Yep just not intelligent... And we can never prove that. The fact that we are concious in relation to that in the universe at all dimensions humans are alone out there in the cosmos as an intelligent race and on top of the spectra for that matter too.
If there is life on Proxima B, it is probably all the deceased comedians from this planet who we all enjoyed, and they are now mooning us. Right in the middle of it is Sam Kinison screaming "CAN YOU SEE US YET?...WE WAXED FOR THIS.
So long story short: even if there's as many lights on proxima B as there are on earth we're not going to be able to see it with the James Webb space telescope
@@MCrelationz there's probably life everywhere in the universe, it's just that all light from planets that we can see are from millions of years ago. Humans have only been going for 200,000 years so it's very possible that there are multiple civilizations that are pretty far along or have already collapsed and we won't know because the light that shows us that is still half a million years away
And assuming they have the exact same type of illumination as we do..if there was another civilization out there, what would the chances be of them inventing the same types of artificial lighting? For all we know there may be something far advanced beyond our current LED's (which weren't thought of us a possibility as soon as 20 years ago) or they may be so far behind that they haven't even discovered fire or the wheel? It's almost mind bending to think about but if I'm betting on this I'd say the Earth is such a special place and humans such a special lifeform that the chances of that again, even in a supposedly infinite universe is miniscule
@@NikolaiKuznetsov97 even if there's life we're alone anyways, it's impossible to send a ship out to anywhere because the crew would die before reaching the next world. We can't even get along on the Earth we're not going to be able to send a multi-generational rocket out
Why does Humankind automatically think another species requires light to live, or even has to be carbon based? There could literally be two separate species on a tidally locked planet and never the two shall meet. We must always, always, remember to never impose our tunnel vision ideas of what alien life can be composed of and the conditions at which it lives at into our little boxes. Things rarely turn out the way we envision them.
If you're suggesting they might be silicon based, well, yeah theoretically, but also probably not. Also, light aka electromagnetic radiation is about the easiest signal to detect, that's why we should look for that. You don't want to miss that proverbial low-hanging fruit.
@@marcosmedina6940 Energy doesn’t necessarily produce light. Dark matter for example is still beyond physicists ability to quantify for that very reason. A tidally locked planet with a dark side could very well have an intelligent life form that uses an energy form totally unknown to us and outside our ability to fathom. In fact, they may live underground and use light as an energy source since it could be more easily directed and controlled in confined spaces. The iterations are too numerous to contemplate.
Sometimes it's fun to speculate, but real science is not based on rumours. I used to be naive, but no more. I will believe it, when it's confirmed beyond any reasonable doubt.
Welcome to the smart club. Guess work, wild assumption and fantasy is best left to the over-excited dreamers out there who know nothing concrete about alien civilisations, but present their posts as if they were somehow 'facts'. Nobody of sound, logical mind assumes anything until hard evidence proves it.
Really science believes in time travel and it is pure mathematical nonsense. There has never been any observational evidence what so ever it is pure speculation. Thereby making the time paradox also nonsense. But it is treated as fact. There has never been any evidence that the arrow of time goes in any direction but forward. It comes from the idea that if a particle travels both in distance and time right to left forward in time. Then if that particle travels left to right it travels backwards in time. This is mathematical nonsense. A mathematical equation based on a false premise is still false. It would seem that some of our theories are made using the ravens paradox.
It may not Proxima B exactly. But life is definitely out there. May be differently civilized or evolved. Why we think civilization should be similar to earthly? Their civilization could be different. May be their body has produce enough bio-lights. They may be flying like our birds. The way of reproduction may be amazingly different to ours. May be no gender differences! Only commonality May be LIFE! It will not necessarily be a repetition of EARTH!
If life was able to evolve on the dark side of a tidally locked planet...maybe sight and the need for light is not necessary. Maybe other senses have developed enough to offset sight.
I'm laughing at this comment because it's so true due to us thinking we're being spied on by UFO's here on earth by their sightings by certain witnesses
the goverment printed that since covid started...so if they can print that amount in a few years im sure they can figure out how to travel that far in the same amount of time. just use that super printer as the power source!
Because space is simply vast and i think the way to traverse it is through dark matter manipulation which is beyond our understanding and capabilities.
Just a question but why would a civilisation that evolved on a tidal locked planet that lives on the dark side need artificial lights? Surly they would have evolved in a way that that light was not needed. Using other sensors than sight
I would assume bc life on that planet most likely originated from the day side. If they evolved the ability to create artificial light, that’s probably how they started crossing into the dark side.
@@canadian_american84 not really its likely they would be living on the light side since that side could have water the other side would be too cold for it be there although it might since it has alaska like temperatures
This is at least one of the best videos about this subject that I have seen! On my channel there are nearly 40 videos of an ion thruster that lifts its power supply against Earth's gravity! It has also carried optional propellant tanks. The craft will be tested in a vacuum soon to demonstrate rapid sustained acceleration, with minimal propellant usage. I hope someone will realize the value of the project for unmanned interstellar probes. The project is progressing rapidly but could be accelerated tremendously with more funds.
I just saw a piece about a promising new technique to desalinate sea water. I saw another piece that talked about the greening of the Sahara Desert. These are two very promising techniques that could dramatically affect humanity for the better in the coming decades.
This is unlikely, Proxima B orbits Proxima Centauri very close, so close that it's year lasts a mere 11 days. It's likely the planet has been stripped of an atmosphere.
@@trevorparks7666 You are right, it is a red dwarf star however it is also a very active flare star which means any atmosphere would likely have been stripped over time. Also the planet is tidally locked, so always shows the same side to the star. Doesn't bode well for life.
@@swright8566 true but being 4 million miles (I think it was miles could have been kms) it may still have some but we won't know till they get the new telescopes up.
@@trevorparks7666 We already know Proxima is a flare star due to our observations of it. I'd be more interested in what planets are orbiting Alpha Centauri A and B rather than this one.
I believe for a fact that life in the galaxy or other galaxies is a guarantee. _Intelligent_ life however, that is a fluke. It may occur more often than just here, but by accident and probbaly very very rare. No shark, octopus, turtle, every discovered fire, manipulated its environment, it just became more adept at survival in its environment. A lot goes into "intelligent" life. Opposable thumbs or something similar, a good place to conduct chemical reactions, gaining speech to convey complex ideas, enough hostility and aggression to make a dominant species not just survive but thrive and compete yet social and cooperative enough to build, etc. There are a lot of variables and conditions to be met.
If a civilization lived on tidal locked planet, it would make sense to build cities on the dark side since they would need the light side for vegetation, farms, and plants for oxygen.
I heard some scientist being interviewed and saying that Proxima B is "too close" a target for JWST's capabilities. He sounded like he wasn't sure if he believes it.
@@SuperExponential Jupiter and Europa have the same “surface” brightness because they’re both illuminated by the Sun 500 million miles away. Proxima B is a star likely millions of times brighter than any planet orbiting it. That’s the problem - distance AND the intrinsic brightness (luminosity) of the star it’s orbiting.
