Sun Club
OUT OF THIS WORLD

Mind-blowing ‘alien life’ calculation reveals where ET is probably hiding – and it’s surprisingly close

EXPERTS have revealed their thoughts on where extraterrestrial life may be hiding if it truly exists.

The search for alien life has been ongoing for decades and has still yielded no viable results.

Advertisement
 defines a habitable zone as the distance from a star at which liquid water could exist on orbiting planets' surfaces.

So far, astronomers have discovered around 5,000 exoplanets, some of which could support life based on this criteria.

And now in a , Professor Piero Madau of astrophysics from the University of California, Santa Cruz proposes a mathematical framework that could help us locate even more habitable planets.

Advertisement

The calculation is meant to identify the population of habitable planets within 326 light-years of our Sun.

Madau suggests that within just 61 light-years of our Sun, as many as 11,000 Earth-sized exoplanets could orbit their stars’ habitable zones.

"The approach is based on a set of differential equations and provides a time-dependent mapping between star formation, metal enrichment, and the occurrence of exoplanets and potentially life-harboring worlds," the study reads.

One of the biggest influencers on the study is the Copernican Principle.

Advertisement

Most read in News Tech

'RAPE' PROBE
Woman 'raped in property overnight' as 5 men arrested over horrific 'attack'
ICED OUT
Dancing On Ice shock as show favourite axed in first skate off
TOT TRAGEDY
Baby girl found dead at home as woman, 21, and man, 41, arrested
SHUT UP SHOP
BBC star chef suddenly closes restaurant after 9 months despite £400k revamp

The principle posits that Earth is not the center of the universe and therefore not in a great position to observe the Universe.

However, by using several mathematical equations, astronomers can determine which stars could point us toward biosignatures. 

Biosignatures comprise certain elements that are considered the building blocks of life as we know it.

Typically, they consist of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen, among others.

Advertisement

Conditions have to be very particular for these elements to exist on an exoplanet.

But assuming Earth is an average planet, as the study does, they should be more common than previously thought.

Topics
Advertisement
machibet777.com