Astrobiology Adventures: Exploring Life Beyond Earth

Astrobiology Adventures: Exploring Life Beyond Earth

Astrobiology: The Search for Life Beyond Earth In this special edition of Space Nuts, hosts Andrew Dunkley and Professor Jonti Horner delve into the captivating field of astrobiology. With Professor Fred Watson away, Jonty brings his expertise to explore the complexities of life beyond our planet, the conditions necessary for its existence, and the ongoing quest to find it.
Episode Highlights:
The Evolution of Exoplanet Discovery: Andrew and Jonty discuss the advancements in technology that have allowed astronomers to discover thousands of exoplanets, with a particular focus on Earth-like planets that could potentially harbour life.
The Challenges of Finding Life: The hosts address the difficulties in the search for extraterrestrial life, including the implications of the absence of evidence and the complexities of distinguishing between life forms.
Life in Our Solar System: Jonty shares insights on why we might find life within our solar system, particularly on Mars and the icy moons of the outer planets, and how robotic exploration is key to this search.
Defining Habitable Zones: The conversation shifts to the criteria that define a habitable zone around stars and the importance of factors such as stellar type, distance, and planetary characteristics in the search for life.
Philosophical Implications: The hosts ponder the philosophical questions surrounding the existence of life and the potential for advanced civilisations, and whether humanity is prepared for contact with extraterrestrial intelligence.

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Stay curious, keep looking up, and join us next time for more stellar insights and cosmic wonders. Until then, clear skies and happy stargazing.

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Chapters:
- Introduction to Astrobiology
- Technological Advances in Exoplanet Discovery
- Searching for Life in Our Solar System
- Defining Habitable Zones and Their Importance
- The Philosophical Questions of Extraterrestrial Life


00:00:00 --> 00:00:00 Jonti Horner: Hi there.

00:00:00 --> 00:00:02 Andrew Dunkley: Thanks for joining us again. This is Space

00:00:02 --> 00:00:05 Nuts, where we talk astronomy and space

00:00:06 --> 00:00:08 science. And my name is Andrew Dunkley, your

00:00:08 --> 00:00:10 host. Great to have your company. Now,

00:00:10 --> 00:00:12 normally I'd be joined by Professor

00:00:12 --> 00:00:14 Fred Watson Watson, but he is away, uh,

00:00:14 --> 00:00:17 visiting family at the moment. And because he

00:00:17 --> 00:00:19 was going to be away and then I'm going to be

00:00:19 --> 00:00:21 away and we tried to cram episodes in and,

00:00:21 --> 00:00:24 uh, we just couldn't do enough in the amount

00:00:24 --> 00:00:26 of time we had. Uh, we invited Professor

00:00:26 --> 00:00:29 Jonty Horner to join us and we're, uh, going

00:00:29 --> 00:00:30 to do some specials. You might have heard the

00:00:30 --> 00:00:33 last one, uh, which was very engaging

00:00:33 --> 00:00:36 and interesting and fascinating and long. Uh,

00:00:36 --> 00:00:39 this time we, we're going down a different

00:00:39 --> 00:00:40 road. We're going to focus the whole

00:00:40 --> 00:00:41 programme on

00:00:41 --> 00:00:44 astrobiology. Strap in.

00:00:44 --> 00:00:47 We'll do that right now. 15 seconds.

00:00:47 --> 00:00:49 Guidance is internal. 10,

00:00:50 --> 00:00:52 9. Ignition sequence.

00:00:52 --> 00:00:55 Jonti Horner: Star. Space nuts. 5, 4, 3, 2.

00:00:55 --> 00:00:58 Andrew Dunkley: 1. 2, 3, 4, 5, 5, 4, 3,

00:00:58 --> 00:00:58 2, 1.

00:00:58 --> 00:01:00 Jonti Horner: Space nuts.

00:01:00 --> 00:01:02 Andrew Dunkley: Astronauts report it feels good. And here he

00:01:02 --> 00:01:05 is again, professor of astrophysics at the

00:01:05 --> 00:01:07 University of Southern Queensland, Johnty

00:01:07 --> 00:01:09 Horner. G', day, Johnty G'.

00:01:09 --> 00:01:09 Jonti Horner: Day. How are you going?

00:01:09 --> 00:01:11 Andrew Dunkley: I'm well. Good to see you again.

00:01:12 --> 00:01:14 And, uh, we've got a lot to talk about, so I

00:01:14 --> 00:01:16 think we're going to just dive on in.

00:01:16 --> 00:01:19 Now, in preparation for this astrobiology

00:01:19 --> 00:01:21 chat, you sent me a paper that you wrote,

00:01:22 --> 00:01:24 uh, and published on the Arxiv website.

00:01:25 --> 00:01:28 Uh, it's, um, ancient.