I find so interesting that those shapes for the new telescopes are exactly the shapes we encounter in the animal/botanic world... James Webb and Luvoir with their hive shape and Habex is just like a gigantic flower. Awesome to see that
I imagine that every life form, no matter how alien it may appear to us, will have its own distinct sensory apparatus for organizing its experiences of its planetary world. Its organizing capabilities could run the gamut from simple to very complex. Hope I am around to see!
@@darrinsiberia I would imagine the same. Our organism organizes its experience of the world in a manner that serves our impulses to basic and more complex needs. All measurement is predicated on the same. Perhaps the galaxies we observe are like fish swimming in an endless sea. What do they dream of and what exotic ??? do they see. Perhaps the very dreams we have are but a glimpse of a parallel universe that does not operate by the same laws of physics that operate here. Our scientific instruments are our senses greatly amplified. We can only look at what we see. Beyond that is the Great Mystery that resides both within and beyond all space and time.
@@darrinsiberia It seems the entire universe is varying densities of light with galaxies, and humans flickering but for a moment within an endless void.
Yeah, the current fastest, but not the maximum of our capability to develop in a couple of years. We refuse to use nuclear on scale, which with some serious funding probably could get it up to at least 10% c.
Not top1 civilization fastest are space whole take travel 60,000 year ,,, about 4,2 light year, ,,,,,,,,,,,, top1 civilization travel speed of light , even UFO ,not to go far away,why? ,, Because: travel by year also,, difficult, problem like : food and drink,,,, other planet advance technology travel 100X than speed of light, 4,2 light year take to go 5 second
Most science fiction movies depict extraterrestrial beings just like us. Human shape might not be what's common out there. Here on Earth life comes in different shapes and forms. Why assume they have to be like us. Human ego has no limits. May some people think they speak perfect English like in the movies. Yes, there's no doubt ingnorant people come in different shapes.
Humans don’t exist. Also I met aliens. They have some nice technology. Temporary future time travel, and quantum tunneling faster than light through objects.
There would most likely be a few similarities. Opposable thumbs for grasping , some form of arms and legs , ( a snake can’t build anything for example) stereo front focused vision, reproductive capability… etc
No limits. Your right. But maybe arms feet and a head is just a universal form of life. And everywhere it occurs, it always pops out arms head and feet no matter what. Bcuz that's the best way to do it? Idk
We have never been alone in the cosmos, we are only just waking up to the fact that life is everywhere out there, I just hope that when we do have first contact they are friendly.
Most past contacts were friendly. We're most ways fragile beings.Exept a few. Some dimensional beings are invisible to us.Some can see us some can hear or smell us.Some can see & sense emotions about us. Many strange & weird things are on this planet/planet.✅🤔🙀😂👽🌃
We can't know for certain that there is life elsewhere. We have no idea what the probability of abiogenises is. It could be that the probability of abiogenises is so incredibly rare, that it could be 1 in a septillion chance of it repeating elsewhere in the universe over a span of 13.7 billion years and we just got so incredibly lucky. Until we either find life, or figure out how easy or hard abiogenises can occur, we can't know for certain
The universe is ancient, but it's probably logical to surmise that intelligent life is extremely new, perhaps a few million years at the most, so life here would be regarded as very new.
@@rexluminus9867 where n how do you come up with that ? Nothing I've ever heard concerning aliens, ufos , contact , usos , etc has given me the impression of being "good " . Most people are terrified , anxiety levels off the charts....and let's not forget the kidnapping people out of their homes, cars , out hiking men women and children...for hours doing God only knows what , scrambling their brains to try n make em forget . Then you got the animal mutilations that still occur and occur around the world ....and I would bet there are humans that this happens to but gets covered up ......how anyone can think "oh their good ...their gonna save us from ourselves, help us transcend to a better place .....is beyond me . They'll help you make it to another place alright but it won't be a place you want to be !
With Proxima B being so close to its star it may have been subjected to increased radiation causing increased chance of life arising along with faster evolution. In addition, being tidally locked it has a much greater range of favorable temperatures to find a goldilocks zone. Remember it may be a water world where the sun is shielded by water.
At least we know there are vast regions on our planet nearly free of it 😉🤣🤣 It may also be the reason why so many people are interested in artificial intelligence.
They get the light they want to analyse and put it through a prism which breaks the light into the rainbow spectrum 🌈. This spectrum has dark gaps at specific frequencies that act like fingerprints to particular elements. The light itself contains information about what its source is, as Felipe said. Also, the opposite is true. If you heat specific elements until they glow, they will emit light at the exact frequencies that were dark on the spectrum absorption analysis!
if there's artificial light on proxima-b, that means there are more humans. I just hope the women at proxima-b are not stuck up bitchy like the ones we got here on Earth
Life (and his karma or destiny) isn´t so easy and beautiful for everyone, especially considering the hard times of humanity, there have been (and there are) so many sufferings, wars, misunderstandings and diseases...
There are two types of people in the world. Ones that think outside the box and ones that don't. I, myself like to think outside the box. What kind of person are you?
wouldn't it be possible to launch a dozen or more like the James Web Telescope and put them in a configuration several thousand miles apart in a circular pattern to enhance the resolution?
sure! the james webb cost 10 BILLION DOLLARS! your idea would cost that, times 12. that would be 120 billion dollars. that's about 60 times the national debt of the usa now. hmmm, maybe it could be possible - but how to finance it?
@@JackT1961 maybe so, but the money has to come from somewhere. taxes or donations or a grant. At any rate, there needs to be a cheaper alternative or substitute.
Two other Stars in that system illuminate that planet and are brighter than our moon is in the night sky. Because of that, Proxima B may not have a dark side; not as we know dark.
Espetacular vídeo!!🎉 I would like so much Carl Sagan are alive now for watch this video, he believes in life in another planets on Cosmo!!🙏😌 Thanks a lot, I hope there is life in Próxima B!!🙏🌅🍀🍀 Congratulations!!
A galaxy may possess 10 billion stars. 2 to 3 planets per star, on average, equates to around 20 to 30 billion planets. In 1 galaxy. Out of hundreds of BILLIONS OF GALAXIES that exist.
Up to 200 billion galaxies known to exist. Average of 100 million stars per galaxy. Average of 1 planet per star, currently. You're on the right track but your math is off.
And out of those 10 billion stars, only a small percentage are anything like the sun. Blue giants dont live long enough to give complex life a change to evolve, red dwarfs are too volatile giving out massive flares on a regular basis, effectivly sterilising anything in reach of the radiation. The Hubble's target of finding just 34 'earth like' planets out of a sample of several hundred exo-planets in our immediate galactic neighborhood found exactly zero candidates. 2 were possibles but further research downgraded them. If we'r to find any other living organism out there bigger than a single celled microbe, we'd better use a bigger and more powerful 'net'. Just saying.
If there was intelligent life on a distant planet, not too far from Earth, we would be hearing radio waves coming from it before we would be seeing much higher frequency light waves. I would not be getting all excited just yet.
