be detected. You could have Dyson spheres, the idea of covering basically a star is completely covered by some kind of structure which collects all the light from the star to power the civilization. And that would be pretty easily detectable to some degree because you're transferring all of the visible light thermodynamically, it has to be re-emitted. So it
Starting point is 01:43:45 can add as infrared light. So you'd have an incredibly bright infrared star, yet one that was visibly not present at all. And so that would be pretty intriguing. So you just look for, well, is there efforts to look for something like there for different distance fears out there for, with the strong infrared signal? There has been. Yeah, there has been, and there's been, I think in the literature there was one with the IRA satellite, which is an infrared satellite. They targeted, I think of order of 100,000 stars, nearby stars, and found no convincing examples
Starting point is 01:44:17 of what looked like a Dyson Sphere star. And then Jason Wright and his team extended this, I think using WISE, which isindfresh satellite to look around Galaxy. So could an entire Galaxy have been converted into Dyson spheres or a significant fraction of the Galaxy, which is basically the the car to share of type three, right? This is the when you've basically mastered the entire galactic pool of resources.
Starting point is 01:44:41 And again, out of 100,000 nearby galaxies, there appears to be no compelling examples of what looks like a Dyson galaxy, if you want to call it that. So that by no means proves that they don't exist or don't happen, but it seems like it's an unusual behavior for a civilization to get to that stage of development and start harvesting the entire stellar output. I mean, Ligo is super interesting with gravitational waves. If that kind of experiment could start seeing some weirdness, some weird signals that compare to the power of cosmic phenomena. Yeah, I mean, it's a whole new window to the universe, not just in terms of astrophysics, but potentially for technosy inches as well.
Starting point is 01:45:29 I have to say, with the warp drives, I am skeptical that warp drives are possible because you have kind of fundamental problem and relativity. You can either really have relativity, fast and light travel, or causality. You can only choose two of those three things. You really can't have all three in a coherent universe. If you have all three, you basically end up with the possibility of these kind of temporal paradoxes and time loops and grandfather paradoxes. Okay, there would be pockets of causality, something like that, where there's like pockets of consistent causality. You could design it in that way. You could be, you know,
Starting point is 01:46:02 if you had a warp drive or a time machine essentially, you could be, you know, you could be very conscious and careful of the way you use it so as to not to cause paradoxes or just doing it in a local area or something. But the real fundamental problem is you always have the ability to do it. And so in a vast cosmic universe, if time machines were all over the place, there's too much risk of someone doing it, right? If somebody having the option of essentially breaking the universe with it with it. So this says, a fundamental problem, Hawking has this chronology protection conjecture where he said that essentially, this just can't be allowed because it breaks, it breaks all our laws of physics if time travel is possible.
Starting point is 01:46:45 Current laws of physics, yes. Correct. Yeah. And so we need to rip up relativity. I mean, that's the point. It's the current laws of physics. So you'd have to rip up our current law of relativity to make sense of how FTL could live in that universe because you can't have relativity, FTL and causality sit nicely
Starting point is 01:47:01 and play nicely together. But we currently don't have quantum mechanics and relativity playing nice together anyway, so it's not like everything is all a nice little factor. And certainly not the full picture, there must be more to go. But it's already ripped up, so might as well rip it up a little more. And in the process, I actually try to connect the two things, because maybe in the unification of the standard model and general relativity may be there, wise, some kind of new wisdom about warp drives. So by the way, warp drives is somehow messing with the fabric of the university
Starting point is 01:47:40 be able to travel faster than the speed of light. Yeah, you're basically bending space time. You could also do it with a wormhole or a tacky, you know, some of the hypothetical FTL systems doesn't have to necessarily be the alkybed drive, the warp drive, it could be any faster than my system. As long as it travels superlumely, it will violate causality. And presumably, there will be observable with LIGO.
Starting point is 01:48:03 Potentially, yeah, potentially. It potentially depends on I think, you know, the properties of whatever the spacecraft is. I mean, one, one problem with whoop drives is there's all sorts of problems with what drives, but when like the start of their sense, one problem, yeah, there's just this one minor problem that we have to get around. But when it arrives at its destination, it basically collects this vast, it has like an event horizon on the front of it. And so it collects all this radiation
Starting point is 01:48:31 at the front as it goes. And when it arrives, all that radiation gets dumped on its destination and basically completely exterminate the planet that arrives at. That radiation is also incident within the shell itself, this Hawking radiation occurring within the shell, which is pretty dangerous. And then, you know, also has it raises all sorts of exacerbations of the Fermi paradox, of course, as well. So you might be able to explain why we don't see a galactic empire. And even here it's hard, you might be able to explain why we don't see a galactic empire. If everybody's limited to Voyager 2 rocket speeds of like 20 kilometers per second or something. But it's a lot harder to explain why we don't see the stars populated by galactic empires
Starting point is 01:49:16 when warp drive is eminently possible. Because it makes expansion so much more trivial that it makes our life harder. There's some wonderful simulation where it being done at Rochester where they actually simulate all the stars in the galaxy, a fraction of them, and they spawn a civilization, and one of them, and they let it spread out, it's sublight speeds, and actually the very mixing of the stars themselves, because the stars are not static, they're in orbit, the galactic center, and they have crossing paths with each other. If you just have a range of even like five light years, and your speed is of order of a few percent, the speed of light is the maximum you can muster, you can populate the entire galaxy within something like a hundred thousand to about a million years or so. So not a fraction of the lifetime of the galaxy itself. And so this raises
Starting point is 01:50:07 some fairly serious problems because if any civilization entire history of the galaxy decided to do that, then either we shouldn't be here or we happen to live in this kind of rare pocket where the chose not to populate to. And so this is sometimes called fact A, hearts fact A. The fact A is that a civilization is not here now. An alien civilization is not in present occupation of the earth. And that's difficult to resolve with the apparent ease
Starting point is 01:50:42 at which even a small extrapolation of our own technology could potentially populate a galaxy in far faster than galactic history. So to me, by the way, the firm paradox is truly a paradox for me, but I suspect that if alien vision is earth, I suspect if they do, if they are everywhere, I think they're already here and we're too dumb to see it. But leaving that aside, I think we should be able to, in that case, have very strong, obvious signals when we look up at the stars at the emanation of energy required. We would see we would see some weirdness that like where these are these kinds of stars and these are these kinds of stars they're being messed with like leveraging the nuclear fusion of stars to do something useful. Right. The fact that we don't really see that like maybe you can correct me.
Starting point is 01:51:42 Wouldn't we be able to, if there is like alien civilizations running galaxies, wouldn't we see weirdnesses from an astronomy perspective with the way the stars are behaving? Yeah, I mean, it depends exactly what they're doing, but I mean, the Dyson Sphere example is one that we would discuss where a survey of 100,000 nearby galaxies find that they are not have all been transformed into Dyson Sphere collectors. You could also imagine them doing things like we read a paper like this recently of star lifting where you can extend the life of your star by scooping mass off the star. So you'd be doing stellar engineering essentially. Space if you're doing a huge amount of asteroid
Starting point is 01:52:19 mining, you would have a spectral signature because you're basically filling the solar system with dust by doing that. There'd be debris from that activity. And so there are some limits on this. Certainly we don't see bright flashes, which would be one of these kinds of what drives as I said, as they decelerate the produces these bright flashes of light. We don't seem to see evidence of those kind of things. We don't see anything obvious around the nearby stars or the stars that we've served in detail beyond that that indicate any kind of artificial civilization.
Starting point is 01:52:57 The closest maybe we had was Boyage and Star. There was a lot of interest in them. There was a star that was just very peculiarly dipping in and out its brightness. And it was hypothesized for a time that that may indeed be some kind of dyson-like structure, so maybe a dyson sphere that's half-built. And so as it comes in and out, it's blocking out huge swaths of the star. It was very difficult to explain it really with huge swaths of the star. It was very difficult to explain it really with any kind of planet model at the time. But an easier hypothesis that was proposed was it could just be a large number of comets or dust or something or maybe a planet that had broken apart and as it fragments orbit around it blocks out starlight. And it turned out with subsequent observations of that
Starting point is 01:53:43 star, which especially the amateur astronomy community made a big contribution to as well, that the dips were chromatic, which was a real important collude that that probably wasn't a solid structure then that was going around it. It was more likely to be dust, dust is chromatic. But chromatic I mean, it looks different in different colors.
Starting point is 01:54:03 So it blocks out more red light than blue light. If it was a solid structure, it shouldn't be a peak, a solid metal structure or something. So that was one of the clear indications and the behavior of in the way the light changed or the dips changed across wavelengths was fully consistent with the expectations of what small particulates would do.
Starting point is 01:54:25 And so that's very hard. I mean, the real problem with alien hunting, the real problem. The technical term. This is the real one problem. Yeah. One problem with the world right and the one problem with alien hunting. Yes. But actually, I'd say there's three big problems for me with any search for life, which includes UFOs
Starting point is 01:54:45 or the way to fossils and Mars, is that aliens have three unique properties as a hypothesis. One is they have essentially unbounded explanatory capability. So there's almost no phenomena I can show you that you couldn't explain with aliens to some degree. You could say, well, the aliens just have
Starting point is 01:55:02 some super high-tech way of creating that illusion. The second one would be unbounded avoidance capacity. So I might see a UFO tomorrow, and then the next day, and then the next day, and then predict I should see it on Thursday, then into the week. But then I don't see it, but I could always get out of that and say, well, that's just because they chose not to come here. They can always avoid future observations fairly easily.
Starting point is 01:55:32 If you survey an exoplanet for biosignatures and you don't see oxygen, you don't see methane, that doesn't mean there's no one living there. They could always be either tricking their atmosphere, engineering, and we actually wrote a paper about that, how you can use lasers to hide your biosignatures as in fact civilization, or you could just be living underground or underwater or something where there's no biosignatures. So you can never really disprove this life on another planet or on another star. It has infinite avoidance. And then finally, the third one is that we have incomplete physical understanding of the universe. So if I see a new phenomena, which by Agents Starwitz
Starting point is 01:56:10 could exemplar that, we saw this new phenomenon of these strange dips we'd never seen before. It was hypothesized immediately this could be aliens, it's like a god of the gaps, but it turned out to be incomplete physical understanding. And so that happens all the time. In the first Pousar that was discovered, same story, Joss Limbele, kind of somewhat tongue in cheek called it Little Green Man One because it looked a lot like the radio signature that was expected from a civilization.
Starting point is 01:56:38 But of course, it turned out to be a completely new type of star that we had never seen before, which was a neutron star, with these two jets coming out the top of it. And so that's a challenge. Those three things are really, really difficult in terms of experimental design for a scientist to work around. Something that can explain anything, can avoid anything, so it's almost unforcifiable, and could always just be, to some degree, as you said,
Starting point is 01:57:05 we have this very limited knowledge of the infinite possibilities of physical law. And we probably only scratching the surface each time, and we've seen it so often in history, we may just be detecting some new phenomena. Well, that last one, I think, I'm a little more okay with making mistakes on. Yeah, which is because Which is exciting still. Yeah. Because no matter, so you might exaggerate the importance of the discovery, but the whole point is to try to find stuff in this world that's weird and try to characterize that weird
Starting point is 01:57:37 and ensure you can throw a little green men as a label on it. But eventually, it's as mysterious and as beautiful as as interesting as little agreement. Like we tend to think that there's some kind of threshold. But like there's all kinds of weird organisms on this earth that operate very differently than humans that are super interesting. The human mind is super interesting. I mean like weirdness and complexity is as interesting in any of its forms as what we might think from Hollywood what aliens are. So that's okay. Looking for weirdness on Mars. That's one of the best sales pictures to do tennis in your work is that we always have that as
Starting point is 01:58:19 our fullback that we're going to look for alien signatures. If we fail, we're going to discover some awesome new physics along the way. And so even any kind of signature that we detect is always going to be interesting. And so that compels us to have not only the question of looking for life in the universe, but it gives us a strong scientific grounding as to why this sort of research should be funded and should be executed because it always pushes the frontiers knowledge. I wonder if we'll be able to discover and be open enough to a broad definition of aliens where we see some kind of techno signature, basically like a touring test, like this thing is intelligent. Like it's processing information in a very interesting way.
