Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Preface to the First Edition
- 1 An Explanation for the Absence of Extraterrestrials on Earth
- 2 One Attempt to Find Where They Are: NASA's High Resolution Microwave Survey
- 3 An Examination of Claims that Extraterrestrial Visitors to Earth Are Being Observed
- 4 The Likelihood of Interstellar Colonization, and the Absence of Its Evidence
- 5 Pre-emption of the Galaxy by the First Advanced Civilization
- 6 Stellar Evolution: Motivation for Mass Interstellar Migrations
- 7 Interstellar Propulsion Systems
- 8 Interstellar Travel: A Review
- 9 Settlements in Space, and Interstellar Travel
- 10 Terraforming
- 11 Estimates of Expansion Timescales
- 12 A Search for Tritium Sources in Our Solar System May Reveal the Presence of Space Probes from Other Stellar Systems
- 13 Primordial Organic Cosmochemistry
- 14 Chance and the Origin of Life
- 15 The RNA World: Life before DNA and Protein
- 16 The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
- 17 Alone in a Crowded Universe
- 18 Possible Forms of Life in Environments Very Different from the Earth
- 19 Cosmological SETI Frequency Standards
- 20 Galactic Chemical Evolution: Implications for the Existence of Habitable Planets
- 21 The Frequency of Planetary Systems in the Galaxy
- 22 Atmospheric Evolution, the Drake Equation and DNA: Sparse Life in an Infinite Universe
- About the Editors and Contributors
- Author Index
- Subject Index
9 - Settlements in Space, and Interstellar Travel
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Preface to the First Edition
- 1 An Explanation for the Absence of Extraterrestrials on Earth
- 2 One Attempt to Find Where They Are: NASA's High Resolution Microwave Survey
- 3 An Examination of Claims that Extraterrestrial Visitors to Earth Are Being Observed
- 4 The Likelihood of Interstellar Colonization, and the Absence of Its Evidence
- 5 Pre-emption of the Galaxy by the First Advanced Civilization
- 6 Stellar Evolution: Motivation for Mass Interstellar Migrations
- 7 Interstellar Propulsion Systems
- 8 Interstellar Travel: A Review
- 9 Settlements in Space, and Interstellar Travel
- 10 Terraforming
- 11 Estimates of Expansion Timescales
- 12 A Search for Tritium Sources in Our Solar System May Reveal the Presence of Space Probes from Other Stellar Systems
- 13 Primordial Organic Cosmochemistry
- 14 Chance and the Origin of Life
- 15 The RNA World: Life before DNA and Protein
- 16 The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
- 17 Alone in a Crowded Universe
- 18 Possible Forms of Life in Environments Very Different from the Earth
- 19 Cosmological SETI Frequency Standards
- 20 Galactic Chemical Evolution: Implications for the Existence of Habitable Planets
- 21 The Frequency of Planetary Systems in the Galaxy
- 22 Atmospheric Evolution, the Drake Equation and DNA: Sparse Life in an Infinite Universe
- About the Editors and Contributors
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
Interstellar Travel and Extraterrestrial Intelligence
The success of several proposals to search for extraterrestrial intelligence (ETI) in the Galaxy (Cocconi & Morrison, 1959; Oliver & Billingham, 1971; Michaud, 1979) requires the existence of a large number of technologically competent cultures over a long period of time. For example, to expect to find one ETI within 1000 light-years in a perfectly efficient search would require about a million ETI in the Galaxy, each signalling for a million years. (Or it would require 108 ETI signalling 104 years, or 104 ETI signalling 108 years, etc.) Many people have asked why some of these ETI should not have taken advantage of their prolonged technological capability to find a method for interstellar travel and settlement of nearby stellar systems (see, e.g., Hart, 1975; Jones, 1976; Winterberg, 1979). If the initial problem of interstellar travel and settlement were solved, then it should become progressively easier for daughter settlements to eventually continue the process until every available stellar system in the Galaxy (including possibly our own) were inhabited.
The chances of this happening have been discussed extensively, often with minimal thought given to the physical requirements for interstellar settlement. In particular, it has been argued that interstellar settlement is either impossible (see, e.g., Purcell, 1960; Marx, 1973) or absurdly expensive (e.g. requiring trillions of man-years of effort to amass the nuclear fuel needed).
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- Information
- ExtraterrestrialsWhere Are They?, pp. 70 - 85Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995