00:01:28 --> 00:01:31 Yeah, it's, it's coming up on 16

00:01:31 --> 00:01:33 years since you wrote that. But one of the

00:01:33 --> 00:01:36 interesting parts was, um, look, it's

00:01:36 --> 00:01:38 been a couple of decades now that we've been

00:01:38 --> 00:01:40 finding exoplanets. And as technology

00:01:40 --> 00:01:43 improves, it's only a matter of time before

00:01:43 --> 00:01:45 we start finding Earth like planets. And

00:01:45 --> 00:01:48 that's really going to make the search for

00:01:48 --> 00:01:51 life beyond our solar system really,

00:01:51 --> 00:01:54 really interesting. So those 16 years have

00:01:54 --> 00:01:55 passed. Have we got the. Have we got the

00:01:55 --> 00:01:57 equipment yet? I suspect we have.

00:01:58 --> 00:02:00 Jonti Horner: It depends where you're looking, I think. I

00:02:00 --> 00:02:02 mean in terms of looking at the planet. Round

00:02:02 --> 00:02:05 of the stars. We can now learn a lot more

00:02:05 --> 00:02:07 about them than we could 16 years ago when I

00:02:07 --> 00:02:10 wrote the paper, that particular paper. But

00:02:10 --> 00:02:12 we're still not there yet. And it's a

00:02:12 --> 00:02:15 perpetual thing. No matter how hard you work,

00:02:15 --> 00:02:17 there's always more to do. The other thing

00:02:17 --> 00:02:19 that goes along with it, which I think is

00:02:19 --> 00:02:21 worth saying right up at the very start, is,

00:02:21 --> 00:02:24 uh, searching fly false worries going to be

00:02:24 --> 00:02:25 one of the hardest things we've ever done.

00:02:26 --> 00:02:28 And, um, absence of evidence is not

00:02:28 --> 00:02:31 necessarily evidence of absence.

00:02:31 --> 00:02:34 What I mean by that is we could, in a

00:02:34 --> 00:02:36 remarkable turn of events in the next few

00:02:36 --> 00:02:38 months, find life elsewhere. You know, that's

00:02:38 --> 00:02:40 kind of the ultimate extreme, soonest

00:02:40 --> 00:02:43 possible. Um, very unlikely to happen.

00:02:43 --> 00:02:45 Alternatively, we might still be looking in a

00:02:45 --> 00:02:48 century. If we're still looking in a century.

00:02:49 --> 00:02:51 That doesn't mean that there isn't any life

00:02:51 --> 00:02:53 out out there, but what it will suggest

00:02:53 --> 00:02:56 to us is that life is relatively scarce.

00:02:56 --> 00:02:59 So to me, the sooner we find life elsewhere,

00:03:00 --> 00:03:02 that 8 will be awesome. Because, hey, look,

00:03:02 --> 00:03:03 we found life elsewhere, and we've answered

00:03:03 --> 00:03:06 the ultimate question, are we alone? But the

00:03:06 --> 00:03:07 sooner we find life elsewhere, the other

00:03:07 --> 00:03:09 thing it's telling us is that life must be

00:03:09 --> 00:03:11 fairly common in the universe. The scarcer

00:03:11 --> 00:03:14 life is, the harder it will be to find, and

00:03:14 --> 00:03:16 therefore the longer it will take us to find.

00:03:16 --> 00:03:18 And now the ultimate extreme of that is that,

00:03:19 --> 00:03:20 uh, this is the only place that there is

00:03:20 --> 00:03:23 life. And it'll be very hard

00:03:23 --> 00:03:26 to conclude that even if we were talking

00:03:26 --> 00:03:28 through a time warp, in 10 years, when

00:03:28 --> 00:03:30 humanity is taking its fledgling steps into

00:03:30 --> 00:03:33 the galaxy or whatever, if we haven't found

00:03:33 --> 00:03:35 life by then, we'll be confident that life is

00:03:35 --> 00:03:38 very rare and very precious. That doesn't

00:03:38 --> 00:03:40 mean that there is not life somewhere else in

00:03:40 --> 00:03:42 the universe. And it's one of the challenges

00:03:42 --> 00:03:44 with this. I would like to think that we'll

00:03:44 --> 00:03:45 find the answer to that question in our

00:03:45 --> 00:03:48 lifetime. But the only way we'll get an

00:03:48 --> 00:03:49 answer to the question, are we alone, um,

00:03:50 --> 00:03:52 within our lifetime? As if the answer is no,

00:03:52 --> 00:03:54 if that answer is that there is life

00:03:54 --> 00:03:56 elsewhere. And this is one of the big,

00:03:57 --> 00:03:59 really, really big open questions for

00:03:59 --> 00:04:01 humanity, open questions for science. You

00:04:01 --> 00:04:03 know, when I was a kid, when you were a kid,

00:04:03 --> 00:04:05 one of the big questions was, is the solar

00:04:05 --> 00:04:07 system unique? Or are there planets around

00:04:07 --> 00:04:09 other stars? And we'll talk about that more

00:04:09 --> 00:04:12 in the next episode. But there is nobody

00:04:12 --> 00:04:15 under the age of 30, 31 alive on

00:04:15 --> 00:04:16 this planet that grew up in that shared

00:04:16 --> 00:04:18 universe with you and I. So that fundamental

00:04:18 --> 00:04:21 question got answered and answered in ab.