Starting point is 01:59:06 But you can say that about chemistry. You can say that about physics, maybe not physics, chemistry. The interesting complex chemistry, you could say that this is processing. This is storing information. This is propagating information over time. It's a great area between a living organism, we call an alien, and I think that's super interesting, it's able to carry some kind of intelligence. Yeah, information is a really useful way to frame what we're looking for though, because then you're divorced from making assumptions about even a civilization necessarily or anything like that. So any kind of information rig signature, indeed, you can take things like the light curve from Boyage and Star and ask,
Starting point is 01:59:51 what is the minimum number of free parameters or the minimum information content that must be encoded within this light curve? And the hope is that maybe from, you know, good example, be from a radio signature, you from a video scene and show you to text something that has a thousand megabytes of parameters essentially contained within it. That's pretty clearly at that point, not the product of a natural process, but it's any natural process that we could possibly
Starting point is 02:00:17 imagine with our current understanding of the universe. And so, thinking of, even if we can't decode, which actually, I'm skeptical, would be able to ever decode it in our lifetime, so it would probably take decades to fully ever figure out what they're trying to tell us. But if there was a message there, we could at least know that there is high information content and there is complexity and that this is a attempt at communication information transfer and leave it to our subsequent generations to figure out what
Starting point is 02:00:45 exactly it is that's trying to say. What again, a wild question, and thank you for entertaining them. I really, really appreciate that. But what kind of signal in our lifetime, what kind of thing you do think might happen, Could possibly happen where the scientific community would be convinced that there's alien civilizations out there. What you already said maybe a strong infrared signature for something like a Dyson Sphere. Yeah, that's possibly that's also
Starting point is 02:01:18 something a little bit ambiguous. Because that's the challenge that I can interrupt is where your brain would be like you as a scientist would be like I know it's ambiguous, but this is really weird. Yeah, I think If you had something I can imagine something like a prime number sequence or a mathematical sequence like the Fibonacci series something being Massatically provable that this is not a physical phenomenon. Right. Yeah, prime numbers is a pretty good case because there's no natural phenomena that produces prime number sequences.
Starting point is 02:01:50 It seems to be a purely abstract mathematical concept, as far as I'm aware. And so if we detected, you know, if it was a radio blitz that were following that sequence, it would be pretty clear to me or it could even be in a car say again suggested that pi could be encoded in that or you might use the hydrogen line but multiply by pi like some very specific frequency of the universe like a hydrogen line but multiply it by a abstract mathematical constant that would imply strongly that there was someone behind the scenes operating that as I stored in which phenomena though. So, radio. So, radio.
Starting point is 02:02:26 So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio.
Starting point is 02:02:34 So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio.
Starting point is 02:02:42 So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. So, radio. a little bit and thinking about not just looking for life and intelligence around us right now but looking into the past and even into the future to some degree or communicating with the future. And so we had this front experiment of imagining a civilization that was born at the beginning of the history of the galaxy and being the first and what it would be like for them and they were desperately searching for evidence of life that couldn't find it. And so they decided to try and leave something behind for future civilizations to discover, to tell them about themselves.
Starting point is 02:03:10 But of course, a radio thing is not going to work there, because it has a power source, and that's a piece of machinery. It's going to eventually break down. It's going to be hard to maintain that for billions of years time scale. And so you wanted something that was kind of passive that doesn't require an energy source but can somehow transmit information, which is hard to think about something that satisfies those criteria. But there was a proposal by one of my colleagues, Luke Arnold, which inspired a lot of us in technical signatures. And he suggested that you could build artificial
Starting point is 02:03:40 transitors. So you could be build sheets of material that transit in front of the star, maybe one thin sheet passes across first, then two, then three, then five, and seven, so you could throw the prime number sequence of these. And so there'd be a clear indication that someone had manufactured those, but they don't require any energy source because they're just sheets of material in order of the star. They would eventually degrade from my computer rights, maybe they'll always become destabilized, but they should have lifetimes far exceeding the lifetime
Starting point is 02:04:10 of any battery or mechanical electronic system that we could, at least without energy, conceive of building. And so you could imagine and extending that, and how could you encode not just a prime number sequence, but maybe in the spatial pattern of this very complex like curve we see, you could encode more just a prime number sequence, but maybe in the spatial pattern of this very complex like curve we see, you could encode more and more information through 2D shapes and the way those octetions happen. And maybe you could even encode messages and in depth information from that. You could even imagine it being like a lower layer of information, which is just
Starting point is 02:04:44 the prime number sequence, but then you look closely and you see the smaller divots embedded within those that have a deeper layer of information to extract. And so to me, something like that would be pretty compelling, but that was somebody who had an impressive hoax. That would be a pretty compelling evidence for this civilization. And actually the methods of astronomy right now are kind of marching towards being able to better and better detect a signal like that. Yeah. I mean, to some degree it's just building bigger aperture in space, the bigger the telescope, the finer ability to detect those
Starting point is 02:05:24 minute signals. Do you think the currents are the scientific community and other weird question, but just the observations that are happening now, do you think they're ready for a prime number sequence? And in the sort of, if we're using the current method, the transit timing variation method, like, do you think you're ready? Do you have the tools to detect the prime number of
Starting point is 02:05:47 sequins? Yeah, for sure. I mean there's 200,000 stars that Kepler monitored and it monitored them all the time. It took a photo of each one of them every 30 minutes measured their brightness and it did that for four and a half years. And so you have already and test is doing it right now under the mission. And so you have already an existing catalog and people are genuinely scouring through each of those light curves with automated machine learning techniques we even developed some in our own team that can look for weird behavior. We wrote a code called the weird detector, for instance, that of course, you know, it was just the most generic thing possible. Let's assume anything about the signal shape. Just look for anything that repeats.
Starting point is 02:06:28 The signal shape can be anything, can we kind of learn the template of the signal from the data itself, and then we is like a template matching filter to see if that repeats many, many times in the data. And so we actually applied that and found a bunch of interesting stuff, but we didn't see anything that was the prime
Starting point is 02:06:45 number sequence, at least on the capital data. That's 200,000 stars, which sounds like a lot, but compared to 200 billion stars in the Milky Way, it's really just scratching the surface. So one, because there could be something much more generalizable than the prime number sequence, it's ultimately the question of a signal that's very difficult to compress in the general sensible compress means. So maybe as we get better and better machine learning methods that automatically figure out analyze the data to understand how to compress it.
Starting point is 02:07:16 You'll be able to discover data for some reason is not compressible. But then compression really is a bottomless pit because that's really what intelligence is being able to compress information. Yeah, and to some degree the more you, I would imagine, I don't work in compression algorithms, but I would imagine the more you compress your signal, the more assumptions that kind of go on behalf of the decoder, the more skilled they really have to be. on behalf of the decoder, the more skilled they really have to be. Some of the, a primary consequence is completely uncoded information essentially. But if you look at the Aracibo message, they were fairly careful with their pixelation of their simple image they sent to try and make it as interpretable as possible to be that even a dumb alien would be able to figure out what we're trying to show them here because there's all sorts of conventions and rules that I built in that we tend to presume when we design our messages. decoder, particularly compression algorithm, I'm sure they could eventually reverse engineer
Starting point is 02:08:27 it and figure it out, but you're making it harder for them to get to that point. So maybe I always think you probably would have a two tier system, right? You'd probably have some lower tier key system and then maybe beneath that, you'd have a deeper compressed layer of more in depth information. What about maybe observing actual physical objects? So first let me go to your tweet as a source of inspiration. You tweeted that it's interesting to ponder that if or clouds are ever mined by the systems of valiance civilizations, mining equipment from billions of years ago in our org cloud, since the org clouds
Starting point is 02:09:05 are, they extend really, really, really, really far outside the actual star. Yeah. Yeah. So, you know, mining equipment, just a basic boring mining equipment out there. I don't know if there's something interesting to say about org clouds themselves that are interesting to you and about possible non-shiny, later-mitting or mining equipment from alien civilizations. Yeah, I mean, that's the beauty of the field of technical
Starting point is 02:09:33 signatures and looking for life is you can find inspiration and intellectual joy in just this small little thing that starts a whole thread of building upon it and wondering about the implications. And so in this case, I was just really struck by, we couldn't mention this a little bit earlier, the idea that stars are not static. We tend to think of the galaxy as having stars in a certain location from the center of
Starting point is 02:10:00 the galaxy and they kind of live there. But in truth, the stars are not only orbiting around the center of the galaxy and they kind of live there, but in truth the stars are not only orbiting around the center of the galaxy, but those orbits are themselves changing over time, they're processing. And so in fact, the orbits look more like a spyrograph if you've done those as a kid, they kind of whirl around and trace that all sorts of strange patterns. And so the stars intersect with one another. And so the current closest star to us is Proxima Centauri, which is about 4.2 light years away,
Starting point is 02:10:29 but it will not always be the closest star. And over millions of years, it will be supplanted by other stars. And in fact, stars will come even closer than Proxima within just a couple of light years. And that's been happening, not just we can project, that will happen over the next few million years, but that's been happening presumably throughout the entire history of the Galaxy for billions of years.
Starting point is 02:10:50 And so if you went back in time, it would have been all sorts of different nearest stars at different stages of the Earth's history. And those stars are so close that their all clouds do intermix with one another. So the all cloud can extend out to even a light year or two around the earth. There's some debate about exactly where it ends. It probably doesn't really have a definitive end, but kind of more, just kind of peeters out,
Starting point is 02:11:12 more and more and more, as you go further away. By the way, for people who don't know, nor cloud, I don't know what the technical definition is, but a bunch of rocks that kind of know objects that orbit the star. And they can extend really with the particles of gravity. These are objects that are mostly icy rich.
Starting point is 02:11:30 They were probably formed fairly similar distances to Jupiter and Saturn, but were scattered out through the interactions of those giant planets. We see a circular disk of objects around us, which kind of looks like the asteroid belt, but just further away called the Kuiper belt. And then further beyond that, you get the awk clout. And the awk clout is non-medisk. It's just a sphere at kind of surrounds us in all directions. So these are objects that were scattered out through three dimensionally in all different
Starting point is 02:11:58 directions. And so those objects are potentially resources for us, especially if you were planning to do an interstellar mission one day, you might want to mine the water that's embedded within those and use that as either oxygen or fuel for your rocket. And so it's quite possible. There's also some rare earth metals and things like that as well, but this is quite possible. The civilization might use all cloud objects as a jumping off point. where the civilization might use all cloud objects as a jumping off point. Or in the hype about you have things like planet 9 evens. That might even be objects beyond in the all cloud, which are actually planet like that we just cannot detect. These objects are very, very faint. So that's why they're so hard to see. I mean, even planet 9 is hypothesized to exist, but we've not been able to confirm its existence because it's something like a thousand day you away from us, a thousand times the distance of the earth from the sun. And so even though it's probably larger than
Starting point is 02:12:48 the earth, the amount of light it reflects from the sun, the sun just looks like a star at that point, so far away from it that it barely reflects anything back. It's extremely difficult to detect. So there's all sorts of wonders that may be lurking out in the outer solar system. And so this leads you to wonder in the Auckland, that Auckland must have intermixed with other Aucklands in the past. And so what fraction of the Auckland is truly belongs to us, belongs to what was scattered from Jupiter and Saturn, what fraction of it could in fact be interstellar visitors. And of course, we've got excited about this recently because of Oumuamua, this interstellar asteroid, which seemed to be at the time the first evidence of an interstellar
Starting point is 02:13:35 object. But when you think about the Auckland intermixing, it may be that a large fraction of comments, comments are seeded from the Auckland, that eventually come in. Some of those comments may indeed have been in distiller in the first place that we just didn't know about through this process. There even is an example I can't remember the name, there's an example of a comment that has a very peculiar spectral signature
Starting point is 02:13:58 that has been hypothesized to have actually been an interstellar visitor, but one that was essentially sourced through this awk card mixing. And so this is kind of intriguing. It also, you know, out of solar system is just such a, it's like the bottom of the ocean. We know so little about what's on the bottom of our own planets ocean. And we know next to nothing about what's in the outskirts of our own solar system. We thought darkness. Yeah. So like, that's one of the things is to understand the phenomena, we need light. And we need to see how light interacts with it or it would light emanates from it with
Starting point is 02:14:36 most of our universe of darkness. So it's, there could be a lot of interesting stuff. I mean, this is where you're interested with the cool world and the interesting stuff lurks in the darkness. Basically, all of us, you know, 400 years of astronomy, our only window into the universe has been light. And that has only changed quite recently with the discovery of gravitational waves. That's now a new window. And hopefully, we'll just some degree, I guess, solar neutrinos we've been detecting for a while, but they come from the certain line to tell the space. But we may be able to soon detect new trino messages
Starting point is 02:15:08 as even been hypothesized as a way of communicating between civilizations as well, or just do new trino telescopes to study the universe. And so there's a growing interest in what we call multi-messenger astronomy now. So not just messages from light, but messages from these, but the physical packets of
Starting point is 02:15:27 information that are coming out way. But when it comes to the outer solar system, light really is our only window. There's two, there's two ways of doing that. One is you detect the light from the all cloud object itself, which, as I just said, is very, very difficult. There's another trick, which we do in the Kuiper Belt especially and that's called an occultation. And so sometimes those objects will just pass in front of a distant star just coincidentally. These are very, very brief moments. They last for less than a second. And so you have to be very fast camera to detect them, which conventionally astronomers don't usually build fast cameras. Most of the phenomena we observe occurs on hours, minutes, stays even.