Radio technology is slowly being phased out on Earth. Eventually we won't put anymore signals out. The same will happen with other advanced civilizations or they just skip radio all together
In the first grade we were asked what would be found on the Moon next year when we land there. Next year was 1969, we Landed, I drew beer cans and a shopping cart!
It could be crystallized structures/mountains or huge veins running through the crust making the artificial lights. It seems to me that if that planet produces that much light from civilization then surely they already know about us, their neighbor.
Did you ever investigate the methods used to measure the distance to stars. There is a "step ladder" of methods. All depends on the validity of the bottom rung. This method is parallax which was for a Euclidean flat space which no one believes anymore. The lines of sight at two times and positions of the most distant star are assumed to be infinite and parallel from one sighting to the next. Now when you look at this geometry they seem to fudge and there are no parallel lines and no valid way of measuring. It may be wishful thinking that we can actually measure how far a star..
Lets not forgot that intelligent life on other planets may have evolved to see at night without the use of any lights. Just cause a planet doesn't have lights at night doesn't necessarily means its doesn't have intelligent lifeforms. They properly just evolved differently.
This reminds me of Optimus Prime in Transformers saying that Cybertron is located in the Alpha Centauri System. But I do think that there is life on Proxima B.
what if alien use technology that we are unavailable to see or detect?? we are always thinking about something similar to us.... why not thinking the opposite????
No, not really! If life evolved on the dark side of a tidally locked world, they most likely would develop some form of bioluminescence, and/or echolocation. With these adaptations, you most likely would not need “artificial lighting.”
@@schulzy1544 they would still need some form of light because owl eyes developed to capture small amounts of light. they use their eyes to spot prey items
its harder to detect life when surface is solid red ice that anything its parent star shine ...it reflect back with false data , but it does have interesting glimmering and shimmering metallic surface during dark side only ..might be ancient materials like gold or something with high value to mine with but its very cold out there , i don't think anything survive when star is very active in that distance
There is technology out there that can travel 50 light years in a matter of days.....with the help of other advance species helping the high upper class humans that's exploring space while we are stuck here wondering if there's life on other planets.
The advantage of going faster then light is that you can see what will happen to your spaceship before it happens thus being able to avoid any obstacles or paradoxes...lol
@@2019inuyasha you clearly don't understand how advance alien technology works especially when it comes to manipulating gravity around a craft which defies gravity itself due to element 115 is a perfect example.
Say where proximity of proximal b is approximately in our cosmos I want to go home .could be volcanoes or few gangsters out having campfires and whiskey
There’s life everywhere every millimetre has some form of life some so small we can’t see we will figure it out one day maybe in a million years but we are destined to experience everything that ever will and can be
There must be millions of habitable planets in milky way alone, so we can hope for finding life in one of it by james webb? If the life in another planet is confimed, that would be the greatest achievement in entire human history. Cograts to James webb to answer human being's longest waited question 'are we alone?'
I know for a fact proximate B Centauri is in fact A habitable planet there is life there and they know that they just don’t want people to know but I know it’s 400 light years away even Gaia talks about this The civilizations there is Taygeta there’s civilizations everywhere even on Venus I just wish that they tell the truth because we already know we know what’s out there The whole universe is filled with life .. I see the lights every time I look up at the stars at night no one pays attention but I do
so on and off the planet we got our own space ships plus the one we live on.+ THE QUIFER-BELT! We got parts and teak specks and our historical record to rejoice too our world possibilities! Space cuzins would respect. where less space stuff and more space cuzziny! 2022ad/I RECON./.
@@laslloofficial2368 are we starting to believe the scientists of nasa now?Were Elisa Tabor of Stanford and Avi Loeb of Harvard very pleased with this presentation you think?
Yes it did get hit by a pebble sized object but no worries. It didn't break the mirror it just threw it out of alignment slightly which is correctable.
There is intelligent life on another planets, but if they have the capability of monitoring human activitys all these thousands of years and our ugly history, they would never want to be in contact with humanity. And I do not blame them one bit!
I agree 100% @Crash Bandicoot, even if they are more advanced than us I'm sure their was a time where their history was just as ugly as ours. It's all in the process of evolving as a species.
@@kennysimms5217 exactly, its the selfish behaviours that cause animals to survive and they pass that along their descendants. We just developed consciousness to understand our natural desires may not be right sometimes
Just imagine what would happen if one of our space telescopes at Proxima B just vanished for a few weeks and our alien neighbors bring it with them to Earth. Everyone is excited for the chance to discover other intelligent life in the universe but what happens when we actually find them and they find us? Hopefully they will be friendly.
We don't have telescopes at Proxima B. We just have them pointed there. The furthest manmade objects from Earth are the Voyager and Pioneer probes, which were launched in the 70's. They're just outside of the solar system.
The power of thought is how interstellar travel is accomplished . Thought waves are infinitely faster than the speed of light because they are already at the intended destination because of connection to the consciousness of the universe. Of course it will be a long time before mankind figures out how to utilize this.
Of course we are not alone... Us, here in earth should have the mind set that we are not alone, and so must be ready for what ever may happen if any of those aliens will reach the earth...
Not being alone has nothing to do with aliens reaching Earth. Not being alone has to do with evolution and statistics, Aliens reaching Earth has to do with good old physics! My guess - we are not alone (life has developed in some/many other places, a few of them might even have developed enough to be experienced from Earth) but there will never be Aliens reaching Earth - space is just mind-blowing vast...
It would take 4 years to get there, traveling at the speed of light. No craft even comes close. A space craft traveling at one hundredth the speed of light - and that would be super fast, it would take 400 years to get there, only to discover luminescent flora on the planet.
image from 0:33 to 0:36 is main city on Proxima B ; Kochar aliens live there under minus 47 Celsius. 27 years ago they had huge tragedy upon high pressured pipes to heat city had exploded ( theirs elderly ones fail frozen in just few hours upon tragedy ). Space engineering society for search of alien life in Universe , needs telescope in zone of Uranus that could magnified 200 million times taken picture , in order to show the artificial lights in habitable zone of Proxima Centauri. Recently they had send S.E.T.I signal 25 times Mir ( Peace ). Kochar aliens life span is 240 years.
Those are not city lights. Alpha centauri has insects that are the size of elephants and these insects are like fireflies and we are seeing them illuminate on the night side of the planet.
6 trillion miles long. Promixa is 4.2 light-years away or 25 trillion miles away from 🌎. So at fastest speed of 24,000 MPH Apollo missions manned. 🤔 Anywhere 100,000+ years. Or if we could do lightspeed 670 million MPH (186,000 miles per second) then one way trip 4.2 years.