00:04:22 --> 00:04:24 And answering that question is the first real

00:04:24 --> 00:04:26 step to say, is there life elsewhere

00:04:26 --> 00:04:29 beyond the solar system? Because in order to

00:04:29 --> 00:04:32 find life beyond the solar system, we first

00:04:32 --> 00:04:33 need to know that there's somewhere that life

00:04:33 --> 00:04:36 could exist. The question of life in the

00:04:36 --> 00:04:37 solar system is a different one. And that's

00:04:37 --> 00:04:39 all part of astrobiology. So if you bundle

00:04:39 --> 00:04:42 all of this together, that question of how we

00:04:42 --> 00:04:44 alone, um, is there life elsewhere? Which

00:04:44 --> 00:04:46 brings with it Questions like, what is the

00:04:46 --> 00:04:48 origin of life, why are we here? How did life

00:04:48 --> 00:04:50 begin, how did it get established, what are

00:04:50 --> 00:04:53 the processes needed? Everything like that,

00:04:53 --> 00:04:54 yeah, is what gets bundled in, in

00:04:54 --> 00:04:57 astrobiology. And astrobiology is a very,

00:04:57 --> 00:05:00 very weird science. I know certainly early in

00:05:00 --> 00:05:02 my career, a lot of older scientists viewed

00:05:02 --> 00:05:05 astrobiology in a similar way to the way a

00:05:05 --> 00:05:07 lot of astronomers view astrology almost. You

00:05:07 --> 00:05:09 know, they viewed it as being speculation,

00:05:09 --> 00:05:12 fiction and hook, you know, total bogus waste

00:05:12 --> 00:05:15 of time stuff. But it really isn't.

00:05:16 --> 00:05:18 Yeah, but one of the real challenges is, uh,

00:05:18 --> 00:05:20 it's not a question that one single

00:05:20 --> 00:05:22 discipline on its own can answer. Right. It's

00:05:22 --> 00:05:24 not like in astronomy, you, you're studying

00:05:24 --> 00:05:27 how, so you talk to astronomers in

00:05:27 --> 00:05:30 astrobiology, if we're looking at everything

00:05:30 --> 00:05:33 to do with life, astronomers like myself

00:05:33 --> 00:05:35 can't do it on their own, biologists can't do

00:05:35 --> 00:05:38 it on their own. You need geophysicists, you

00:05:38 --> 00:05:41 need chemists, you need every area of human

00:05:41 --> 00:05:43 scientific endeavour to come together.

00:05:43 --> 00:05:45 Because as scientists, our knowledge is

00:05:45 --> 00:05:47 somewhat siloed. I think I've said in

00:05:47 --> 00:05:49 previous episodes, the further you go away

00:05:49 --> 00:05:51 from what your speciality is, the more out of

00:05:51 --> 00:05:53 debt and the more superficial your knowledge

00:05:53 --> 00:05:55 is. So I always view my knowledge as being

00:05:55 --> 00:05:57 almost like a Christmas tree shape. I've got

00:05:57 --> 00:05:59 a lot of knowledge about a very narrow area

00:05:59 --> 00:06:01 at the top. And the further you go from that

00:06:01 --> 00:06:03 area, the less knowledge I have, but the

00:06:03 --> 00:06:05 broader my knowledge base gets. And I think

00:06:05 --> 00:06:07 every human's like that. And um, you can

00:06:07 --> 00:06:09 almost imagine that if you're trying to

00:06:09 --> 00:06:11 answer the question of what you need for

00:06:11 --> 00:06:13 life, where we should look, which, what we'll

00:06:13 --> 00:06:15 talk about a lot today. You need a level

00:06:15 --> 00:06:17 that's above a certain point on that

00:06:17 --> 00:06:18 Christmas tree of knowledge to be able to

00:06:18 --> 00:06:20 contribute to that from a scientific

00:06:20 --> 00:06:23 advancement point of view. And the area

00:06:23 --> 00:06:25 that you can cover yourself is generally

00:06:25 --> 00:06:26 fairly small. There's a lot of knowledge that

00:06:26 --> 00:06:29 is needed that is outside your silo.