Starting point is 02:16:06 But now we're developing cameras which can take thousands of images per second. And yet do it at the astronomical fidelity that we need for this precise measurement. And so you can see these very fast dips. You even get these kind of diffraction patterns that come around, which are really cool to look at. And that's, I kind of love it because it's almost like passive radar. You have these pinpricks of light to imagine that you live in a giant black sphere, but there's these little pinholes that have been poked. And through those pinholes, almost laser light is shining through. And inside this black sphere, there are unknown things wandering around, drifting
Starting point is 02:16:46 around that we are trying to discover. And sometimes they will pass in front of those little pencil thin laser beams, block something out. And so we can tell that it's there. And it's not an active radar, because we didn't actually, you know, beam anything out and get a reflection off, which is what the sun does. The sun's light comes off and it comes back like an active radar system. There's more like a passive radar system where we are just listening very intently. And so I'm kind of so fascinated by that. The idea that we could map out the rich architecture of the outer solar system just by doing something that we could have done potentially for a long time, okay, which is just listening in the right way, just tuning in to the correct way of not listening, but viewing the universe
Starting point is 02:17:32 to catch those objects. Yeah, that means really fascinating. It seems almost obvious that your efforts, when projected out in over like a hundred to a hundred years, will have a really good map through even methods, like basically transit timing, high resolution transit timing, but basically the planetary and the plan of satellite movements of all the different star systems out there. Yeah, and they could revolutionize the way we think about the solar system. I mean, that revolution has happened several times in the past when we discovered Vesta in the 19th century. That was I think the seventh planet for a while or the eighth planet when it was first discovered and then we discovered series
Starting point is 02:18:13 and there was a bunch of asteroid objects, Jane-ness, and so for a while the textbooks had, there was something like 13 planets in the solar system and then that was just a new capability that was emerging to detect those small objects. And then we ripped that up and said, no, no, we're going to change the definition of a planet. And then the same thing happened when we started looking at outer skirts of the solar system again, we found ares, we found Sedna, these objects which resemble Pluto, and the more and more of them we found, make make. And eventually we again had to rethink the way we've contextualized what a planet is and what the nature of the outer solar system is. So regardless is to
Starting point is 02:18:52 what you think about the debate about where the Pluto should be to vote so not, which I know often works a lot of strong feelings. It is an incredible achievement that we were able to transform our view of the solar system in a matter of years, just by basically, you know, charge-coupled devices, the things that's in cameras, um, though the invention of that device allowed us to detect objects which were much further away, much fainter, and revealed all of this stuff that was there all along. And so it, that's the beauty of astronomy. This is just so much to discover, and even in our own backyard.
Starting point is 02:19:30 Do you ever think about this? Do you imagine what are the things that will completely change astronomy over the next 100 years? Like if you transport yourself forward 100 years, what are the things that will blow your mind when you look at what? Would it be just a very high resolution
Starting point is 02:19:46 mapping of things like holy crap like one surprising thing might be holy crafters like earth like moons everywhere. Another one could be just totally different devices for sensing. Yeah, I think you usually are striving moves forward dramatically and science in general when you have a new technological capability come online for the first time. And we kind of just gave examples of that there with the solar system. So what kind of new capabilities might emerge in the next 100 years? The capability I would love to see is not just, I mean, we're in the next 10, 20 years, we're hoping to take these pale blue dot images we spoke about. So that requires building something like GWST, but on even larger scale, and optimise for direct imaging and have to be the corona graph, or a star shade or something to block out the starlight and reveal those pale blue dots.
Starting point is 02:20:39 So in the next sort of decades, I think that's the achievement that we can look forward to in our lifetimes is to see photos of the Earths going beyond that, maybe in our lifetimes towards the end of our lifetimes perhaps. I'd love it if we, I think it's technically possible as breakthrough star shot giving us a lot of encouragement with to maybe send a small probe to the nearest stars and start actually taking high resolution images of these objects. There's only so much you can do from far away if you want to have, and we can see it in the solar system. I mean, there's only so much you can learn about Europa by pointing Hubble Space Telescope
Starting point is 02:21:13 at it, but if you really want to understand that that moon, you're going to have to send something to orbit it to hopefully land on it and drill down to the surface. And so the idea of even taking a flyby and doing a snapshot photo that gets beamback that could be, doesn't even have to be more than 100 pixels by 100 pixels, that even that would be a completely game-changing capability to be able to truly image these objects.
Starting point is 02:21:38 And maybe at home, in our own solar system, we can certainly get to a point where we produce crewed maps of exoplanets. One of the kind of the ultimate limit of what a telescope could do is governed by its size. And so the largest telescope you could probably ever build would be one that was the size of the sun. There's a clever trick for doing this
Starting point is 02:22:01 without physically building a telescope. There's the size of the sun, and that's to use the sun as gravitational lens. This was proposed by Van Eschleman in 1979, but it builds upon Einstein's Theor of Generativity, of course, that there is a warping of light, a bending of light from the sun's gravitational field. And so a distant starlight, it's like a magnifying glass. Anything that bends light is basically, can be used as a telescope.
Starting point is 02:22:26 It's going to bend light to a point. Now, it turns out the sun's gravity is not strong enough to create a particularly great telescope here because the focus point is really out in the kipa belt. It's at 550 astronomical units away from the Earth. So 550 times further away from the sun than we are, and we've, you know, beyond any of our spacecraft have ever gone. So you have to send a spacecraft to that distance, which would take 30, 40 years, even optimistically improving our chemical propulsion system significantly. You'd have to bound it into that orbit, but then you could use the entire sun as your telescope. And with that kind of capability,
Starting point is 02:23:05 you could image planets to kilometer scale or resolution from afar. And that really makes you wonder, I mean, if we can conceive, maybe we can't engineer it, but if we can conceive of such a device, what might other civilizations be currently observing about our own planet?
Starting point is 02:23:25 And perhaps that is why nobody is visiting us because there is so much you can do from afar that to them that's enough. Maybe they can get to the point where they can set out radio leakage, they can trip out to restaurant, television signals, they can map out our surfaces, they can tell we have cities, they can even do infrared mapping of the heat island effect and all this kind of stuff, they can tell the chemical composition of our planet. And so that might be enough, maybe they don't need to come down to the surface and study anthropology in it, do anthropology and see what our civilization is like. But there's certainly a huge amount you can do, which is significantly
Starting point is 02:24:05 cheaper to some degree than flying there just by exploiting cleverly the physics of the universe itself. So your intuition is, and that's very well made, be true, that observation might be way easier than travel. From our perspective, from an alien perspective, like we could get very high resolution Imaging before we could ever get there. It depends on what information you want if you want to know the chemical composition And and you want to know kilometers scale maps of the planet then you could do that from afar with some Version of these kind of gravitational lenses if you want to do better than that, if you want to image a newspaper set on the porch of somebody's house, you're going to have to fly there.
Starting point is 02:24:51 There's no way, unless you had a task at the size of such a serious A-star or something, you just simply cannot collect enough light to do that from many light years away. So there is certainly reasons why visiting will always have its place, depending on what kind of information you want. We've proposed in my team actually that the sun is the ultimate pinnacle of telescope design, but flying to 1,000 a.u. is a real pain in the butt
Starting point is 02:25:22 because it's just gonna take so long. And so a more practical way of achieving this might be to use the earth. Now the earth doesn't have any way near enough gravity to create a substantial gravitational lens, but it has an atmosphere. An atmosphere refracts light, it bends light. So whenever you see a sunset just as the sun setting below the horizon, it's actually already beneath the horizon. It's just that the light is bending through the atmosphere. It's actually already about half a degree down beneath. And what you're seeing is that curvature of the light
Starting point is 02:25:57 path. And your brain interprets, of course, to be following a straight line because your brain always thinks that. And so you can use that bending whenever you have bending, you have a telescope. And so we've proposed my team that you could use this refraction to similarly create an earth-sized telescope called the telescope. The telescope. Yeah, great video on this. And there's a paper on the telescope. I do.
Starting point is 02:26:21 Yeah, great. Sometimes get confused because they've heard of of an earth sized telescope because of the may have heard of the event horizon telescope, which took an image of what's the taken in them right now of the center of our black hole. And this is a very impressive and this previously did messy 87 and nearby supermassive black hole. And so those images were interferometrics. So they were small telescopes scattered across the earth and they combined the light paths together interferometrically to create effectively an earth-sized angular resolution
Starting point is 02:26:52 Telescopes always have two properties. There's the angular resolution Which is how small of a thing you can see on the surface and there's the magnification How much brighter does that object get versus just your eye or some small object? Now what what the event horizon telescope did, it traded off amplification or magnification for the angular resolution. That's what it wanted. It wanted that high angular resolution, but it doesn't really have much photon collecting power because each telescope individually is very small.
Starting point is 02:27:23 The telescope is different because it is literally collecting light with a light bucket which is essentially the size of the earth. And so that gives you both benefits potentially. Not only the high angular resolution that a large aperture promises you but also actually physically collects all those photons so you can detect light from very, very far away, very outer edges of the universe. it's photon, so you can detect from very, very far away, through the outer edges of the universe. And so we proposed this as a possible future, technological way of achieving these extreme goals and vicious goals we have in astronomy.