If artificial lights were detected and no satellite pollution evidenced, then it could mean only two things: 1) Our cosmic neighbours have entered the post Edison lighting era but not the space age so they must still be in the 1920s equivalent time over there. 2) They evolved in a much more sustainable way and their satellites are being recycled rather efficiently and space pollution is always contained. It means they have a world govt and an efficient and perhaps an authoritarian regime in place to enforce its writ.
authoritarian governments always fail. and miserably so. We have had more then our fair share here. None have ever worked yet. Too much corruption at the top. the idea might be sound to a point. but we are not capable of sustaining it. The max lifespan is one leader. The next will almost certainly abuse the power. If it gets that far. Usually the case has been that the first leader who is given the power is unfit to wield it in the first place. so... doomed from the start. Unfortunately...those that love such governments are gifted with the failings of putting failed and doomed to fail agendas first and so the leader is a complete weakling....the focus on the agenda. Rome was our most successful and the roller coaster ride of ups and downs and total nut jobs with way too much power is more then enough to make any sane person never even consider this sort of government.
Assuming it was actually artificial then yeah, option 1 the Edison era would be best for us. Since that would give us a century and a half advantage. But the best thing would be if there is no intelligent life within a hundred light years. Competition for resources could cause a war that we might not win.
@@jds1275Such a scenario would come with both an opportunity and a threat. Its possible that lifeforms may not be competing for the same resource unless the life is Earth like and human like. This would also give us a new world to establish a second home. But if the search for alien life is to find a planet hospitable enough for humans then it mustn't go beyond 10 light years maximum as its unlikely there can ever be technology good enough to traverse distances beyond this. Perhaps this realisation could induce efforts to terraform proximate planets as that would be more feasible.
Do you think there is life on Proxima B?
Yep just not intelligent... And we can never prove that. The fact that we are concious in relation to that in the universe at all dimensions humans are alone out there in the cosmos as an intelligent race and on top of the spectra for that matter too.
If there is life on Proxima B, it is probably all the deceased comedians from this planet who we all enjoyed, and they are now mooning us. Right in the middle of it is Sam Kinison screaming "CAN YOU SEE US YET?...WE WAXED FOR THIS.
no the signal from 2020 was a message to a spy on earth but they were just traveling trough
they made it sound like they already did.😢
We gonna find out !! It's a jungle out there
Hmm, didn't catch where the James Webb Telescope actually saw any lights on Alpha Centauri. Must just be a rumor hence the name of this Channel.
Right. They are yet to release the official images next month..
aha yep
@@vr_gamer.814 Any guess on what the images might show?
Remember the canals on Mars the only one person saw. Turned out to be at best the product of an optical illusion and an overactive imagination.
My thoughts exactly
So long story short: even if there's as many lights on proxima B as there are on earth we're not going to be able to see it with the James Webb space telescope
damn
@@MCrelationz there's probably life everywhere in the universe, it's just that all light from planets that we can see are from millions of years ago. Humans have only been going for 200,000 years so it's very possible that there are multiple civilizations that are pretty far along or have already collapsed and we won't know because the light that shows us that is still half a million years away
And assuming they have the exact same type of illumination as we do..if there was another civilization out there, what would the chances be of them inventing the same types of artificial lighting? For all we know there may be something far advanced beyond our current LED's (which weren't thought of us a possibility as soon as 20 years ago) or they may be so far behind that they haven't even discovered fire or the wheel? It's almost mind bending to think about but if I'm betting on this I'd say the Earth is such a special place and humans such a special lifeform that the chances of that again, even in a supposedly infinite universe is miniscule
It’s also possible that we’re alone and it’s a big waste of time
@@NikolaiKuznetsov97 even if there's life we're alone anyways, it's impossible to send a ship out to anywhere because the crew would die before reaching the next world. We can't even get along on the Earth we're not going to be able to send a multi-generational rocket out
Why does Humankind automatically think another species requires light to live, or even has to be carbon based? There could literally be two separate species on a tidally locked planet and never the two shall meet. We must always, always, remember to never impose our tunnel vision ideas of what alien life can be composed of and the conditions at which it lives at into our little boxes. Things rarely turn out the way we envision them.
And automatically think that other species live in, or are limited to, our dimension.
Energy could produces light that's why and if a civilization becomes advance they need energy
If you're suggesting they might be silicon based, well, yeah theoretically, but also probably not. Also, light aka electromagnetic radiation is about the easiest signal to detect, that's why we should look for that. You don't want to miss that proverbial low-hanging fruit.
This my friend is soooo true!!!
@@marcosmedina6940 Energy doesn’t necessarily produce light. Dark matter for example is still beyond physicists ability to quantify for that very reason. A tidally locked planet with a dark side could very well have an intelligent life form that uses an energy form totally unknown to us and outside our ability to fathom. In fact, they may live underground and use light as an energy source since it could be more easily directed and controlled in confined spaces. The iterations are too numerous to contemplate.
We aren't a mature enough species to encounter alien lifeforms. We can't even get along with each other.
"Better shoot just in case". I tend to agree with you. If I was an Alien, I'd be darned careful around these "Primitives".
Well aliens should know, not all earthlings are americans
Is getting along with each other even possible when people's lives are on the line?
@@peoplebelievealiensarereal US, Russia, Germany, China allways looking for conflict
Let me guess, your solution to everyone getting along with each other is gun restrictions, vaccines and masks.. hah
Sometimes it's fun to speculate, but real science is not based on rumours. I used to be naive, but no more. I will believe it, when it's confirmed beyond any reasonable doubt.
Welcome to the smart club. Guess work, wild assumption and fantasy is best left to the over-excited dreamers out there who know nothing concrete about alien civilisations, but present their posts as if they were somehow 'facts'. Nobody of sound, logical mind assumes anything until hard evidence proves it.
Agreed 🤙
Really science believes in time travel and it is pure mathematical nonsense. There has never been any observational evidence what so ever it is pure speculation. Thereby making the time paradox also nonsense. But it is treated as fact. There has never been any evidence that the arrow of time goes in any direction but forward. It comes from the idea that if a particle travels both in distance and time right to left forward in time. Then if that particle travels left to right it travels backwards in time. This is mathematical nonsense. A mathematical equation based on a false premise is still false. It would seem that some of our theories are made using the ravens paradox.
You are naive when you believe in traditional "science" and not (oh my)) speculations, real science have much more vast instruments
There's alot of "real science " thats nothing more than speculation and guesstimation!
It may not Proxima B exactly. But life is definitely out there. May be differently civilized or evolved. Why we think civilization should be similar to earthly? Their civilization could be different. May be their body has produce enough bio-lights. They may be flying like our birds. The way of reproduction may be amazingly different to ours. May be no gender differences! Only commonality May be LIFE! It will not necessarily be a repetition of EARTH!
Definetly agree with this.
Lets hope
maybe we'll find some Turians out there :D
If life was able to evolve on the dark side of a tidally locked planet...maybe sight and the need for light is not necessary. Maybe other senses have developed enough to offset sight.
I agree Maybe there's a Lunarians out there
Meanwhile, aliens in proxima B are also receiving light signals from earth
They will be watching the final episodes of the big bang theory right now and are wondering what it means 😉🤣🤣
I'm laughing at this comment because it's so true due to us thinking we're being spied on by UFO's here on earth by their sightings by certain witnesses
'Just 4 light years away' Or 24 trillion miles. No one can wrap their head around just how far that distance is.
