SETI public: Galactic Gradients, Postbiological Evolution and the Apparent Failure of SETI

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Tue Jun 07 2005 - 07:52:48 PDT

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    Paper: astro-ph/0506110
    Date: Mon, 6 Jun 2005 14:10:44 GMT (77kb)

    Title: Galactic Gradients, Postbiological Evolution and the Apparent Failure
    of
      SETI

    Authors: Milan M. Cirkovic and Robert J. Bradbury
    Comments: 30 pages, 2 figures
    \\

      Motivated by recent developments impacting our view of Fermi's paradox
    (absence of extraterrestrials and their manifestations from our past light
    cone), we suggest a reassessment of the problem itself, as well as of
    strategies employed by SETI projects so far. The need for such reevaluation
    is
    fueled not only by the failure of searches thus far, but also by great
    advances
    recently made in astrophysics, astrobiology, computer science and future
    studies, which have remained largely ignored in SETI practice. As an example
    of
    the new approach, we consider the effects of the observed metallicity and
    temperature gradients in the Milky Way on the spatial distribution of
    hypothetical advanced extraterrestrial intelligent communities. While,
    obviously, properties of such communities and their sociological and
    technological preferences are entirely unknown, we assume that (1) they
    operate
    in agreement with the known laws of physics, and (2) that at some point they
    typically become motivated by a meta-principle embodying the central role of
    information-processing; a prototype of the latter is the recently suggested
    Intelligence Principle of Steven J. Dick. There are specific conclusions of
    practical interest to be drawn from coupling of these reasonable assumptions
    with the astrophysical and astrochemical structure of the Galaxy. In
    particular, we suggest that the outer regions of the Galactic disk are most
    likely locations for advanced SETI targets, and that intelligent communities
    will tend to migrate outward through the Galaxy as their capacities of
    information-processing increase, for both thermodynamical and astrochemical
    reasons. This can also be regarded as a possible generalization of the
    Galactic
    Habitable Zone, concept currently much investigated in astrobiology.

    \\ ( http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0506110 , 78kb)


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