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Writer's pictureKen Ecott

Discovery of life beyond Earth may come within the decade


Microbial life beyond Earth may be discovered within the next 10-15 years but it's unlikely to be intelligent.

Alien life has long been the hottest topic for numerous astronomers and space enthusiasts. Current space missions are focusing on searching for habitable planets, with the hope of also stumbling onto microbial forms of life. Although we are yet to find any substantial evidence to point towards the existence of intelligent life beyond Earth, some experts still believe that we could be closer to discovering alien life than we may think.

When asked Chris Impey, deputy head of the department of astronomy at the University of Arizona said, the search for life beyond Earth may well yield results within the next decade. However, Impey cautioned that finding intelligent life could take much longer than that.

"I put my money on detecting microbial life in 10 to 15 years, but not at all detecting intelligent life," Impey told Futurism.

Although the astronomer is sceptical about the search for intelligent life beyond Earth successfully reporting finds anytime soon, he indicated that microbial life-forms may be in existence within our very own solar system. Impey also suggested that Europa, one of Jupiter's water-rich moons, could potentially hold life.

Impey added that he hasn't ruled out the possibility of life still existing on Mars, although he believes that such life-forms may likely exist below the surface and as a result, may be much harder to detect. He said scientists currently have a better shot at discovering evidence of life that existed at one time on the Red Planet.

"If we actually get Mars rocks back here to Earth from a place that we think could have been habitable in the past, then we might find evidence of prior life," Impey said.

According to the astronomer, in the coming years, thanks to technological advancements, scientists will be able to use Nasa's new James Web Space Telescope to detect biomarkers, such as oxygen and methane, in the atmospheres of Earth-like planets. This may in turn further the search for life beyond Earth.

"This biomarker experiment... could find evidence of microbial life indirectly," Impey added. The research, according to him, could also help scientists locate planets that are "the closest to Earth as possible, not in distance, but in character".

The strange shapes seen in a rock from Mars that some researchers say are fossilised bacteria really are tiny micro-organisms, say US researchers.

 

Although we could still be several decades away from discovering the existence of intelligent alien life, the possibility of finding microbial life on Mars, Europa or the many exoplanets recently discovered, could help scientists determine how life-forms survive in far away planets and different atmospheres. This in turn, can also further our search for life beyond Earth and eventually even help humanity become a multi-planetary species.

Regardless of how close we are to discovering life outside Earth, the hunt for extraterrestrial life is likely to continue despite failures. "The first SETI experiment was in 1959, so obviously it has been going on for over half a century without any success. The people who do it don't seem put off by failure," Impey said.

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