If we were able to travel 1 tenth of the speed of light it would take 10 years to travel 1 light year.
And currently we can't even manage 1%.
At 100,000 mph it’d take 27,000 years, and that only gets you to 1 star.
the goverment printed that since covid started...so if they can print that amount in a few years im sure they can figure out how to travel that far in the same amount of time. just use that super printer as the power source!
Because space is simply vast and i think the way to traverse it is through dark matter manipulation which is beyond our understanding and capabilities.
@@IllyrianStrength
"You think" do you really ?! pffft
Just a question but why would a civilisation that evolved on a tidal locked planet that lives on the dark side need artificial lights? Surly they would have evolved in a way that that light was not needed. Using other sensors than sight
I would assume bc life on that planet most likely originated from the day side. If they evolved the ability to create artificial light, that’s probably how they started crossing into the dark side.
Some of the life could've evolved on the day side meaning they had no need to go on the dark side
The answer is we don't really know.
Wouldn't life only be viable in the midnight zone and then maybe they would find out a way to live in the dark side of that world?
@@canadian_american84 not really its likely they would be living on the light side since that side could have water the other side would be too cold for it be there although it might since it has alaska like temperatures
I think there is a University of Tucson on Proxima B.
There are billions of lifeforms on billions of planets at any one given time in the universe’s infinite lifespan.
The universe does not have a infinite lifespan
😄🤪🤣
Prove it, otherwise it's not science. It's fiction.
This is at least one of the best videos about this subject that I have seen! On my channel there are nearly 40 videos of an ion thruster that lifts its power supply against Earth's gravity! It has also carried optional propellant tanks. The craft will be tested in a vacuum soon to demonstrate rapid sustained acceleration, with minimal propellant usage. I hope someone will realize the value of the project for unmanned interstellar probes. The project is progressing rapidly but could be accelerated tremendously with more funds.
Wow. JWST is already detecting stuff before it is even fully operational. Yeah, right.
Thank you so many are brain washed
It is operational.
I just saw a piece about a promising new technique to desalinate sea water. I saw another piece that talked about the greening of the Sahara Desert. These are two very promising techniques that could dramatically affect humanity for the better in the coming decades.
This is unlikely, Proxima B orbits Proxima Centauri very close, so close that it's year lasts a mere 11 days. It's likely the planet has been stripped of an atmosphere.
If the sun is a red dawf with only 12% of our suns mass and proxma B is bigger than the earth it has a chance of having an atmosphere
@@trevorparks7666 You are right, it is a red dwarf star however it is also a very active flare star which means any atmosphere would likely have been stripped over time. Also the planet is tidally locked, so always shows the same side to the star. Doesn't bode well for life.
@@swright8566 true but being 4 million miles (I think it was miles could have been kms) it may still have some but we won't know till they get the new telescopes up.
@@trevorparks7666 We already know Proxima is a flare star due to our observations of it. I'd be more interested in what planets are orbiting Alpha Centauri A and B rather than this one.
If it's year is 11 days it doesn't have intelligent life on it...
I was born before the space age and am 76 now. You know what "we may detect them in the coming decade" sounds like to me? :o(
Keep fighting 💪 Mitch, could definitely see another 30 years if you play your cards right
There is definitely a chance of life on other planets. Hopefully some evidence is found during my lifetime! Thanks to all the technology ♥️
True. Death itself would become so less frightening if we got evidence that life is common in the universe and consciousness won't disappear with us
Perhaps sooner than you think!
I agree with you...but. They are here
Already...I see all the times
Cross the sky....
😂 every generation before you had already said that same thing 🤣
I believe for a fact that life in the galaxy or other galaxies is a guarantee.
_Intelligent_ life however, that is a fluke. It may occur more often than just here, but by accident and probbaly very very rare. No shark, octopus, turtle, every discovered fire, manipulated its environment, it just became more adept at survival in its environment.
A lot goes into "intelligent" life. Opposable thumbs or something similar, a good place to conduct chemical reactions, gaining speech to convey complex ideas, enough hostility and aggression to make a dominant species not just survive but thrive and compete yet social and cooperative enough to build, etc. There are a lot of variables and conditions to be met.
If a civilization lived on tidal locked planet, it would make sense to build cities on the dark side since they would need the light side for vegetation, farms, and plants for oxygen.
I heard some scientist being interviewed and saying that Proxima B is "too close" a target for JWST's capabilities. He sounded like he wasn't sure if he believes it.
Too close to the star (Proxima Centauri) it’s orbiting. Only 5 million miles or so.
@@executivesteps how far away is Europa from Jupiter?
@@SuperExponential Jupiter and Europa have the same “surface” brightness because they’re both illuminated by the Sun 500 million miles away.
Proxima B is a star likely millions of times brighter than any planet orbiting it. That’s the problem - distance AND the intrinsic brightness (luminosity) of the star it’s orbiting.
I find so interesting that those shapes for the new telescopes are exactly the shapes we encounter in the animal/botanic world... James Webb and Luvoir with their hive shape and Habex is just like a gigantic flower. Awesome to see that
How about the fact that our solar system resembles an atom.
@@badmonkey2222 Incredible, isn't it? It also reminds me that hexagonal shaped "hurricane" in Jupiter... Geometric forms are so intriguing
@@shellisonwullian6217 it is incredible as are those perfectly shaped hexagon storms, I think it's actually Saturn though.
@@badmonkey2222 yeah! You're right!
@@badmonkey2222 I said Jupiter 'cause I've watched a video where they also found the similar pattern on this planet in 2019
I love our world 🌎 and our scientists and doctors scholars in todays times this is so amazing
An alien civilization doesn't have to evolve on a planet, it could be colonized from somewhere else.
I imagine that every life form, no matter how alien it may appear to us, will have its own distinct sensory apparatus for organizing its experiences of its planetary world. Its organizing capabilities could run the gamut from simple to very complex. Hope I am around to see!
I don't think I've read a more obvious comment in my life.
@@josephwillis1581 Obvious and nevertheless here stated for your eyes (sensory apparatus) to comment and see.
@@darrinsiberia I would imagine the same. Our organism organizes its experience of the world in a manner that serves our impulses to basic and more complex needs. All measurement is predicated on the same. Perhaps the galaxies we observe are like fish swimming in an endless sea. What do they dream of and what exotic ??? do they see. Perhaps the very dreams we have are but a glimpse of a parallel universe that does not operate by the same laws of physics that operate here. Our scientific instruments are our senses greatly amplified. We can only look at what we see. Beyond that is the Great Mystery that resides both within and beyond all space and time.
@@darrinsiberia It seems the entire universe is varying densities of light with galaxies, and humans flickering but for a moment within an endless void.
... I just hope that I'm the last one they eat...