00:06:29 --> 00:06:31 And so that's where the interdisciplinary

00:06:31 --> 00:06:34 nature comes in. No one discipline can answer

00:06:34 --> 00:06:36 it their own. And that means astrobiology

00:06:36 --> 00:06:39 conferences tend to be mind bogglingly

00:06:39 --> 00:06:41 bonkers. And you get people from very

00:06:41 --> 00:06:43 different disciplines along

00:06:44 --> 00:06:46 and you learn a lot that updates your

00:06:46 --> 00:06:48 knowledge from when you went to high school.

00:06:48 --> 00:06:50 You also learn a lot that isn't about the

00:06:50 --> 00:06:52 science, but is about the scientists.

00:06:53 --> 00:06:54 And it's really interesting because we all

00:06:54 --> 00:06:56 think we're individuals. It's like that Monty

00:06:56 --> 00:06:57 Python thing, isn't it? We're all individuals

00:06:57 --> 00:06:59 and there's a Voice at the back that goes,

00:06:59 --> 00:07:01 I'm not, I'm not. Yeah, it's a bit like that.

00:07:01 --> 00:07:03 Uh, we all think, we're all individuals and

00:07:03 --> 00:07:05 we're very unique in the way we think and the

00:07:05 --> 00:07:07 way we present. But when you go to one of

00:07:07 --> 00:07:08 these conferences, that's so

00:07:08 --> 00:07:10 multidisciplinary. The different

00:07:10 --> 00:07:13 disciplines present in different ways to one

00:07:13 --> 00:07:14 another. But within the discipline there are

00:07:14 --> 00:07:16 similarities, you know. So if you see the

00:07:16 --> 00:07:19 talks I give, I have beautiful pictures and

00:07:19 --> 00:07:21 bright text, white or yellow on them, limited

00:07:21 --> 00:07:23 text, usually a dark background. And that's

00:07:23 --> 00:07:26 really common for astronomers. You go to a

00:07:26 --> 00:07:29 talk by a kind of plate tectonics person

00:07:29 --> 00:07:31 and suddenly you've got this mishmash of

00:07:31 --> 00:07:34 colours on a total different background where

00:07:34 --> 00:07:36 there's a bit more text. But the colour

00:07:36 --> 00:07:39 schemes are a bit, to me, kind of psychedelic

00:07:39 --> 00:07:40 and like something you'd see out of a 1970s

00:07:40 --> 00:07:43 cartoon, you know, because they're used to

00:07:43 --> 00:07:44 working with these geological maps that, uh,

00:07:45 --> 00:07:47 um, have a very different colour palette and

00:07:47 --> 00:07:49 sensibility, I think. And then you get talks

00:07:49 --> 00:07:51 from the biologists where they've got the

00:07:51 --> 00:07:53 name of one bacterium and it fills half of

00:07:53 --> 00:07:55 the page because it's such a lengthy

00:07:55 --> 00:07:56 scientific name. And they've got loads of

00:07:56 --> 00:07:59 texts. And so you learn a lot about how

00:08:00 --> 00:08:02 what you study at university and what

00:08:02 --> 00:08:05 discipline you go into trains you to

00:08:05 --> 00:08:08 think and transit to problem solve. Because

00:08:08 --> 00:08:10 it trains you in a lot of different ways,

00:08:10 --> 00:08:12 essentially, programmes, people. And, um, you

00:08:12 --> 00:08:14 know, I find that side of things really

00:08:14 --> 00:08:16 fascinating because it's a good way to learn

00:08:16 --> 00:08:18 to improve your communication skills. And you

00:08:18 --> 00:08:20 also pick up all this abundance of,

00:08:21 --> 00:08:23 wow, I never knew that, you know. And that's

00:08:23 --> 00:08:26 what we need if we are to answer questions

00:08:26 --> 00:08:28 like, how did life begin? Where did life come

00:08:28 --> 00:08:30 from? Are we alone? Um, yeah.

00:08:30 --> 00:08:32 Andrew Dunkley: And that's really an interesting question

00:08:32 --> 00:08:35 because, uh, it could be life

00:08:35 --> 00:08:36 not as we know it.

00:08:36 --> 00:08:38 Like we, you know, we're assuming carbon

00:08:38 --> 00:08:41 based life forms, but there could be life

00:08:41 --> 00:08:43 forms that have been created out of a

00:08:43 --> 00:08:45 completely different soup mix. Two, uh,

00:08:45 --> 00:08:47 things I want to get out of the way quickly.

00:08:47 --> 00:08:50 The Drake Equation, which was, uh, created

00:08:50 --> 00:08:53 to try and assess how much intelligent

00:08:53 --> 00:08:56 life that was able to communicate existed in

00:08:56 --> 00:08:57 the universe. And the answer is still one.

00:08:58 --> 00:09:01 And the Fermi paradox, which says, you know,

00:09:01 --> 00:09:04 um, that statistically there's a

00:09:04 --> 00:09:06 high probability of extraterrestrial life.