Starting point is 02:27:59 But it's a very difficult system to test because you essentially have to fly out to these focus points and these focus points lie beyond the moon. So you have to have someone who is willing to fly beyond the moon and hitchhike an experimental telescope onto it and do that cheaply. If it was something doing low earth orbit, it'd be easy. You could just attach a cube set to the next Falcon 9 rocket or something and test it out. It'd probably probably cost you a few tens of thousands dollars, maybe a hundred thousand dollars. But there's basically no one who flies out that far except for bespoke missions such as like a mission that's going to Mars or something that would pass through that kind of space. And they typically
Starting point is 02:28:40 don't have a lot of leeway and excess payload that they're willing to strap on for radical experiments. So that's been the problem with it. In theory, it should work beautifully, but it's a very difficult idea to experimentally test. Can you elaborate where the focal point is that far away? So you get about half a degree bend from the Earth's atmosphere when you're looking at the Sun at the horizon, and you get that two times over if you're outside of the planet's atmosphere because it comes, you know, the star is half a bend to use the horizon and half a degree back at either way so you get about a one degree bend. You take the rates of the Earth which is about 7,000 kilometers and do your arc tan function and you'll end up with a distance that's about, it's actually
Starting point is 02:29:22 the inner focal point is about two thirds the the distance of the earth moon system. The problem with that inner focal point is not useful, because that light ray path had to basically scrape the surface of the earth. So it passes through the clouds, it passes through all the thick atmosphere, it gets a lot of extinction along the way. If you go higher up in altitude, you get less extinction. In fact, you can even go above the clouds and so that's even better because the clouds obviously are going to be a pain in the neck for doing anything optical. But the problem with that is that the atmosphere, because it gets thinner at higher altitude, it bends like less. And so that pushes the focal point out. So the most useful focal point is actually about three or four times the distance of the Earth
Starting point is 02:30:01 Moon separation. And so that's what we call one of the Lagrange points, essentially. Now there, and so there is a stable orbit, it's kind of the out means separation. And so that's what we call one of the Lagrange points, essentially. Now there's a stable orbit, the outermost stable orbit you could have around the earth. So the atmosphere does bad things to the signal. Yeah, it's absorbing light. Is that possible to reconstruct, to remove the noise, whatever. So it's just strength. It's not nothing else. It's possible to reconstruct. I mean, to some degree, we do this as a technology called adaptive optics that can correct for what's called wavefront errors that happened with the Earth's atmosphere. The Earth's atmosphere is turbulent. It is not a single plane of air of the same density. There's all kind of wiggles and currents in the air. And so that each little layer is bending light
Starting point is 02:30:49 in slightly different ways. And so the light actually kind of follows a wiggly path on its way down. What that means is that two light rays, which are traveling at slightly different spatial separations from each other, will arrive at the detector at different times. Because one maybe goes on more or less a straight path
Starting point is 02:31:04 and the one wiggles down a bit more before it arrives. And so you have an incoherent light source. And when you're trying to imagery construction, you always want a key here at light source. So the way they correct for this is that this, if this path had to travel a little bit faster, the straight one goes faster and the wiggly one takes longer, the mirror is deformable.
Starting point is 02:31:23 And so you actually bend the mirror on this, on the straight one down faster and the wiggly one takes longer, the mirror is deformable. And so you actually bend the mirror on this, on the straight one down a little bit to make it an equivalent light path distance. So the mirror itself has all these little actuators. It's actually made up of like thousands of little elements. Almost looks like a liquid mirror because they can manipulate it in kind of real time. And so they scan the atmosphere with a laser beam
Starting point is 02:31:43 to tell what the deformations are in the atmosphere and then make the corrections to the mirror to account for. That's amazing. So you could, you could do something like this for the telescope, but it would be, it's cheaper and easier to go above the atmosphere and just fly out. I think so. It would be very, it's a very, that's a very challenging thing to do. And normally when you do adaptive optics, as it's called, you're looking straight up. So you're, you know, or very challenging thing to do. And normally when you do adaptive optics, as it's called, you're looking straight up. So you're very close to straight up. If you look at the horizon,
Starting point is 02:32:09 we basically never do astronomical observations on the horizon, because you're looking through more atmosphere. If you go straight up, you're looking at the thinnest portion of atmosphere possible. But as you go closer and closer towards the horizon, you're increasing what we call the air mass, the amount of air you have to travel through. So here, it's kind of the worst case
Starting point is 02:32:25 because you're going through the entire atmosphere in and out again with a telescope. So you'd need a very impressive adaptive optic system to correct for that. So yeah, I would say it's probably simpler at least for a proof of principle, just to test it with having some satellite that was a much wider orbit. Now, speaking of traveling out into deep space, you already mentioned this a little bit. You made a beautiful video called The Journey to the End of the Universe.
Starting point is 02:32:56 And sort of at the start of that, you're talking about office and tary. So what would it take for humans or for human-like creatures to try to allow to alpha-centory? There's a few different ways of doing it, I suppose. One is it depends on how fast your ship is. That's always going to be the determining factor. If we devised some intercellar proportion system that could travel a fraction of the speed of light, then we could do it in our lifetimes
Starting point is 02:33:22 that could travel a fraction of the speed of light, then we could do it in our lifetimes, which is I think what people are normally dream of when they think about interstitial proportion and travel, that you could literally step onto the spacecraft maybe a few years later, you step off an alpha centauri B, you walk around the surface and come back and visit your family. There would be of course a lot of relativistic time dilation
Starting point is 02:33:42 as a result of that trip. You would have aged a lot less than people back on Earth by traveling close to the speed of life for some fraction of time. The challenge of this of course is that we have no such propulsion system that can achieve this. So, but you think it's possible, like, sweet you, yeah.
Starting point is 02:34:02 You have a paper called the Hale Drive, fuel free relativistic propulsion and large masses via recycled boomerang photons. So do you think, for sure, what is that? In second of all, how difficult are alternate propulsion systems? Yeah. So, before I took on the helidrive, there was an idea, because I think the Halo Drive is not going to solve this problem.
Starting point is 02:34:28 I'll talk about the Halo Drive in a moment, but the Halo Drive is useful for a civilization which is a bit more advanced than that. It has spread across the stars and is looking for a cheap highway system to get across the galaxy. For that first step, just to context that, the Halo Drive requires requires black hole. So that's why you're not going to be able to do this on the earth right now. But there are lots of black holes in the Milky Way. So that's the good news. So we'll come to that in a moment. But if you're trying to travel to Afghanistan, Tore without a black hole, then the most, you know, there were some ideas out there.
Starting point is 02:35:00 There was a project, Adelaide, some Project Icarus that were two projects at the British Interpentry Society conjured up on sort of a 20, 30-year time scale and they asked themselves if we took existing and speculatively but realistic attempts at future technology that are emerging over the next few decades, how far could we personally start a travel system? far could be pertinence to the travel system. They settled on fusion drives in that. So if we had the ability to essentially either detonate, you can always imagine that kind of nuclear fission, or nuclear fusion bombs going off behind the spacecraft and propelling it that way, or having some kind of successful nuclear fusion reaction, which obviously we haven't really demonstrated yet as a propulsion system, then you could achieve something like 10% the speed of light in those systems.
Starting point is 02:35:50 But these are huge spacecrafts. And I think you need a huge spacecraft if you're going to take people along. The conversation recently is actually switched. And that idea is kind of seems a little bit antiquated now. And most of us have kind of given up in the idea of people physically, biologically stepping on board the spacecraft. And maybe we'll be sending something that's more like a micro probe that maybe just weighs a gram or two.
Starting point is 02:36:15 And that's much easier to accelerate. You could push that with a laser system to very high speed, get it to maybe 20% of the speed of light. It has to survive the journey, probably a large fraction of them won't survive the journey, but they're cheap enough that you can maybe manufacture millions of them, and some of them do arrive and able to send back an image, or maybe even if you wanted to have a person there, we might have some way of doing like a telepresence or some kind of delayed telepresence or some kind of reconstruction of the planet which is sent back so you can digitally interact with that environment in a way which is not real time but representative of what that planet would be like to be on the surface so we might be more like digital visitors to these planets
Starting point is 02:36:58 certainly far easier practically to do that than physically forcing this wet chunk of meat to fly across space to do that. And so that's maybe something we can imagine down the road. The Halo Drive, as I said, is thinking even further ahead. And if you did want to launch large masses, large masses could even be planet sized things. In the case of the Halo Drive, you can use black holes. So this is kind of a trick of physics. You know, I often think of the universe as like a big computer game, and you're trying to find cheat codes, hacks, exploits that the universe didn't intend for you to use. But once you find them, you can address all sorts of interesting capabilities that you didn't previously have.
Starting point is 02:37:47 Yeah. And the Halo Drive does that with black holes. So if you have two black holes, which are very common situation, a binary black hole, and they're inspiring towards each other. The LIGOs detected, I think, dozens of these things, maybe over a hundred at this point. And these things, as they merge together, they pre-merge a phase. They're all buting to the very, very fast, even close to the speed of light.
Starting point is 02:38:10 And so Freeman Dyson, before he passed away, I think in the 70s, had this provocative paper called Gravitational Machines. And he suggested that you could use neutron stars as an interstellar propulsion system. And neutron stars are sort of the lower mass version of a binary black hole system, essentially. In this case, he suggested just doing gravitational slingshot,
Starting point is 02:38:33 just fly your spacecraft into this very compact and relativistic binary system. And you do need neutron stars because if there were two stars, they'd be physically touching each other. So the neutron stars are so small that it's 10 kilometers across. They can get really close to each other and have these very, very fast orbits with respect to each other. You shoot your spacecraft through,
Starting point is 02:38:57 right through the middle, right through the Ivan Edel, and you do a slingshot around one of them, and you do it around the one that's coming towards you. So one on becoming way, one on becoming towards you at any one point, and then you could basically steal some of the kinetic energy in the sling shot. In principle, you can start up to twice the speed. You can take your speed and it becomes your speed plus twice the speed of the black of the neutron star in this case, and that would be your new speed after the sling shot. This seems great because it's just free energy, basically.
Starting point is 02:39:27 You're not doing it, you know, you're not generally having nuclear power after anything to generate this, you're just stealing it. And indeed, you can get to relativistic speeds this way. So I loved that paper, but I had a criticism, and the criticism was that this is like trying to fly your ship into a blender, right? This is two neutron stars which have huge title forces and they're whipping around each other once every second or even less than a second and you're trying to fly your spaceship and do this maneuver that is pretty precarious
Starting point is 02:39:57 and so it just didn't seem practical to me to do this, I loved it. And so I took that idea and this is how science is, it's iterative. It's, you take a previous, great man's idea and you just sort of maybe slightly tweak and improve it. And that's how I see the hilo drive. And I just suggested, why not replace those out for black holes? I'm just certainly very common. And rather than flying your ship into that, that hellhole of a blender system, you just
Starting point is 02:40:24 stand back and you fire a laser beam. Now because black holes have such intense gravitational fields, they can bend light into complete 180s. They can actually become mirrors. So, you know, the sun bends light by maybe a fraction of a degree through gravitational lensing, but, you know, a compact object like a black hole can do a full 180. In fact, if you went too close, if you put the laser beam too close to the black hole, we'll just fall into it and never come back out. So you just kind of push it out, push it out, push it out,
Starting point is 02:40:52 until you get to a point where it's just skirting the event horizon. And then that laser beam skirts around and it comes back. Now, the laser beam wants to do a gravity, I mean, it is doing a gravitational sling shot. But laser, I mean, light, photons can't speed up unlike the spaceship case. So instead of speeding up, the way they still energy is they increase their frequency.
Starting point is 02:41:13 So they become higher energy photon packets, essentially, and they get blue shifted. So that you send maybe a red laser beam that comes back blue, it's got more energy in it. And because photons carry momentum, which is somewhat unintuitive in everyday experience, but they do, that's got more energy in it. And because photon's caramel momentum, which is somewhat unintuitive in everyday experience, but they do, that's how solar cells work, they're caramel momentum, they push things.
Starting point is 02:41:32 You can even use them as laser tweezers and things to pick things up. Because they push, it comes back with more momentum than it left. So you get an acceleration force from this. And again, you're just seeing energy from the black hole to do this. So you can get acceleration force from this. And again, you're just seeing energy from the black hole to do this. So you can get up to the same speed. It's basically the same idea as Freeman Dyson, but doing it from a safer distance. And there should be a quarter of a million
Starting point is 02:41:55 or so or 10 million black holes in the Milky Way galaxy. Some of them would be even as close to sort of 10 to 20 light years when you do the accurricular statistics of how close you might expect feasibly one to be. They're of course difficult to detect because they're black, so they're inherently hard to see, but statistically there should be plenty out there in the Milky Way. And so these objects would be natural waypoint stations. You could use them to both accelerate away and to break and slow down. And on top of all this, we've been
Starting point is 02:42:28 talking about astronomy and cosmology. There's been a lot of exciting breakthroughs in the introduction and exploration of black holes. So the boomerang, boomeranging photons that you're talking about. There's been a lot of work on photon rings and just all the fun stuff going on outside the black holes. So all the garbage outside is actually might be the thing that holds a key to understanding what's going on inside and there's the Hawking
Starting point is 02:42:58 radiation. There's all kinds of fascinating stuff like, I mean, there's just trippy stuff about black holes that I can't even, most people don't understand. I mean, the holographic principle with the plate and the information being stored potentially outside of the black hole, I don't even, I can't even comprehend how you can project a three-dimensional object onto 2D and some hostile information where it doesn't destroy it. And if it does destroy it, challenging all the physics. All of this is very interesting, especially for kind of more practical applications of how the black hole could be used for propulsion. Yeah, I mean, it may be that black holes are used in all sorts of ways.