Yeah. I always believed were not alone. Its more weirder or more "terrifying" if we were alone. But it feels better that its comfirmed. Big W for Jwst
Our fastest space ship would take 60,000 years to go 4 light years.
even if they traveled at light speed take 4 year there and 4 year back
i would not consider our pathetic chemical rockets, used only to launch low earth orbit technology to be a "spacecraft"
@@stephenmartinez1 and what would you suggest or just trying to sound smart , i can do that an call space aliens pathetic flying saucers .
Yeah, the current fastest, but not the maximum of our capability to develop in a couple of years. We refuse to use nuclear on scale, which with some serious funding probably could get it up to at least 10% c.
Not top1 civilization fastest are space whole take travel 60,000 year ,,, about 4,2 light year, ,,,,,,,,,,,, top1 civilization travel speed of light , even UFO ,not to go far away,why? ,, Because: travel by year also,, difficult, problem like : food and drink,,,, other planet advance technology travel 100X than speed of light, 4,2 light year take to go 5 second
Most science fiction movies depict extraterrestrial beings just like us. Human shape might not be what's common out there. Here on Earth life comes in different shapes and forms. Why assume they have to be like us. Human ego has no limits. May some people think they speak perfect English like in the movies. Yes, there's no doubt ingnorant people come in different shapes.
Agreed
Humans don’t exist. Also I met aliens. They have some nice technology. Temporary future time travel, and quantum tunneling faster than light through objects.
There would most likely be a few similarities. Opposable thumbs for grasping , some form of arms and legs , ( a snake can’t build anything for example) stereo front focused vision, reproductive capability… etc
No limits. Your right. But maybe arms feet and a head is just a universal form of life. And everywhere it occurs, it always pops out arms head and feet no matter what. Bcuz that's the best way to do it? Idk
Can you imagine though if they really looked like us and spoke English, I'd be blown away 😂
We have never been alone in the cosmos, we are only just waking up to the fact that life is everywhere out there, I just hope that when we do have first contact they are friendly.
Most past contacts were friendly. We're most ways fragile beings.Exept a few.
Some dimensional beings are invisible to us.Some can see us some can hear or smell us.Some can see & sense emotions about us.
Many strange & weird things are on this planet/planet.✅🤔🙀😂👽🌃
If you mean friendly like humans, were screwed.
We can't know for certain that there is life elsewhere. We have no idea what the probability of abiogenises is. It could be that the probability of abiogenises is so incredibly rare, that it could be 1 in a septillion chance of it repeating elsewhere in the universe over a span of 13.7 billion years and we just got so incredibly lucky. Until we either find life, or figure out how easy or hard abiogenises can occur, we can't know for certain
The universe is ancient, but it's probably logical to surmise that intelligent life is extremely new, perhaps a few million years at the most, so life here would be regarded as very new.
@@rexluminus9867 where n how do you come up with that ? Nothing I've ever heard concerning aliens, ufos , contact , usos , etc has given me the impression of being "good " . Most people are terrified , anxiety levels off the charts....and let's not forget the kidnapping people out of their homes, cars , out hiking men women and children...for hours doing God only knows what , scrambling their brains to try n make em forget . Then you got the animal mutilations that still occur and occur around the world ....and I would bet there are humans that this happens to but gets covered up ......how anyone can think "oh their good ...their gonna save us from ourselves, help us transcend to a better place .....is beyond me . They'll help you make it to another place alright but it won't be a place you want to be !
Bruh, they can't see the lights on proxima B? Why can't the lab boys just raise their render distance?
Heck, the telescope isn’t even operational yet…
It's also not powerful enough to see artificial lights on Proxima b. 😆
Awesome 👍 I love these pictures and commentary
With Proxima B being so close to its star it may have been subjected to increased radiation causing increased chance of life arising along with faster evolution. In addition, being tidally locked it has a much greater range of favorable temperatures to find a goldilocks zone.
Remember it may be a water world where the sun is shielded by water.
congrats on the views bro!🚀
We are searching for extraterrestrial intelligence with a passion because we definitely know that it doesn't exist on our own planet.
This is brilliant 👏
@@royfults5664 Not
Very smart
At least we know there are vast regions on our planet nearly free of it 😉🤣🤣
It may also be the reason why so many people are interested in artificial intelligence.
that's cuz extraterrestrials wouldn't be on our planet because we're terrestrial to our own planet kinda how that works
All tge Science Fiction movies of Outer space like Star Wars and Star Trek proves otherwise..
And how can one distinguish between lightning and vulcanism or Aurora from such a huge distance 🤔
Lighr gives off information on it's source.
They get the light they want to analyse and put it through a prism which breaks the light into the rainbow spectrum 🌈.
This spectrum has dark gaps at specific frequencies that act like fingerprints to particular elements. The light itself contains information about what its source is, as Felipe said.
Also, the opposite is true. If you heat specific elements until they glow, they will emit light at the exact frequencies that were dark on the spectrum absorption analysis!
Thermal imaging allows them to detect the levels that would be aligned with whatever type of illumination if I'm not mistaken
How long does volcanism last? On earth, or in any possible predictions on other bodies out there?
@@uweinhamburg
It depend on the location of the planetary object proximity to its star and the Size of objects that may be in orbit ..
I just hope Proxima-B doesn't have Child Support or IRS non-sense.
if there's artificial light on proxima-b, that means there are more humans. I just hope the women at proxima-b are not stuck up bitchy like the ones we got here on Earth
Didn't watch the vid, just came here to say. . No it didn't . . your all welcome. You no longer need to watch this.
Legend 🙌
Alien: turns on lightbulb
Amogus: we found ‘em
We urbanizing earth to 101%
I guess we should all just be thankful that we are here living in this universe as complex life.
Life (and his karma or destiny) isn´t so easy and beautiful for everyone, especially considering the hard times of humanity, there have been (and there are) so many sufferings, wars, misunderstandings and diseases...
There are two types of people in the world. Ones that think outside the box and ones that don't. I, myself like to think outside the box. What kind of person are you?
wouldn't it be possible to launch a dozen or more like the James Web Telescope and put them in a configuration several thousand miles apart in a circular pattern to enhance the resolution?
sure! the james webb cost 10 BILLION DOLLARS! your idea would cost that, times 12. that would be 120 billion dollars. that's about 60 times the national debt of the usa now. hmmm, maybe it could be possible - but how to finance it?
correction 5 percent of the usa debt, not 60 times.
@@bsteo1731 Money should not be an obstacle if science is to advance
@@JackT1961 maybe so, but the money has to come from somewhere. taxes or donations or a grant. At any rate, there needs to be a cheaper alternative or substitute.
@Pencil Cube Your daddy Elon can’t do this. It’s only his money that would tease any idea of such.
Proxima b is yes, populated. With intelligence. Already landed here. Met the Dogon of Africa. They were aquatic.
I think 🤔 the aquatic beings were from the Sirius system
Two other Stars in that system illuminate that planet and are brighter than our moon is in the night sky. Because of that, Proxima B may not have a dark side; not as we know dark.
But the darker side remains darker and will go from dimly lit to total darkness as it orbits.
Thanks for sharing. New subscriber.