00:09:07 --> 00:09:09 So where is everybody? And

00:09:09 --> 00:09:12 that's what astrobiology is really, isn't it?

00:09:12 --> 00:09:15 Where is everybody? And. And will they be

00:09:15 --> 00:09:17 people or will they be microbes?

00:09:17 --> 00:09:20 And I suppose my first question to you

00:09:20 --> 00:09:23 is, uh, you're talking about finding life

00:09:23 --> 00:09:25 outside the solar system. Aren't we likely

00:09:25 --> 00:09:28 to find it first within the solar system?

00:09:29 --> 00:09:31 Jonti Horner: So that's a really good question. I was going

00:09:31 --> 00:09:32 to talk about that a bit as well, because I

00:09:32 --> 00:09:35 think there are two different places.

00:09:35 --> 00:09:37 In a broad sense, we're looking for life

00:09:37 --> 00:09:40 elsewhere. One is in the

00:09:40 --> 00:09:42 outer solar system or on Mars, you know, in

00:09:42 --> 00:09:44 our solar system, on one of the planets or,

00:09:44 --> 00:09:46 uh, on the icy objects. And the other is

00:09:46 --> 00:09:48 beyond the solar system. And those two

00:09:48 --> 00:09:51 things have very different

00:09:51 --> 00:09:54 characteristics. What I mean

00:09:54 --> 00:09:56 by that is that, uh, objects that are in our

00:09:56 --> 00:09:59 solar system are in our backyard. They're the

00:09:59 --> 00:10:01 only things in astronomy that we can get up

00:10:01 --> 00:10:03 close and personal with. So in the solar

00:10:03 --> 00:10:06 system, the search for life elsewhere is

00:10:06 --> 00:10:09 being driven by robotic exploration. In the

00:10:09 --> 00:10:10 Moon. Yes, there's a little bit of

00:10:11 --> 00:10:14 observation from Earth. We saw that with the

00:10:14 --> 00:10:16 phosphine storey on Venus that I ranted about

00:10:16 --> 00:10:18 a little bit last week. Um, and, um, the

00:10:18 --> 00:10:20 wonderful caution shown by scientists that

00:10:20 --> 00:10:21 was not necessarily reflected in the

00:10:21 --> 00:10:24 coverage. Um, but a lot of the research

00:10:25 --> 00:10:28 in the solar system is robotic in nature. We

00:10:28 --> 00:10:30 send spacecraft to places to study them up

00:10:30 --> 00:10:33 close and personal. And we can't do that

00:10:33 --> 00:10:35 around other stars. Around other stars. It's

00:10:35 --> 00:10:37 very much a remote sensing type deal. So

00:10:37 --> 00:10:40 there are different ways of doing it. Now, I

00:10:40 --> 00:10:41 think there is a realistic chance we'll find

00:10:41 --> 00:10:44 life elsewhere in the solar system. There's a

00:10:44 --> 00:10:46 lot of good reasons for that. Now, before I

00:10:46 --> 00:10:48 dive into that a little bit, I'll just take a

00:10:48 --> 00:10:50 step back and come back to that point you

00:10:50 --> 00:10:51 made about life like us and carbon based life

00:10:51 --> 00:10:53 versus other things. Because it's really

00:10:53 --> 00:10:56 important to make explicit what is normally

00:10:56 --> 00:10:58 an implicit bias when

00:10:58 --> 00:11:01 scientists are talking about astrobiology.

00:11:01 --> 00:11:03 It's really made clear when you think about

00:11:03 --> 00:11:06 NASA and Issa's efforts on the moon, where

00:11:06 --> 00:11:08 they have. On, um, Mars, sorry, where they

00:11:08 --> 00:11:10 have aggressively said the strategy to look

00:11:10 --> 00:11:12 for life is to follow the water.

00:11:13 --> 00:11:15 What they're doing there is making

00:11:16 --> 00:11:18 an implicit assumption. That is an assumption

00:11:18 --> 00:11:20 that is not always written out and is clear,

00:11:20 --> 00:11:23 but is at the back of it, that life

00:11:23 --> 00:11:25 that we look for will be life like us. And I

00:11:25 --> 00:11:28 mean life like Earth life. Now we can

00:11:28 --> 00:11:30 imagine. You see it on science fiction all

00:11:30 --> 00:11:32 the time. You know, life that is very other.