Starting point is 02:43:40 By advanced civilizations, I think, again, it's been a popular idea in science fiction, science fiction, trope that Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the
Starting point is 02:43:55 Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermass black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the supermassive black hole in the Sagittarius A star, the the supermassive black hole in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in in you can basically throw matter into it and you can get these jets that come out the accretion disks and the jets that fly out. And so you can more or less use them to convert matter into energy V equals MC squared. And there's pretty much nothing else except for annihilation with the same antiparticle as a way of doing that. So they have some unique properties. You could perhaps power a civilization by just throwing garbage into a black hole, right? Just throwing asteroids in and how your civilization with as much
Starting point is 02:44:28 energy as you really would ever possibly need. And you could also use them to accelerate away across the universe. And you can even imagine using small artificial black holes as thermo generators, right? So the Hawking radiation from them kind of exponentially increases as they get smaller and smaller in size. A very small black hole, one you can almost imagine, like holding in your hand, would be a fairly significant heat source. That raises all sorts of prospects about how you might use that in an engineering context to power your civilization as well. You have a video on becoming a CardiShift Type 1 civilization.
Starting point is 02:45:06 What's our hope for doing that? Or a few orders of magnitude away from that? Yeah, it is surprising. I think people tend to think that we're close to this scale. The CardiShift Type 1 is defined as a civilization which is using as much energy as is essentially instant upon the planet from the star. That's a border, I think, for the Earth of something like 10 to the 5,
Starting point is 02:45:29 10 to the 7, 10 to the 7, 10 to the 6 is a gigantic amount of energy, and we're using a tiny, tiny, tiny fraction of that right now. So, you know, if you became a color-shift type I civilization, which is the not necessarily as a goal into itself, I think people think, well, why are we aspiring to become this energy hungry civilization? Surely energy needs might improve our efficiency or something as time goes on. But ultimately, the more energy you have access to, the greater your capabilities will be. If you want to lift Mount Everest into space,
Starting point is 02:46:05 there is just a calculable amount of potential energy change that's going to take in order to accomplish that. And the more energy you have access to as a civilization, then clear the easier that energy achievement is going to be. So it depends on what your aspirations are as a civilization. It might not be something you want to ever do, but we should make clear that lifting heavy things isn't the only thing it's it's just doing work So yeah, it could be computation
Starting point is 02:46:30 It could be right it could be more and more and more sophisticated and larger and larger larger computation Which is it does seem what we're headed with the very fast increase in The scale and the quality of our computation outside the human brain, artificial computation. Yeah. I mean, computation is a great example of, I mean already I think some like 10% of US power electricity use is going towards the supercomputing centers. So there's a vast amount of current engineers which are already going towards computing,
Starting point is 02:47:02 but surely only increased over time. If we start ever doing anything like mind uploading or creating simulated realities that that cost will surely become on Mr. a dominant source of our engine requirements at that point if civilization completely moves over to this kind of post-humanism stage. And so it's not unreasonable that our engine needs would continue to grow suddenly historically. They always have it about 2% per year. And so if that continues, there is going to be a certain point where you're running up against the amount of energy which you can harvest because you're using every, even if you cover the entire plant and solar panels,
Starting point is 02:47:42 there's no more energy to be had. And so this is a, you know, there's a few ways of achieving this. I sort of talked about in the video how there were several renewable energy sources that were excited about like geothermal, wind power waves, but pretty much all of those don't really scratch the surface or don't really scratch the itch of going to a car to shove type one civilization. That meaning for now, I would never tell anybody don't do wind power now because it's clearly used for our current stage of civilization, but it's not, it's going to be a pretty negligible fraction of our energy requirements if we got to that stage of development. And so there has to be a breakthrough in either ability to harvest
Starting point is 02:48:19 solar energy, which would require maybe something like a space array of solar panels of beam energy back down or some developments and innovations in nuclear fusion that would allow us to essentially reproduce the same process of what's producing the solar photons, but here on earth. But even that comes with some consequences. If you're generating the energy here on earth and you're doing work on it on earth, then that work is going to produce waste heat and that waste heat is going to increase the ambient temperature of the planet. And so, even if this isn't really a greenhouse effect that you're increasing the temperature of the planet, this is just the amount of computers that are churning.
Starting point is 02:48:57 For your hand to a computer, you can feel the warmth coming off them. If you do that much work of literally the entire instant energy of the planet is doing that work, the planet is going to warm up significantly as a result of that. And so that clearly indicates that this is not a sustainable path. That civilizations as they approach Kuttershift type 1 are going to have to leave planet Earth, which is really the point of that video to show that it's a kind of type one civilization, even though it's defined as instant energy upon a planet, that is not a species that is going to still be living on their planet, at least in isolation.
Starting point is 02:49:37 They will have to be half-sangie from afar, they will have to be, you do work on that energy outside of their planet planet because otherwise you're going to dramatically change the environment which you live. Well, yeah, so the more energy you create, the more energy you use the more the higher the imperative to expand on it to the universe, but also not just the imperative, but the the capabilities. And you're kind of as a side on your lab page mentioned that you're sometimes interested in astroengineering. So what kind of space architectures do you think we can build to house humans or interesting
Starting point is 02:50:15 things outside of Earth? Yeah, I mean, there's a lot of fun ideas here. One of the classic ideas is the O' is only a cylinder or a Stanford torus. These are like two rotating structures that were devised in space. They're basically using the centrifugal force as artificial gravity. And so these are structures which tend to be many kilometers across that you're building in space, but could potentially habitat millions of people in in orbit of the earth. Of course, you could imagine pulling them if you, you know, the expanse does a pretty good job, I think, of exploring the idea of human
Starting point is 02:50:52 exploration of the solar system and having many objects, many of the small near-earth objects and asteroids inhabited by mining colonies. One of the ideas we've played around with our group is this technology called a quasi-t. A quasi-t is an extension. Again, we always tend to extend previous ideas, ideas built upon ideas. An extension idea called a statite. A statite was an idea proposed, I think, by Ron Ford in the 1970s. 1970s seem to have all sorts of wacky ideas. I don't know what's going on there. I think the Stanford Taurus, the O'Neill, cylinder, statites, the gravitational lens, people were really having fun with dreaming about space in the 70s. The statite is basically a solar
Starting point is 02:51:41 sail, but it's such an efficient solar sail that the outward force of radiation pressure equals the inward force of gravity from the sun. And so it doesn't need to orbit. Normally you avoid, the sun is pulling us right now through force of gravity, but we are not getting closer towards the sun, even though we are falling towards the sun because we're in orbit, which means our translational speed is just enough to keep us at the same altitude, essentially, from the sun And so you're in orbit and that's how you maintain distance a statite doesn't need to do that it could be basically You know completely static in a inertial space, but it's just balancing the two forces of radiation pressure and inward gravitational pressure A quasi is the in-between of those two states.
Starting point is 02:52:26 So it has some significant outward pressure, but not enough to resist fully falling into the star. And so it compensates for that by having some translational motion. So it's in-between an orbit and a static. And so what that allows you to do is maintain artificial orbits. So normally, if you want to calculate your orbital speed of something that's say half an
Starting point is 02:52:48 AU, you would use Kepler's third law and go through that and you'd say, okay, if it's that half an AU, I can calculate the period by P squared's proportional to A cubed and go through that. But for a quasi, you can basically have any speed you want. It's just a matter of how much of the gravitational force you're balancing out. You effectively enter an orbit where you're making the mass of the star be less massive than it really is. So it's as if you were orbiting a .1 solar mass star or a .2 solar mass star or whatever you want. And so that means that mercury orbits with a pretty fast orbital speed around the sun because it's closer to the sun than we are,
Starting point is 02:53:28 but we could put something in Mercury's orbit that would have a slower speed and so it would co-track with the Earth. And so we would always be aligned with them at all times. And so this could be useful if you wanted to have either a chain of colonies or something that were able to easily communicate and move between one another between these different bases, you'd probably use something like this to maintain that easy transferability. Or you could even use it as a space
Starting point is 02:54:02 where the monitoring system, which was actually proposed in the paper, we know that major events like the current and the event that happen, you know, can knock out all of our electromagnetic systems, quite easily, a major solar flare could do that, a G-MEN and a storm, but if we had the ability to detect
Starting point is 02:54:19 those higher elevated activity cycles in advance, the problem is they travel, obviously, pretty fast and so it's hard to get ahead of them, whose higher elevated activity cycles in advance. The problem is they travel, obviously pretty fast and so it's hard to get ahead of them, but you could have a station, which is basically sampling solar flares very close to the surface of the earth and as soon as it detects anything suspicious, magnetically it could then send that information
Starting point is 02:54:38 straight back at the speed of light to your earth and give you maybe half an hour warning or something, that something bad was coming, you should shut off all your systems or get in your Faraday cage now and protect yourself. And so these, these quiesa, it's kind of a cool trick of again, kind of hacking the laws of physics. It's like another one of these exploits that the universe seems to allow us to do to potentially manifest these artificial systems that would otherwise be difficult to produce. So leveraging natural phenomena. Yeah. That's always the key. My mind is to work with nature. That's how I see astroengineering rather than against it. You're not trying to force it to do
Starting point is 02:55:21 something. That's why I always think solar energy is so powerful, because in the battle against nuclear fusion, nuclear fusion, you're really fighting a battle where you're trying to confine plasma into this extremely tight space. Or the sun does this for free. It has gravitation. And so that's the essence of what a solar panel does. It is a nuclear fusion reactor fueled energy system,
Starting point is 02:55:47 but it's just using gravitation for the confinement and having a huge standoff distance for its energy collection. And so there are tricks like that, it's very naive, simple trick in that case, where we can rather have to reinvent the wheel. We can use the space infrastructure, if you like, the astrophysical infrastructure, that's already there to benefit. Yeah, I think in the long arc of human history, probably in natural phenomena is the right solution. That's the simple, that's the other solution
Starting point is 02:56:16 because all the power is already there. That's why a distance sphere in the long, sort of, but you don't know what a distance sphere would look like, but some kind of thing that leverages the power, the energy that's already in the sun is better than creating artificial nuclear fusion reaction. But then again, that brings us to the topic of AI. How much of this, if we're traveling out there, interstellar travel or doing some of the interesting things
Starting point is 02:56:49 we'll be talking about, how much of those ships would be occupied by AI systems do you think? What would be the living organisms occupying those ships? Yeah, it's depressing to think about AI in the search for life because it has, I mean, I've been thinking about it a lot over the last few weeks with playing around with chat, GBT3, like many of us, and being astonished with its capabilities. And you see that it, that our society is undergoing a change that seems significant in terms of the development of artificial intelligence. We've been promised this revolutionist thing at IoT for a long time, but it really seems to be stepping up its pace of development
Starting point is 02:57:40 at this point. And so that's interesting because as someone who looks freely in life out there in the universe, it sort of implies that our current stage of development is highly transitional. And that, you know, you go back for the last four and a half billion years, the planet was done essentially. If you go back a few thousand years, there was a civilization, but it wasn't really producing any technical signatures. And then over the last maybe hundred years, there's been something that might be detectable
Starting point is 02:58:11 from afar. But we're approaching this cusp, where we might imagine it. I mean, we're thinking of like maybe years and decades with AI development, typically when we talk about this. But as an astronomer, I have to think about much longer timescars of centuries, millennia, millions of years. And so if this, if this wave continues over that time scale, which is still the blink of an eye on a cosmic time scale, that implies that everything will be AI essentially
Starting point is 02:58:41 out there if this is a common behavior. And so that's intriguing because it sort of implies that we are special in terms of our moment in time as a civilization, which normally is something we're adverse to as astronomers. We normally, like, this mediocre to principle, we're not special, we're a typical pie of the universe, it's not the cosmological principle, but in a temporal sense, we may be in a unique location. And perhaps that is part of the solution to the Fermi paradox. In fact, that if it is true that planets tend to go through basically three phases, dumb life for the vast majority, a brief period of biological intelligence, and then an extended period of
Starting point is 02:59:25 artificial intelligence that they transitioned to, then we would be at a unique and special moment in galactic history that would be a particular interest for any anthropologists out there in the galaxy. This would be the time that you would want to study a civilization very carefully. You wouldn't want to interfere with it. You would just want to see how it plays out. Kind of similar to the ancestor simulations, though sometimes we're talking about the simulation argument, that you are able to observe perhaps your own origins
Starting point is 02:59:56 and study how the transformation happens. And so, yeah, that has for me recently been throwing the Fermi paradox a bit on its head and this idea of the zoo hypothesis that would maybe be monitored which has for a long time been sort of seen as a fringe idea even amongst the setty community. But if we live in this truly transitional period, it adds a lot of imp very nature, would be observing us. It's like a human, there used to be this concept of human computation, which is actually exactly what's feeding the current language models, which is leveraging all the busy stuff we're
Starting point is 03:00:40 doing to do the hard work of learning. So like the language models are trained on human interaction and human language on the internet. And so it would AI feeds on the output of brain power from humans. And so like it would be observing and observing and it gets stronger as it observes. So it actually gets extremely good at observing humans. And one of the interesting philosophical questions that starts percolating is what makes us, what is the interesting thing that makes us human? We tend to think of it and you say like there's three phases. What's the thing that's hard to come by in phase three?
