Scientists gravitate toward E.T. notions

By Katy Human
Denver Post Staff Writer

Aspen - Researchers are more sure than ever that extraterrestrials exist - whether they are microbes eking out a living on an icy planet or intelligent beings inhabiting a watery blue world 5,000 light-years away.

"There must surely be other stars like our sun, and other planets like the Earth," said University of California at Berkeley planetary scientist Geoff Marcy during a recent planetary conference in Aspen. "Primitive life, at least, must be common in the universe."

The planet hunters gathered in Aspen to celebrate the nearly 150 "extrasolar" planets found in the past 10 years, and to discuss new ways to search the skies.

Many of the attendees at last week's conference were from Colorado, which has become a hub for planetary research. The University of Colorado, for example, is one of the leading universities in the country for research, and Ball Aerospace in Boulder built most of the science instruments used on the Hubble Telescope.

 

The research has proved invaluable.

Many of the planets that had been found were "hot Jupiters" - huge, gassy planets so close to their central stars that life seems unlikely.

But in recent months, astronomers have improved their instruments to detect smaller worlds. They're finding planets that orbit far enough from their parent stars to make water - thought to be necessary for life - possible.

Within a few decades, the researchers say, they may be able to detect the chemical signature of life in the atmosphere of an Earthlike planet

Science-fiction writers predicted it decades ago, and now scientists are realizing it's probably true, said Bruce Jakosky, a planetary scientist at CU.

"We're recognizing that life on Earth does not appear to be anything special," he said.

Here, life took root as soon as it could, almost immediately after meteorites stopped their fiery bombardment of the young planet, Jakosky said.

The main message from a decade of planet discoveries is that solar systems dot the Milky Way, circling at least 3 percent of stars. About 200 billion stars are in the galaxy.

Researchers could never have predicted the discoveries of the past decade.

In early 1995, two teams reported dismal failures in planetary searches. Many scientists began to conclude that our own solar system was alone, a lucky quirk, said Michel Mayor of Switzerland's Geneva Observatory.

But then, his team calculated that the faint wobble of a sunlike star had to come from a giant planet spinning quickly around it.

Marcy's group confirmed it: The gravitational tug was from a planet half the mass of Jupiter, orbiting its star about every four days.

The techniques used to detect such wobbles have been honed since then. Researchers are experimenting with other telescopic techniques.

But the next big leap in planet detection - the discovery of other Earthlike planets - probably won't happen until at least 2007, scientists say, when NASA plans to launch the Kepler space telescope.

Engineers with Ball are building that instrument now, said Ball's Harold Reitsema.

"We're encouraged by all of these discoveries ... to believe that many stars have planets," Reitsema said.

NASA and the European Space Agency are also beginning to plan other missions, to launch sometime after Kepler: the Space Interferometry Mission, the Terrestrial Planet Finder and Darwin.

But what will happen next isn't clear, although one thing is: There won't be any manned visits to these planets anytime soon, as they probably are tens or thousands of light-years away.

Berkley's Marcy ran through a series of calculations suggesting there could easily be thousands of advanced civilizations in the Milky Way.

"There's only one problem: Where are they? Why haven't we seen them?" Marcy said.

Researchers have found no writing on the moon, no crashed spaceships on Mars, no messages floating through space.

Maybe civilizations just don't last long enough to communicate with one another, he suggested. And perhaps Darwinian evolution, generally believed to be an inevitable consequence of life, doesn't inevitably produce intelligence.

"Maybe there are other ways to survive and be the fittest," Marcy said.

Staff writer Katy Human can be reached at 303-820-1910 or [EMAIL PROTECTED] .

 

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