00:11:32 --> 00:11:34 It might be molten metal monsters on a magma

00:11:34 --> 00:11:36 planet, or it might be an intelligent

00:11:36 --> 00:11:37 hydrogen cloud that nevertheless wants to

00:11:37 --> 00:11:40 flirt with Captain Kirk. It's

00:11:40 --> 00:11:42 very different kinds of life, but

00:11:42 --> 00:11:45 Fundamentally we only know of one type of

00:11:45 --> 00:11:47 life that does exist, and that's life

00:11:47 --> 00:11:50 like Earth life. And so when we

00:11:50 --> 00:11:53 look for life elsewhere, at ah, least in

00:11:53 --> 00:11:56 what is the early stages still, it is really

00:11:56 --> 00:11:58 important to look for something that we know

00:11:58 --> 00:12:01 can exist and does exist, rather than

00:12:01 --> 00:12:02 looking for things that we could speculate

00:12:02 --> 00:12:05 might exist. If you've got to focus your

00:12:05 --> 00:12:08 efforts with limited resources, it

00:12:08 --> 00:12:10 makes sense to follow the kind of well

00:12:10 --> 00:12:12 trodden footsteps of what we know about life

00:12:12 --> 00:12:14 on Earth. And um, from an astronomer's point

00:12:14 --> 00:12:16 of view, life on Earth needs three things.

00:12:16 --> 00:12:19 You know, it needs liquid water, it needs a

00:12:19 --> 00:12:20 source of energy and a source of nutrients.

00:12:20 --> 00:12:22 And quite often those two are the same thing,

00:12:22 --> 00:12:25 but not always. And wherever we find those

00:12:25 --> 00:12:27 things on Earth, we find life in abundance.

00:12:27 --> 00:12:29 And once life gets there, it's really hard to

00:12:29 --> 00:12:31 get rid of. You know, anybody who's had ants

00:12:31 --> 00:12:33 getting into their kitchen or the mice plague

00:12:33 --> 00:12:36 that we talked about last week knows just how

00:12:37 --> 00:12:40 life, once it gets established, keeps going.

00:12:40 --> 00:12:43 And so it makes sense. And a lot of what I'll

00:12:43 --> 00:12:45 talk about for all the rest of the episode is

00:12:45 --> 00:12:47 kind of based on this assumption that we're

00:12:47 --> 00:12:50 looking, at least initially for life like

00:12:50 --> 00:12:52 us, has the same needs as us. Where the US is

00:12:52 --> 00:12:55 abroad, the entire panel play of life on

00:12:55 --> 00:12:58 Earth rather than us as in me and the having

00:12:58 --> 00:13:00 this chat back and forward. What

00:13:00 --> 00:13:02 that leads to though is a lot of studies that

00:13:02 --> 00:13:04 have been done for the solar system are very

00:13:04 --> 00:13:07 water driven. And if you go back decades, you

00:13:07 --> 00:13:10 could go back to the late 1800s when people

00:13:10 --> 00:13:12 were obsessed with this idea that there was

00:13:12 --> 00:13:14 an advanced technological civilization on

00:13:14 --> 00:13:16 Mars that was running out of time because the

00:13:16 --> 00:13:19 planet was desolate and barren. And this was

00:13:19 --> 00:13:21 all motivated by the observations of the

00:13:21 --> 00:13:23 canali, the channels on Mars that don't

00:13:23 --> 00:13:26 exist, which were mistranslated as canals and

00:13:26 --> 00:13:28 canals on Earth are a very clear sign of

00:13:28 --> 00:13:31 human activity. Yeah, People at

00:13:31 --> 00:13:33 that time were so certain that we'd already

00:13:33 --> 00:13:35 found life that when there was a prize

00:13:35 --> 00:13:38 awarded, um, a prize laid

00:13:38 --> 00:13:39 out, sorry, in announced, I think it was like

00:13:39 --> 00:13:42 in 1899 or something, for the search for

00:13:42 --> 00:13:44 life, for the first person to discover life

00:13:44 --> 00:13:46 elsewhere, to find evidence of life

00:13:46 --> 00:13:48 elsewhere. That prize explicitly

00:13:48 --> 00:13:51 excluded Mars because it was felt that life

00:13:51 --> 00:13:53 on Mars was so well established that that was

00:13:53 --> 00:13:55 a no brainer. You know, it was such a thing

00:13:55 --> 00:13:56 in popular culture that when the War of the

00:13:56 --> 00:13:58 Worlds broadcast happened in the 1930s,

00:13:59 --> 00:14:01 people thought it was live news coverage and

00:14:01 --> 00:14:01 panicked.

00:14:01 --> 00:14:04 Andrew Dunkley: Yes. You know, the night that panicked

00:14:04 --> 00:14:04 America.

00:14:04 --> 00:14:07 Jonti Horner: Yeah. And there's this whole heritage of

00:14:08 --> 00:14:10 our expectation of life being common

00:14:11 --> 00:14:13 and it being lifelike, us requiring water.