Starting point is 03:01:25 Is it something like scarcity, which is limited resources? Is it something like consciousness? Is that the thing that's very, what, that emerged the evolutionary process in biological systems that are happening and they're constrained resources? This thing that feels, that that feels like something to experience the world, which we think of as consciousness, is that really difficult to replicate? Is in artificial systems? Is that the thing that makes it fundamental human? Or is it just a side effect that we attribute way too much importance to? Do you have a sense? If you look out into the future
Starting point is 03:02:08 and AI systems are the ones that are traveling out there to office and Tory and beyond, do you think they have to carry the flame of consciousness with them? No, not necessarily. They may do, but they may not be unnecessarily. I mean, I guess we were talking about the difference here between an AGI artificial general intelligence or consciousness, which are distinct ideas. And you can certainly have one without the other. So I could imagine I would disagree with a certain mean that statement. Okay. I think it's very possible in order to have intelligence, you have to have consciousness.
Starting point is 03:02:47 Okay. Well, I mean, to a certain degree, GBT3 has a level of intelligence already. It's not a general intelligence, but it displays properties of intelligence with no consciousness. So again, I would disagree. Okay. Okay. Well, I don't know. Because you said, it's very nice. You said it displays properties of intelligence.
Starting point is 03:03:12 In the same way, displays properties of intelligence, I would say it's starting to display properties of consciousness. It's certainly good for you that is conscious. Correct. Yeah. So there's I guess like guess like a chewing test problem. Like if it's displaying with those properties, if it cracks like a parrot, it looks like a parrot, or cracks like a duck, things like it isn't it, isn't it basically a duck at that point? So yeah, I can see that argument. It probably, I mean, certainly, I tried to think about it from the observer's point of view as an astronomer. What am I looking for?
Starting point is 03:03:47 Whether that intelligence is conscious or not has little bearing, I think, as to what I should be looking for when I'm trying to detect evidence of them. It would maybe affect their behavior in ways that I can't predict. But that's again getting into the game of what I would cause in a psychology of trying to make projections about the motivations of an alien species is incredibly difficult. And similarly, for any kind of artificial intelligence, it's unfathomable what its intentions may be. I mean, I would sort of question whether it would even be interested in traveling between the stars at all. If its primary goal is computation,
Starting point is 03:04:33 computation for the sake of computation, then it's probably going to have a different way of, you know, it's going to be engineering, it's solar system and the nearby material around it for a different goal. If it's just simply trying to increase computer substrate across the universe. And that, of course, if that is its principal intention to just essentially convert dumb matter into smart matter as it goes, then I think that would come into conflict with our observations of the universe, right?
Starting point is 03:05:02 Because the Earth shouldn't be here if that were true. The earth should have been transformed into computer substrate by this point. There has been plenty of time in the history of the galaxy for that to have happened. So I'm skeptical that we can... I'm skeptical in the part that that's a behavior that AI or any civilization really engages in, but I also find it difficult to find a way out of it. I've to explain why that would never happen in the entire history of the galaxy amongst potentially if life is common, millions, maybe even billions of instant instantions of AI could have occurred across the galaxy. And so that seems to be a knock against the idea that there is life else, or intelligent life else
Starting point is 03:05:50 around the galaxy. The fact that that hasn't occurred in our history is maybe the only solid data point we really have about the activities of other civilizations. Of course, the scary one could be that we just at this stage intelligent alien civilizations just started destroying themselves. It becomes too powerful. Everything is just too many weapons, too many nuclear weapons, too many nuclear weapons style systems that just from mistake to aggression, to like the probability of self-destruction is too high relative to the challenge of avoiding the technological challenges of avoiding self-destruction. as we get smarter, smarter AI, either AI distroges us or other, there could be just a million,
Starting point is 03:06:47 like AI is correlated, the development of AI is correlated with all this other technological innovation, genetic engineering, like all kinds of engineering at the nanoscale, mass manufacturer of things that could destroy us or cracking physics enough to have very powerful weapons, nuclear weapons, all of it. Just too much physics enables way too many things that can destroy us before it enables the propulsion systems that are allows us to fly far enough away before we destroy ourselves. So maybe that's what happens to the other alien civilizations. Is that your resolution? Because I mean, I think us in the technic danger community and the stromian community aren't thinking about this problem seriously enough, in my opinion.
Starting point is 03:07:36 We should be thinking about what AI is doing to our society and the implications of what we're looking for. And so the only, I think, part of this thinking has to involve people like yourself who are more intimate with the machine learning and artificial intelligence world is your, how do you reconcile in your mind? You said earlier that you think you can't imagine a galaxy where life and intelligence is not all over the place. And if artificial intelligence is a natural progression for civilizations, how do you reconcile that with the absence of any information around us, so any clues or hints of artificial behavior, artificial engineered stars or colonization, computer substrate, transform planets, I think like that. It's extremely difficult for me.
Starting point is 03:08:26 The Fermi paradox broadly defined is extremely difficult for me. The terrifying thing is one thing I suspect is that we keep destroying ourselves. The probability of self-destruction with advanced technologies is just extremely high. That's why we're not seeing it. But then again, my intuition about why we haven't blown ourselves up with nuclear weapons, it's very surprising to me from a scientific perspective. It doesn't, given all the cruelty I've seen in the world, given the power that nuclear weapons place in the hands of very small number of individuals, it's very surprising to me that we have destroyed ourselves and it seems to be a very low probability
Starting point is 03:09:11 situation we have happening here. But and then the other explanation is the zoo, the observation that we're just being observed. Let's see, let's see on the other thing. It's just, it's so difficult for me. Of course, all of science, everything is very humbling. It would be very humbling for me to learn that we're alone in the universe. It would change. You know what? Maybe I do want that to be true because you want us to be special. That's why I'm resisting that thought maybe. There's no way we're that special. There's no way we're that special. That's where my resistance comes from. I would just say, you know, the specialness is something,
Starting point is 03:09:54 we implicitly in that statement, this kind of an assumption that we are something positive. Like we're a gift to this planet or something. And that makes it special. But it may be that intelligence is more of an, is like, we're like rats or cockroaches. We're an infestation of this planet. We're not, we're not some benevolent property that the planet would, a planet would ideally like to have it. You can even say such a thing. But we are, we may be not only a, generally,
Starting point is 03:10:23 a negative force for a planet's biosphere and its own survivability, which I think you can make a strong argument about, but we may also be a very persistent infestation that may even in, you know, interest in your thoughts, in the wake of a nuclear war, would that be an absolute eradication of every human being, which would be a fairly extreme event, or would the kind of consciousness, you might call it the flame consciousness, continue with some small pockets that would maybe in 10,000 years, 100,000 years, we'd see civilization reemerge and play out the same thing over again.
Starting point is 03:10:59 Yeah, that's certainly, but nuclear weapons aren't powerful enough yet, but yes, That's certainly but nuclear weapons aren't powerful enough yet, but yes, but to sort of push back on the infestation, sure, but the word special doesn't have to be positive. I just mean I think it tends to imply that I I tell you a point. Yeah, but maybe just maybe it's extremely rare might be. Yeah, and that to me, it just it's very strange for me to be Cosmically unique. It's just very strange. I I mean that were the only thing of This level of complexity in the galaxy just seems very strange to me. I would just yeah I as that I do think it depends on this classification.
Starting point is 03:11:47 I think there is sort of, again, it's kind of buried within there as a subtext, but there is a classification that we're doing here that what we are is a distinct category of life, let's say in this case, when we took my intelligence, we have something that can be separated. But of course, we see intelligence across the animal kingdom in dolphins, handbag whales, octopuses, crows, ravens. And so it's quite possible that these are all manifestations of the same thing.
Starting point is 03:12:20 And we are not a particularly distinct class except for the fact we make technology that's really any difference to our intelligence. And we classify that separately, but from a biological perspective to some degree, it's really just all part of a continuum. And so that's why when we talk about unique, you are putting yourself in a box which is distinct and saying, this is the only example of things that fall into this box. But the walls of that box made themselves be a construct of our own arrogance that we are something distinct. But I was also speaking broadly for us, meaning all life on earth, Earth, but then it's possible that there's all kinds of living ecosystems and another plants and other moons that just don't have interest in technological
Starting point is 03:13:14 development. Maybe technological development is the parasitic thing. It destroys the organism broadly. And then maybe that's actually one of the fundamental realities, whatever broad way to categorize technological development, that's just the parasitic thing that just destroys itself. I think we have cancer, you know, like... We're floating around so to interrupt, we're floating around this idea of the great filter a little bit here. So we're really asking, where is this?
Starting point is 03:13:42 Does it lie ahead of us? Nuclear war, maybe imminent, that would be a filter that's ahead of us. Or could it be behind us and that it's the advent of technology that is genuinely a rare occurrence in the universe and that explains the Fermi paradox. And so that's something that obviously people have debated and gone argued about in setty for decades and decades, but it remains a persistent people argue that there should be really caught up paradox or not, but it remains a consistent apparent contradiction that you can make a very cohesion argument as to why you expect life and intelligence to be common in the universe.
Starting point is 03:14:20 And yet everything, everything we know about the universe is fully compatible with just us being here. And that's a haunting thought, but I have no preference or desire for that to be true. I'm not trying to impose that view on anyone, but I do ask that we remain open-minded until evidence has been collected, either way. The thing is, it's one of not the probably out argues the most important question facing human civilization or the most interesting, I think scientifically speaking, like what question is more important than somehow, you know, there could be other ways to sneak up to it, but it gets to the essence of what we are, what these living organisms are, is somehow seeing
Starting point is 03:15:16 another kind. Yeah, helps us understand. It speaks to the human condition, helps us understand what it is to be human, to some degree. I think, you know, I have tried to remain very agnostic about the idea of life and intelligence. One thing I try to be more optimistic about, and I've been thinking a lot with our searches for life in the universe, is life in the past. I think it's actually not that hard to imagine we are the only civilization in the galaxy right now living. Yeah, that's currently extent. But there may be very many
Starting point is 03:15:52 extinct civilizations. Of each civilization has a typical lifetime comparable to, let's say, AI is the demise of our own. That's only a few hundred years of technological development or maybe 10,000 years if you get back to the near-death revolution, the dawn of agriculture, hardly anything can cosmic time span. That's nothing, that's the blink of an eye. And so it's not surprising at all that we would happen not to coexist with anyone else. But that doesn't mean nobody else was ever here. And if other civilizations come to that same conclusion and realization, maybe they're scour, the galaxy around them, they find any evidence for intelligence, then they have two options.