Sounds like either microwaves naturally emitted by its oceans, or lightning storms
Espetacular vídeo!!🎉
I would like so much Carl Sagan are alive now for watch this video, he believes in life in another planets on Cosmo!!🙏😌
Thanks a lot, I hope there is life in Próxima B!!🙏🌅🍀🍀
Congratulations!!
A galaxy may possess 10 billion stars. 2 to 3 planets per star, on average, equates to around 20 to 30 billion planets. In 1 galaxy. Out of hundreds of BILLIONS OF GALAXIES that exist.
Up to 200 billion galaxies known to exist. Average of 100 million stars per galaxy. Average of 1 planet per star, currently. You're on the right track but your math is off.
@@ProMWM
"Up to"...
"Average"......
What "math" are you using...?
Possible probability....!?
@@nicolasrose3064 Look up the numbers I quoted and you'll get your own answer. Do the work, I'm not doing it for you.
And out of those 10 billion stars, only a small percentage are anything like the sun. Blue giants dont live long enough to give complex life a change to evolve, red dwarfs are too volatile giving out massive flares on a regular basis, effectivly sterilising anything in reach of the radiation. The Hubble's target of finding just 34 'earth like' planets out of a sample of several hundred exo-planets in our immediate galactic neighborhood found exactly zero candidates. 2 were possibles but further research downgraded them. If we'r to find any other living organism out there bigger than a single celled microbe, we'd better use a bigger and more powerful 'net'. Just saying.
Good information.
Thank you
What if other life forms don't need light at night? Maybe they see in infrared? Or another light wave we're not even aware of?
I hate false advertising
If there was intelligent life on a distant planet, not too far from Earth, we would be hearing radio waves coming from it before we would be seeing much higher frequency light waves. I would not be getting all excited just yet.
that's assuming anyone other than ourselves use radio technology
There could also be disturbances and distortions on the radio waves going to earth. Frankly if there is any it might not be directed at earth anyways.
Radio technology is slowly being phased out on Earth. Eventually we won't put anymore signals out. The same will happen with other advanced civilizations or they just skip radio all together
In the first grade we were asked what would be found on the Moon next year when we land there. Next year was 1969, we Landed, I drew beer cans and a shopping cart!
It could be crystallized structures/mountains or huge veins running through the crust making the artificial lights.
It seems to me that if that planet produces that much light from civilization then surely they already know about us, their neighbor.
Funnily enough if they're watching us right now they will be seeing us in 2018
Did you ever investigate the methods used to measure the distance to stars. There is a "step ladder" of methods. All depends on the validity of the bottom rung. This method is parallax which was for a Euclidean flat space which no one believes anymore. The lines of sight at two times and positions of the most distant star are assumed to be infinite and parallel from one sighting to the next. Now when you look at this geometry they seem to fudge and there are no parallel lines and no valid way of measuring. It may be wishful thinking that we can actually measure how far a star..
Wait, how can we see stars or galaxies for that matter that is far in the universe but not if there is any lights on proxima B?
yeah for real like why dont we zoom in lol and research this
I'm assuming because artificial light is much harder to detect than starlight? Not sure but good question.
You didn’t watch the whole video…artificial light isn’t bright enough for the James Webb to detect it good enough.
Lets not forgot that intelligent life on other planets may have evolved to see at night without the use of any lights. Just cause a planet doesn't have lights at night doesn't necessarily means its doesn't have intelligent lifeforms. They properly just evolved differently.
like they can have night vision in their vision and can see IR LIGHT?
This reminds me of Optimus Prime in Transformers saying that Cybertron is located in the Alpha Centauri System. But I do think that there is life on Proxima B.
Exactly! I’m so thankful someone else knows the Transformers lore that well 😁😁😁 from nerd to nerd
Very interesting info. Keep your fingers crossed . Is there life on Proxima B?? Is there technology is advanced?
Proxima B is having a party and we’re just being nosey neighbors
what if alien use technology that we are unavailable to see or detect?? we are always thinking about something similar to us.... why not thinking the opposite????
@spacerumor what is your source?
Space rumor: "trust me bro!"
No, not really! If life evolved on the dark side of a tidally locked world, they most likely would develop some form of bioluminescence, and/or echolocation. With these adaptations, you most likely would not need “artificial lighting.”
I was going to comment this but you beat me to it.
@@schulzy1544 Thanks. I’ll share the stage with you.
really? you ever heard of owls? they hunt at night and have neither of those features
@@smyers820gm but they still don't need artificial lighting
@@schulzy1544 they would still need some form of light because owl eyes developed to capture small amounts of light. they use their eyes to spot prey items
its harder to detect life when surface is solid red ice that anything its parent star shine ...it reflect back with false data , but it does have interesting glimmering and shimmering metallic surface during dark side only ..might be ancient materials like gold or something with high value to mine with but its very cold out there , i don't think anything survive when star is very active in that distance
There is technology out there that can travel 50 light years in a matter of days.....with the help of other advance species helping the high upper class humans that's exploring space while we are stuck here wondering if there's life on other planets.
The advantage of going faster then light is that you can see what will happen to your spaceship before it happens thus being able to avoid any obstacles or paradoxes...lol
@@2019inuyasha you clearly don't understand how advance alien technology works especially when it comes to manipulating gravity around a craft which defies gravity itself due to element 115 is a perfect example.
@@goldden1427 sooo u know all about aliens spaceships, from the college of Hollywood movies? 😂😂
Highly compelling !
Say where proximity of proximal b is approximately in our cosmos I want to go home .could be volcanoes or few gangsters out having campfires and whiskey
@AfterBurnett lol ok I'm not the only one I thought I missed something b/c it got a heart from the channel creator but good WHAT!?
“We could probably see lights on Proxima B” There’s your summary for the video.
Keep messing around up there and you all are going to see something that you really wish you would have stayed where you are to inhabit.
what if the whips on some planet are night and sleep during the day and remarkable night vision and other senses. What will the lights do to them???
si tuvieran traducido al español o Castell tendrían más suscriptores..igual me suscribo esperando que pongan traducción al castellano..saludos
I hope no alien civilization is expecting Humanity to help them because we're pretty f***** up ourselves
There’s life everywhere every millimetre has some form of life some so small we can’t see we will figure it out one day maybe in a million years but we are destined to experience everything that ever will and can be
Let's not be a conquering species unless we have to , space travel and jazz doesn't need to be extinction level
There must be millions of habitable planets in milky way alone, so we can hope for finding life in one of it by james webb? If the life in another planet is confimed, that would be the greatest achievement in entire human history. Cograts to James webb to answer human being's longest waited question 'are we alone?'
Thank you thank you ☺️
I wonder if it will happen in the 10 years that it's active. Guess we will find out in 10 years!