00:14:14 --> 00:14:17 When we went to Mars, like in the 1960s with

00:14:17 --> 00:14:19 spacecraft, Mars was shown to be the

00:14:19 --> 00:14:21 desolate, arid world we knew today. And that

00:14:21 --> 00:14:23 put to an end the thoughts of an advanced

00:14:23 --> 00:14:26 civilization there. And, um, from that time

00:14:26 --> 00:14:28 onwards there was a period where arguments in

00:14:28 --> 00:14:30 astrobiology fell very much out of favour,

00:14:30 --> 00:14:32 out of fashion. And it was kind of viewed

00:14:32 --> 00:14:34 much more likely that life was almost unique,

00:14:34 --> 00:14:36 we were alone, um, there was no way you could

00:14:36 --> 00:14:36 look.

00:14:36 --> 00:14:39 And there's this argument that I often hear

00:14:39 --> 00:14:42 espouse that water is scarce in the universe.

00:14:43 --> 00:14:45 And that makes my head hurt. I think this is

00:14:45 --> 00:14:47 one of those big myths that is a myth of

00:14:47 --> 00:14:50 miscommunication or a myth of

00:14:51 --> 00:14:53 language being a personal

00:14:54 --> 00:14:56 thing. What I mean by that is, and I'm

00:14:56 --> 00:14:58 always trying to be very aware of this when

00:14:58 --> 00:15:01 I'm, uh, as a communicator, the

00:15:01 --> 00:15:03 words have different meanings to different

00:15:03 --> 00:15:06 people. And so the same word that I

00:15:06 --> 00:15:08 say you'll hear and it doesn't always mean

00:15:08 --> 00:15:10 the same thing to you or me. And one of the

00:15:10 --> 00:15:12 best things, best examples of this is when

00:15:12 --> 00:15:14 you get people who are trying to argue

00:15:14 --> 00:15:17 against an area of science, maybe vaccines,

00:15:17 --> 00:15:19 maybe climate change, maybe something less

00:15:19 --> 00:15:21 controversial. You'll often hear people say

00:15:21 --> 00:15:23 that, well, climate change is just a theory,

00:15:23 --> 00:15:25 or, uh, vaccines are just a theory, or the

00:15:25 --> 00:15:28 Big Bang is just a theory. And to a lot of

00:15:28 --> 00:15:31 people a theory just means a loose

00:15:31 --> 00:15:34 idea. A lot of people will say,

00:15:34 --> 00:15:36 why isn't your car starting this morning?

00:15:36 --> 00:15:39 Well, I've got a theory. To a scientist, a

00:15:39 --> 00:15:41 theory is a very different beast and it's

00:15:41 --> 00:15:43 tied to the ability to make testable

00:15:43 --> 00:15:45 predictions and, um, repeated testing.

00:15:46 --> 00:15:48 There's a lot of philosophy of science. I did

00:15:48 --> 00:15:50 a philosophy of physics course at, uh,

00:15:50 --> 00:15:52 university when I was 18 and I wish I'd done

00:15:52 --> 00:15:53 it when I was at the end of my degree. Not

00:15:53 --> 00:15:54 the start, because I'd have got a lot more

00:15:54 --> 00:15:56 out of it. But there are people who've

00:15:56 --> 00:15:59 aggressively studied the philosophy of the

00:15:59 --> 00:16:02 scientific method and even that philosophy

00:16:02 --> 00:16:03 varies a little bit, discipline to

00:16:03 --> 00:16:05 discipline. A lot of other disciplines that

00:16:05 --> 00:16:07 are the experimental ones are a very much

00:16:07 --> 00:16:10 more hypothesis driven than astronomy,

00:16:10 --> 00:16:12 where we say, I'm interested in what this is,

00:16:12 --> 00:16:13 let's have a look. There's not really a

00:16:13 --> 00:16:15 hypothesis. I just want to look at it and

00:16:15 --> 00:16:17 find out. At least that's how I work. But you

00:16:17 --> 00:16:20 also have this thing where, at least from my

00:16:20 --> 00:16:22 philosophy, you can never prove a Theory, but

00:16:22 --> 00:16:24 you can disprove a theory. What I mean by

00:16:24 --> 00:16:27 that is if you test a theory a million times

00:16:28 --> 00:16:30 and each time it's backs it up, you haven't

00:16:30 --> 00:16:32 proven that theory. You've just shown that

00:16:32 --> 00:16:34 theory is a very good approximation to what's

00:16:34 --> 00:16:36 actually happening. So take the example of me

00:16:36 --> 00:16:39 flipping a coin, I can have a theory theory

00:16:39 --> 00:16:41 that says coins will always land heads or

00:16:41 --> 00:16:44 tails. Test that a million times and odds are

00:16:44 --> 00:16:46 a million times you'll land heads or tails.