Starting point is 03:16:32 They can either give up on communication and just say, well, it's never going to happen. We just may as well just, you know, worry about what's happening here on our own planet. Or they could attempt communication, but communication through time. And that's almost the most selfless act of communication, because there's no hope of getting anything back. It's a philanthropic gift almost to that other civilization that you can maybe maybe might just be nothing more than a monument, which the pyramids essentially are, a monument of their existence, that these are the things they achieve. This is their, you know, the things they believed in,
Starting point is 03:17:09 their language, their culture, or it could be maybe something more than that, it could be sort of lessons from what they learned and their own history. And so I've been thinking a lot recently about how would we send a message to other civilizations in the future because that act of thinking seriously about the engineering of how your design that would inform us about what we should be looking for. And also perhaps be our best chance, quite frankly,
Starting point is 03:17:41 of ever making content. It might not be the contact we dream of, but it's still contact. There would still be a record of our existence as pitiful as it might be compared to a two- to the vast temporal landscape of the universe, just realizing our like day-to-day lives, all of us will be forgotten. It's nice to think about something that sends a signal out to other, yeah. It's almost like a humility of acceptance as well. Of like knowing that you have terminal disease, but your impact on the earth doesn't have to end with your death, and it could go on beyond with what you leave behind for others to discover with maybe the books you write or what you leave in the literature. Do you think launching the Roadster vehicle out in space with the company?
Starting point is 03:18:47 Yeah, the Roadster. I'm not sure what someone would make of that, if they found that. Yeah, that's true. I mean, they have been quasi-attempts of it beyond the Roadster. I mean, there's like plaques on, there's the Pioneer plaques, there's the Voyager 2 Golden Record. It's pretty unlikely anybody's going to discover those because they're just a drift in space.
Starting point is 03:19:10 And they will eventually mechanically die and not produce any signal for anyone to spot. So you'd have to be extremely lucky to come across them. I've often said to my colleagues, I think the best place is the moon. The moon, unlike the Earth, has no significant weathering. How long will the Apollo descent stages, which is still a sun on the lunar surface last for, the only real effect is micro-metriots, which are slowly like dust smashing against them pretty much.
Starting point is 03:19:40 But that's going to take millions, potentially billions of years to erode that down. And so we have an opportunity, and that's on the surface. If you put something just a few meters beneath the surface, it would have even greater protection. And so it raises the prospect of that if we wanted to send something, a significant amount of information, to a future galactic spanning civilization that maybe cracks the intercellar propulsion problem, the moon's going to be there for five billion years. That's a long time for somebody to come by and detect maybe a strange pattern that we draw on the sand for them to, you know,
Starting point is 03:20:16 big arrow, big cross, like, look under here. And we can have a tomb of knowledge of some record of our civilization. And so I think it's, when you think like that, what that implies to us, well, the galaxy's 13 billion years old, the moon is already 4 billion years old, there may be places familiar to us, nearby to us, that we should be seriously considering as places we should look for life and intelligent life or evidence of relics that they might leave behind for us. So thinking like that will help us find such relics in the sake of, it's a, it's a, a beneficial cycle that happens. Yes, yeah exactly.
Starting point is 03:20:56 It enables the science of, of said, you better like of, of search of the bios and tech signatures and so on. Yeah. And it's inspiring. I mean, it's, it's, it's, it inspiring. I mean, it's also inspiring in that we want to leave a legacy behind as an entire civilization, not just in the symbols, but broadly speaking. That's the last thing somehow. Yeah, and I'm part of a team that's trying to repeat the Golden record experiment. We're trying to create like an open source version
Starting point is 03:21:27 of the golden record that future spacecraft are able to download and basically put in a little hard drive that they can carry around with them. And get these distributed hopefully across this older system eventually. And it's gonna be called the HHECK is Guided Galaxy. Could be, that's a good name for it. We've been telling a little bit with name,
Starting point is 03:21:45 but I think probably just be God in record at this point, I've got record version two or something. But I think another benefit that I see of this activity is that it forces us as a species to ask those questions about what it is that we want another civilization to know about us. The God record was kind of funny because it had photos on it and it had photos of people eating, for instance, but it had no photos of people defecating.
Starting point is 03:22:14 And so I was not those kind of funny because of how far as, as far as an alien, or if I was studying an alien, if I saw images of an alien, I would, I'm not trying to be like a pervert or anything, but I would want to see the full Bible. I want to understand the biology that alien. And so we, we always censor what we, what we show. And we should show the whole actual natural process. And then also say, we humans tend to censor these things. We tend to not like to walk around naked, we tend to not to talk about some of the natural biological phenomena and talk a lot about others. And actually it's just be very,
Starting point is 03:22:53 like the way you would be to a therapist or something, very transparent about the way we actually operate this world. I mean, and I've taken that with the Gordon Record. I think he originally, there's a male and a female figure to pitch on the Gordon Record. And the woman had a genitalia originally drawn, and there was a lot of pushback from, I think, a lot of Christian groups who were not happy about the idea of throwing this into space. And so eventually, they had to remove that. And so it's, it would be confusing
Starting point is 03:23:23 biologically, if you're you're you know trying to study xenobiology of this alien that apparently has no genitalia or the manders but for some reason the woman doesn't you know and that's our that's our own societal and cultural imprint happening into that information. That's to be fair just even having two sexes and predators and prey just a whole that could be just a very unique earth-like thing So they might be confused about why there's like pairs of things like why are you? Why why's there a man and a woman in general like they could be I mean they could be confused a lot of things in general I don't I don't think the I don't even know which way to hold the picture. Or there's the picture. They might have very different sensory devices to even interpret
Starting point is 03:24:12 this. Right. They have sound as their own way of navigating the world. It's kind of lost to send any kind of being. There's been a lot of conversation about sending video and audio and video and pictures. And that's one of the things I've been a lot of conversation about sending video and video and pictures. And I've, that's one of the things I've been a little bit resistant about in the team that I've been thinking, well, they might have eyes. And so if you lived in under Europa's surface, having eyes wouldn't be very useful. If you lived in a, on a very dark planet, on the tightly locked night side of an exoplanet,
Starting point is 03:24:44 having eyes wouldn't be particularly useful. So it's kind of a presumption of us to think that the video is a useful form of communication. Do you hope we become a multi planetary species? So we're almost sneaking up to that, but you know, the efforts of SpaceX of Elon, it been general what your thoughts are about those efforts. So you already mentioned Starship will be very interesting for astronomy, for science in general, just getting stuff out into space. But what about the longer term goal of actually colonizing of building civilizations and
Starting point is 03:25:15 other surfaces on moons, on planets? It seems like a fairly obvious thing to be for us is survival. There's a high risk if we are committed to trying to keep this human experiment going, putting all of our eggs in one basket is always going to be a risky strategy to pursue. It's a nice basket though, but yeah. It is a beautiful basket. I personally have no interest in living on Mars all the moon. I would like to visit, but I would definitely not want to spend the rest of my life and die on Mars.
Starting point is 03:25:48 It's a hellhole. Mars is a very, very difficult. I think the idea that this is going to happen in the next 10, 20 years seems to be very optimistic, not that it's insurmountable, but the challenges are extreme to survive on a plant like Mars, which is like a dry frozen desert with a high radiation environment. It's a challenge of a type we've never faced before. So I'm sure human ingenuity can tackle it, but I'm skeptical that we'll have thousands of people living on Mars in my lifetime. But I would relish that opportunity to maybe one day visit such a settlement and do scientific experiments
Starting point is 03:26:36 and Mars or experience Mars, do astronomy from Mars, all sorts of cool stuff you could do. Sometimes you see these dreams of how to solace this exploration and you can fly through the clouds of Venus or you could just do these enormous jumps on these small moons where you can essentially jump as high as a skyscraper and traverse them. So there's all sorts of wonderful ice skating on your rope, but it might be fun. So, I love the idea of us becoming intoplanetary. I think it's it's just a question of time, our own our own destructive tendencies. As you said earlier, our adults with our emerging capability to become interplanetary. And the question is, will we get
Starting point is 03:27:22 out of the nest before we burn it down? And I don't know, obviously I hope that we do, but I don't have any special insight that there is a problem, there is someone of a, an oring intellectual H I have with the, the so called doomsday argument, which I try not to treat too seriously, but there is some element of it that bothers me. The doom's argument basically suggests that, you know, you're typically the mediocrity
Starting point is 03:27:52 principle you're not special, that you're probably going to be born somewhere in the middle of all human beings who will ever be born. You're unlikely to be one of the first 1% of human beings that ever lived and the one of the last one and similarly the last 1% of human beings that were level of because you'd be very unique and special if that were true. And so by this logic you can calculate how many generations of humans you might expect. So if there's been let's say 100 billion human beings that have ever lived on this planet, then you could say to 95% confidence so you divide by 5%, so 100 billion divided by 0.05 would give you two trillion human beings that would ever live. You'd expect by this argument. And so if each, if let's say each
Starting point is 03:28:34 each planet, in general, the planet has a 10 billion population. So that would be 200 generations of humans. We would expect ahead of us us and if each one has an average lifetime I say 100 years then that would be about 20,000 years. So there's 20,000 years left in the clock. There's like a typical doomsday argument type. That's how they typically lay it out. Now you can argue that a lot of the criticisms that doomsday argument come down to well what are you really counting? You're counting humans there but maybe you should be counting years. Or maybe you should be counting human hours. You know, how, what are you, because what you count makes a big difference to what
Starting point is 03:29:12 you get out in the other ends. This is called the reference class. And so that's one of the big criticisms that do say argument. But I do think it has a compelling point that it would be surprising. If our future is to one day blossom and become a galactic spanning empire, trillions upon trillions upon trillions of human beings will one day live across the stars for essentially as long as the galaxy exists in the stars burn.
Starting point is 03:29:39 We would live at an incredibly special point in that story. We would be right at the very, very, very beginning. And that's not impossible, but it's just somewhat improbable. And so there's part of that sort of irks against me, but it also almost feels like a philosophical argument because you're sort of talking about souls being drawn from this cosmic pool. So it's not an argument that I lose sleep about for our fate of the doomsday, but it is somewhat intellectually annoying that there is a slight contradiction that it feels like with the idea of a galactic spanning empire. And, but of course, there's so many unknowns.
Starting point is 03:30:25 I, for one, would love to visit even space, but Mars just imagines standing at a Mars and looking back at Earth. Yeah, I mean, being credible site. It would give you such a fresh perspective as to your entire existence. It would be human. And then come back to Earth, it will give you a heck of a perspective. Plus the sunset on Mars is supposed to be nice. I loved what William Sharneserd, after his flight, his words really moved me when he came down.
Starting point is 03:30:59 And I think it really captured the idea that we shouldn't really be sending engineers, our scientists into space. We should be sending our poets because those are the people when they come down who can truly make a difference when they describe their experiences in space. And I found it very moving, reading what he said. Yeah, when you talk to astronauts, when they describe what they see, it's like this, like they discovered a whole new thing that they can't possibly cover back into words. Yeah, it's beautiful to see. Just as a quick, before I forget, I have to ask you, can you summarize your argument against the hypothesis that we live in a simulation? Is it some of our discussion about the
Starting point is 03:31:45 dunes day clock? No, it's actually pretty more similar to my agnosticism about life in the universe, and it's just sort of remaining agnostic about all possibilities. The simulation argument, sometimes it gets, it makes this kind of two distinct things that we need to consider. One is the probability that we live in so-called base reality, that we're not living in a simulated reality itself. And another probability we need to consider is the probability that that technology is viable or possible and something we will ultimately choose to one day do. Those are two distinct things. They're probably quite similar numbers to each other, but they are distinct probabilities.