JWST does not begin to have either the light sensitivity or the angular resolution to be able to detect artificial lighting on Proxima B
I know for a fact proximate B Centauri is in fact A habitable planet there is life there and they know that they just don’t want people to know but I know it’s 400 light years away even Gaia talks about this The civilizations there is Taygeta there’s civilizations everywhere even on Venus I just wish that they tell the truth because we already know we know what’s out there The whole universe is filled with life .. I see the lights every time I look up at the stars at night no one pays attention but I do
Looney Tunes!
so on and off the planet we got our own space ships plus the one we live on.+ THE QUIFER-BELT! We got parts and teak specks and our historical record to rejoice too our world possibilities! Space cuzins would respect. where less space stuff and more space cuzziny! 2022ad/I RECON./.
Hasn't the James Webb telescope just been hit by a meteor by the way? I think his damaged mirror is seeing stars now.
Like it 😂🤣🤣
Nasa Said it didn't cause anything too significant
Yes. But … NASA says this accident does not affect for fully functional of telescope .
@@laslloofficial2368 are we starting to believe the scientists of nasa now?Were Elisa Tabor of Stanford and Avi Loeb of Harvard very pleased with this presentation you think?
Yes it did get hit by a pebble sized object but no worries. It didn't break the mirror it just threw it out of alignment slightly which is correctable.
Yes, we are enjoying raves here on Proxima B. Please do not disturb!!!
It doesn't take you people long to slice up the baloney and toss it around, does it?
This day has come! FINALLY JWST sees “aliens!”
There is intelligent life on another planets, but if they have the capability of monitoring human activitys all these thousands of years and our ugly history, they would never want to be in contact with humanity. And I do not blame them one bit!
Animals behave the same way, why are you assuming these aliens would be perfectly morally aswell?
I agree 100% @Crash Bandicoot, even if they are more advanced than us I'm sure their was a time where their history was just as ugly as ours. It's all in the process of evolving as a species.
@@kennysimms5217 exactly, its the selfish behaviours that cause animals to survive and they pass that along their descendants.
We just developed consciousness to understand our natural desires may not be right sometimes
Just imagine what would happen if one of our space telescopes at Proxima B just vanished for a few weeks and our alien neighbors bring it with them to Earth. Everyone is excited for the chance to discover other intelligent life in the universe but what happens when we actually find them and they find us? Hopefully they will be friendly.
We don't have telescopes at Proxima B. We just have them pointed there.
The furthest manmade objects from Earth are the Voyager and Pioneer probes, which were launched in the 70's. They're just outside of the solar system.
The power of thought is how interstellar travel is accomplished . Thought waves are infinitely faster than the speed of light because they are already at the intended destination because of connection to the consciousness of the universe. Of course it will be a long time before mankind figures out how to utilize this.
Very interesting!
Nicely put great love it I watched it over and over thank you
Of course we are not alone... Us, here in earth should have the mind set that we are not alone, and so must be ready for what ever may happen if any of those aliens will reach the earth...
Yess
Not being alone has nothing to do with aliens reaching Earth. Not being alone has to do with evolution and statistics, Aliens reaching Earth has to do with good old physics!
My guess - we are not alone (life has developed in some/many other places, a few of them might even have developed enough to be experienced from Earth) but there will never be Aliens reaching Earth - space is just mind-blowing vast...
what timestamp in the video does he say the telescope has detected artificial lights??
It would take 4 years to get there, traveling at the speed of light. No craft even comes close. A space craft traveling at one hundredth the speed of light - and that would be super fast, it would take 400 years to get there, only to discover luminescent flora on the planet.
image from 0:33 to 0:36 is main city on Proxima B ; Kochar aliens live there under minus 47 Celsius. 27 years ago they had huge tragedy upon high pressured pipes to heat city had exploded ( theirs elderly ones fail frozen in just few hours upon tragedy ). Space engineering society for search of alien life in Universe , needs telescope in zone of Uranus that could magnified 200 million times taken picture , in order to show the artificial lights in habitable zone of Proxima Centauri. Recently they had send S.E.T.I signal 25 times Mir ( Peace ). Kochar aliens life span is 240 years.
I wasn’t aware NASA had received images yet. NASA’s website says it 16 days
Those are not city lights.
Alpha centauri has insects that are the size of elephants and these insects are like fireflies and we are seeing them illuminate on the night side of the planet.
No they are animals with 6 legs.
Foi um avanço nesta construção deste James Web. Para esclarecer o nosso universo.
How far is a light year? How long would it take to get to Proxima?
6 trillion miles long. Promixa is 4.2 light-years away or 25 trillion miles away from 🌎. So at fastest speed of 24,000 MPH Apollo missions manned. 🤔 Anywhere 100,000+ years. Or if we could do lightspeed 670 million MPH (186,000 miles per second) then one way trip 4.2 years.
@@darkmatter1152 thank you I never could figure that out. To damn long..
@@thomasanglin1751 star trek warp 9 tng would take 1 day to get there
@@thomasanglin1751 warp 9.9 in 1 second. 9.9 is 21,400c or 4 billion miles per second. But this will never happen.
@@darkmatter1152 make it so
I find it hard to believe that a planet that faces one side to it's star at all times would have advanced life.
I find it hard to believe that you are advanced life
Bafoone!
Hi, so what type of artificial light is that. In which planet was there in
If artificial lights were detected and no satellite pollution evidenced, then it could mean only two things: 1) Our cosmic neighbours have entered the post Edison lighting era but not the space age so they must still be in the 1920s equivalent time over there. 2) They evolved in a much more sustainable way and their satellites are being recycled rather efficiently and space pollution is always contained. It means they have a world govt and an efficient and perhaps an authoritarian regime in place to enforce its writ.
authoritarian governments always fail. and miserably so. We have had more then our fair share here. None have ever worked yet. Too much corruption at the top.
the idea might be sound to a point. but we are not capable of sustaining it. The max lifespan is one leader. The next will almost certainly abuse the power. If it gets that far. Usually the case has been that the first leader who is given the power is unfit to wield it in the first place. so... doomed from the start. Unfortunately...those that love such governments are gifted with the failings of putting failed and doomed to fail agendas first and so the leader is a complete weakling....the focus on the agenda.
Rome was our most successful and the roller coaster ride of ups and downs and total nut jobs with way too much power is more then enough to make any sane person never even consider this sort of government.
@@MPlain I meant like Singapore and not China.
Assuming it was actually artificial then yeah, option 1 the Edison era would be best for us. Since that would give us a century and a half advantage. But the best thing would be if there is no intelligent life within a hundred light years. Competition for resources could cause a war that we might not win.
@@jds1275Such a scenario would come with both an opportunity and a threat. Its possible that lifeforms may not be competing for the same resource unless the life is Earth like and human like. This would also give us a new world to establish a second home. But if the search for alien life is to find a planet hospitable enough for humans then it mustn't go beyond 10 light years maximum as its unlikely there can ever be technology good enough to traverse distances beyond this. Perhaps this realisation could induce efforts to terraform proximate planets as that would be more feasible.
What we see is the past. might be just as advanced as us or even more advanced.
duh. no planet is empty dude. wake up.
This information has been deemed Classified and nothing leaves this building.
only if the building is designed to be self-sufficient and sealed up like a spaceship itself, because this story is CRAP.
Display from Jame's web Ursa major and pole star,out of curiosity