Starting point is 03:32:28 So in my paper, I wrote about this, I just tried to work through the problem. I teach Asher's sister, so I actually teach her me this morning. And so I just seemed like a fun case study of working through a Bayesian calculation for it. Bayesian calculations work on conditionals. And so
Starting point is 03:32:45 when you hear, you know, what kind of inspired this project was when I heard musk said, was like a billion-to-one chance that we don't live in a simulation. He's right if you add the Bayesian conditional, and the Bayesian conditional is conditioned upon the fact that we eventually developed that technology and choose to use it, or it's chosen to be used by such species, by such civilizations, that's the conditional. And you have to add that in because that conditional isn't guaranteed. And so, in a basing framework, you can kind of make that explicit. You see mathematically, explicitly, that's a conditional in your equation. And the opposite side of the coin is basically in the trillema that Bostrom originally put forward,
Starting point is 03:33:28 it's options one and two. So option one is that you basically never developed the ability to do that, option two is you never choose to execute that. So we kind of group those together as sort of the non-simulation scenario, let's call it. So you've got non-simulation scenario and simulation scenario, let's call it. So you've got non simulation scenario and simulation scenario. And agnosticly, we really have to give though, you know, how do you assess the
Starting point is 03:33:52 model, the April or model probability of those two scenarios? It's very difficult and we can, I think people would probably argue about how you assign those priors in the paper we just assigned 50, 50, we just said just said, this hasn't been demonstrated yet. There's no evidence that this is actually technically possible. But nor is there, there's not technically possible. So we're just going to assign 50-50 probability to these two hypotheses. And then in the hypothesis where you have a simulated reality,
Starting point is 03:34:20 you have a base reality set at the top. So there is, even in the simulated hypothesis, there's a probability you still live in base reality, and then there's a whole myriad of universes beneath that which are all simulated. And so you have a very slim probability of being in base reality if this is true, and you have a hundred percent probability of living in base reality. On the other hand, if it's not true, and we never develop that ability or choose never to use it. And so then you apply this technique called Bayesian model averaging, which is where you propagate the uncertainty of your two models to get out of final estimate. And because of that one
Starting point is 03:34:54 base reality that lives in the simulated scenario, you end up counting this up and getting that it always has to be less than 50%. So the probability living in a simulator reality versus a simulator, it has to be slightly less than 50%. Now that really comes down to that statement of giving it 50-50 odds to begin with. And on the one hand, you might say, look, David, I'm working artificial intelligence, I'm very confident that this is going to happen, just to extrapolating off current trends. Or in the other hand, a statistician would say, you're giving way too much weight to the simulation hypothesis, because it's an intrinsically highly complicated model. You have a whole hierarchy of realities within realities, within realities. It's like the inception stuff thing, right? And so this requires hundreds, thousands
Starting point is 03:35:43 millions of parameterizations to describe. And by Occam's razor, we would always normally penalize inherently complicated models as being disfavored. So I think you could argue I'm being too generous or too kind with that, but I sort of want to develop the rigorous mathematical tools to explore it. And ultimately it's up to you to decide what you think that 5050 odds should be. But you can use my formula to plug in whatever you want and get the answer. And I use 5050. So, and but when the first pile, the first two parts of the, the, the, the, the, the boss
Starting point is 03:36:17 from talks about, it seems like connected to that is the question we've been talking about, which is the number of times at bat talking about, which is the number of times at bat you get, which is the number of intelligent civilizations they're out there that can build such simulations. It seems like very closely connected, because if we're the only ones that are here that can build such things, that change these things. Yeah, the simulation of the analysis has all sorts of implications like that. I've always loved Sean Carer points that are really interesting contradiction, apparently,
Starting point is 03:36:51 with the simulation hypothesis that I speak about a little bit in the paper. But he showed that or pointed out that in this hierarchy of realities, which then develop their own AI's within the realities, and then they use or really ancestors simulations, I should say, rather than A.I. They develop their own capability to simulate realities. You get this hierarchy. And so eventually, there'll be a bottom layer, which I often call the sewer of reality. It's like the worst layer where it's the most pixelated it could possibly do. So because each layer is necessarily going to have less computational power than the layer above it, because not only are you simulating that entire planet, but also some
Starting point is 03:37:28 of that's being used for the computers themselves that those are simulated. And so that base reality, or certainly the bit, the sewer reality, is a reality where they are simply unable to produce ancestor simulations because the fidelity to simulation is not sufficient. And so from their point of view, it might not be obvious that the universe is pixelated, but they would just never be able to manifest that capability. What if they're constantly simulating, in order to appreciate the limits of the fidelity you have to have an observer? What if they're always simulating a dumber and dumber observer?
Starting point is 03:38:03 What if the sewer has very dumb observers that can't like scientists that are the dumbest possible scientists. So like it's very pixelated, but the scientists are too dumb to even see the pixelations. So like that's like built into the universe always has to be a limitation on the cognitive capabilities of the complex systems that are within it. Yeah, so that's your reality. They would still presumably be able to have a very impressive computational capabilities. They'll probably be able to simulate galactic formation or this kind of impressive stuff, but they would be just short of the ability to however you define it, credit truly sentient conscious experience in a computer. That would just be beyond their capabilities. So, Carol pointed out that if you add up all the counter-pamely
Starting point is 03:38:52 realities, there should be probabilistically, if this is true, if we hear the simulation hypothesis or scenario, then you're most likely to find yourself in the sewer because there's just far more of them than there are of any of the higher levels. And so that sort of sets up a contradiction because then you live in a reality which is inherently incapable of ever producing ancestors simulations. But the premise of the entire argument is that ancestors simulations are possible. That there's a contradiction. It's a contradiction. There's that old quote, we're all living in the sewer,
Starting point is 03:39:30 but some of us are looking up at the stars. This is maybe more truth than we think. To me, so there's of course physics and computational fascinating questions here. But to me, there's a practical psychological question, which is, you know, how do you create a virtual reality world that is as compelling and not necessarily even as realistic, but almost as realistic, but as compelling or more compelling than physical reality. Because something tells me it's not very difficult. In a full history of human civilization,
Starting point is 03:40:13 though that is an interesting kind of simulation to me. Because that feels like it's doable in the next 100 years, creating a world where we're all prefer to live in the digital world. And not like a visit, but like it's like your scene is insane. No, like you're required. It's unsafe to live outside of the virtual world. And it's interesting to me from an engineering perspective how to build that.
Starting point is 03:40:44 Exam somebody that sort of loves video games and it seems like you can create incredible worlds there and stay there. And that's a, it's a different question than creating an ultra high resolution, high fidelity simulation of physics. But if that world inside a video game is as consistent as the physics of our reality, then you can have your own scientists in that world that trying to understand that physics world. They might look different.
Starting point is 03:41:14 I'm presuming that they'd eventually forget, you know, give it long enough they might forget about their origins of being one's biological assume this is there any reality, especially if you're now born, you know any reality, especially if you're now born, you know, well, certainly if you're born, but even if you're eight years old or something when you first started wearing the headset. Yeah, or you have a memory wipe when you go in. I mean, it also kind of maybe speaks to this issue like neural link and how do we keep up with AI in our world? If you want to augment your intelligence, perhaps one way of competing and one of your impetus for going into this digital reality
Starting point is 03:41:52 would be to be competitive intellectually with artificial intuitions that you could trivially augment your reality if your brain was itself artificial. I mean one one skeptes my've always had about that is, is whether it's more of a philosophical question, but how much is that really you if you do a mind upload? Is this just a duplicate of your memories that thinks it's you versus truly a transference of your conscious stream into that reality? And I think when you, you're almost like the teleportation device and Star Trek, but with teleportation, quantum teleportation, you can kind of rigorously show that that, you know, all, as long as all of the quantum numbers are exactly duplicated as you transfer over, it truly is
Starting point is 03:42:42 from the universe's perspective in every way, indistinguishable from what was there before. It really is, in principle, you and all the sense of being you, versus creating a duplicate clone and uploading memories to that human body or a computer that would surely be a discontinuation of that conscious experience by virtue of the fact you've multiplied it and so I I would be hesitant about uploading for that reason. I would see it mostly as my own killing myself and having some AI duplicate of me that persists in this world, but is not truly my experience typical 20th century human with an attachment to this particular
Starting point is 03:43:33 singular instantiation of brain and body How silly humans used to be used to have rotary phones and And and other silly things. You're an incredible human being. You're an educator. You're a researcher. You have an amazing YouTube channel. Looking to young people, if you were to give them advice, looking to young people if you were to give them advice. How can they have a career that may be inspired by yours, inspired by a wandering curiosity, a career that can be proud of, or a life that can be proud of? What advice would you give? I suddenly think in terms of a career in science,
Starting point is 03:44:22 one thing that I may be discovered late, but has been incredibly influential on me in terms of my own happiness and my own productivity has been this synergy of doing two passions at once, one passion in science communication and the passion research and not surrendering either one. And I think that tends to be seen as something that's an either or you have to completely dedicate yourself to one thing to gain mastery in it. That's a conventional way of thinking about both science and other disciplines.
Starting point is 03:44:59 And I have found that both have been elevated by practicing in each. And I think that's true in all assets of life. I mean, if you want to become the best researcher you possibly can, you're pushing your intellect in a sense your body to a high level. And so to me, I've always wanted to couple that with training of my body, training of my mind,
Starting point is 03:45:24 in other ways, besides from just what I'm doing when I'm in the letter room or in my office and calculating something, focusing on your own development through whatever it is, meditation for me, it's often running, working out and pursuing multiple passions, provides this almost synergistic bliss of all of them together. So often I've had some of the best research ideas from making a YouTube video, I'm trying to communicate an idea or interact with my audience who've had a question spark to whole trail of thought that led down this wonderful intellectual rabbit hole, or maybe to a new intellectual discovery, can go either way sometimes with those things.
Starting point is 03:46:09 And so thinking broadly, diversely, and always looking after yourself in this highly competitive and often extremely stressful world that we live in, Is the best advice I can offer, anybody, and just try, if you can, it's very easy, but if you can follow your passions, you'll always be happy, trying to sell out for the quick cash out, for the quick book out, can be tempting in the short term. Looking for exo means was never easy,
Starting point is 03:46:44 but I made a career, not. Looking for exo means was never easy, but I made a career, not out of discovering exo means, but out of learning how to communicate the difficult problem, and discovering all sorts of things along the way. We shot for the sky and we discovered all this stuff along the way. We discovered dozens of new planets using all sorts of new techniques. We pushed this instrumentation to new places. And I've had an extremely productive research career in this world. I've had all sorts of ideas working on a technosignatures. It's thinking innovatively pushes you into all sorts of exciting directions. So just try to, yeah, it's hard to find that passion, but you can sometimes remember
Starting point is 03:47:25 it when you're a kid, what your passions were and what fascinated you as a child. For me, as soon as I put to the space, but when I was five years old, I was there, I was hooked on space and I almost betrayed my passion. College, I studied physics, which I've always been fascinated by physics as well. But I came back to astronomy because it was my first love and I was much happier doing research in astronomy than I was in physics because it spoke to that wonder I had as a child that first was the spark of curiosity for me in science. So society will try to get you to look at hard
Starting point is 03:48:01 Jupyter's and the advice is to look for the cool world instead. What do you think is the meaning of this whole thing? You ever ask yourself why? It's just a ride. That's right. It's just a ride on a roller coaster. And we have no purpose. It's an accident. Am I my perspective? There's no meaning to my life, there's no objective deity who is overwatching what I'm doing and I have some fate or destiny. It's all just writing under rollercoaster and trying to have a good time and contribute to other people's enjoyment of the road. Yeah, try to make it a happy, happy accident. Yeah, yeah, I see no fundamental providence in my life or in the nature of the universe. And you just see this universe, this beautiful cosmic accident of galaxies smashing together, stars forging here and there,
Starting point is 03:49:02 and planets occasionally spawning maybe life across the universe. And we are just one of those instantiations and we should just enjoy this very brief episode that we have. And I think trying to look at it much deeper than that is to me, it's not very soul-satisfying. I just think enjoy what you've got and appreciate it. It does seem noticing that beauty, um, helps make the ride pretty fun. Yeah. Absolutely. David, you're an incredible person. I, I haven't covered most of the things I wanted to talk to you about. This was an incredible conversation. I, I, I'm glad you exist. I'm glad you're doing everything you're doing. And I'm a huge fan.
Starting point is 03:49:47 Thank you so much for talking today. This was amazing. Thank you so much. Thanks, Rielana. Thank you. Thanks for listening to this conversation with David Kipping to support this podcast. Please check out our sponsors in the description. And now let me leave you with some words from Carl Sagan.
Starting point is 03:50:03 Perhaps the aliens are here, but are hiding, because of some lexgalactica, some ethic of non-interference with emerging civilizations. We can imagine them, curious and dispassionate, observing us, as we would watch a bacterial culture in a dish, to determine whether this year, again, we managed to avoid self-destruction. Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time. you

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