00:16:46 --> 00:16:48 But you've not proven that theory. You've

00:16:48 --> 00:16:50 just said it's a very close approximation to

00:16:50 --> 00:16:52 the truth. You could toss them 10 million

00:16:52 --> 00:16:53 times and one time your coin lands on its

00:16:53 --> 00:16:55 edge and balances. Yeah, that one

00:16:55 --> 00:16:57 observation. So as long as it's well

00:16:57 --> 00:16:58 documented and is repeatable is enough to

00:16:58 --> 00:17:00 kill that theory. And then you need to

00:17:00 --> 00:17:03 develop something more complex. You know,

00:17:03 --> 00:17:04 that's where it goes from.

00:17:04 --> 00:17:07 Now, that's a very roundabout way of coming

00:17:07 --> 00:17:10 back at this water being scarce myth.

00:17:10 --> 00:17:13 I think where that comes from is when you

00:17:13 --> 00:17:16 talk to me about water, I am,

00:17:16 --> 00:17:18 um, just thinking about the molecule.

00:17:18 --> 00:17:21 I'm not thinking about the physical state. So

00:17:21 --> 00:17:23 to me, water can be water ice, it can be

00:17:23 --> 00:17:26 liquid water, it can be water vapour. But to

00:17:26 --> 00:17:28 most people, if you say water, they visualise

00:17:28 --> 00:17:31 liquid water. Yeah, if, if I say, would you

00:17:31 --> 00:17:33 like some water? You're not expecting me to

00:17:33 --> 00:17:35 immediately start steaming your face. You're

00:17:35 --> 00:17:36 expecting a glass of water. Right.

00:17:38 --> 00:17:40 What that means is that when people look out

00:17:40 --> 00:17:42 of the solar system and look everywhere else,

00:17:42 --> 00:17:44 we see this thing that Earth is the only

00:17:44 --> 00:17:46 place where we have abundant liquid water all

00:17:46 --> 00:17:49 the time on the surface. And so people

00:17:49 --> 00:17:51 have this idea that water is scarce, where

00:17:51 --> 00:17:54 what they're really thinking is liquid water

00:17:54 --> 00:17:57 on the surface of an object is scarce.

00:17:58 --> 00:18:00 But that drove a lot of this idea that life

00:18:00 --> 00:18:02 will be scarce because life needs liquid

00:18:02 --> 00:18:04 water. On Earth, the earthy and lipidates

00:18:04 --> 00:18:06 with liquid water, ergo, uh, life will be

00:18:07 --> 00:18:09 scarce. That's moved on though, in about the

00:18:09 --> 00:18:11 last three or four decades, partially with

00:18:11 --> 00:18:13 the exploration of Mars, where we're getting

00:18:14 --> 00:18:16 an overwhelmingly greater amount m of

00:18:16 --> 00:18:18 evidence that Mars in the past was warm and

00:18:18 --> 00:18:20 wet, that it had oceans and lakes. They may

00:18:20 --> 00:18:21 have been slushy or they may have been

00:18:21 --> 00:18:24 properly liquid, but it had oceans and lakes

00:18:24 --> 00:18:26 for a long time of liquid water. And we've

00:18:26 --> 00:18:27 even got evidence that there is permanent

00:18:27 --> 00:18:29 liquid water on Mars as we're talking now in

00:18:29 --> 00:18:31 the form of liquid water in the Martian Mars

00:18:31 --> 00:18:33 polar ice caps. And you get temporary liquid

00:18:33 --> 00:18:36 Water running on the surface. The other thing

00:18:36 --> 00:18:38 we found in the solar system is liquid water

00:18:38 --> 00:18:41 in astonishing abundance in the outer solar

00:18:41 --> 00:18:44 system, protected by shells of ice on the

00:18:44 --> 00:18:47 icy satellites of the giant planets. On the

00:18:47 --> 00:18:48 dwarf planet Pluto, or inside the dwarf

00:18:48 --> 00:18:51 planet Pluto, probably in the larger, uh,

00:18:51 --> 00:18:53 Edgeworth Kuiper Belt objects, Trans

00:18:53 --> 00:18:55 Neptunian objects, maybe in other places as

00:18:55 --> 00:18:58 well, even in places as small as Enceladus.

00:18:58 --> 00:19:01 So there's been this revolution from the

00:19:01 --> 00:19:02 point of view of the solar system through my

00:19:02 --> 00:19:05 lifetime that actually liquid water isn't

00:19:05 --> 00:19:08 scarce. Coupled to the fact that the Earth is

00:19:08 --> 00:19:10 actually remarkably dry as a planet, that

00:19:10 --> 00:19:11 suddenly opened up people's perspectives

00:19:11 --> 00:19:13 again that the solar system is a good place

00:19:13 --> 00:19:16 to look for life. And that's driving a lot of

00:19:16 --> 00:19:17 exploration, a lot of missions. All the Mars

00:19:17 --> 00:19:20 exploration past and, um, future focused

00:19:20 --> 00:19:22 around that idea. The fact that we've got two

00:19:22 --> 00:19:24 missions going to the Jovian IC satellites at

00:19:24 --> 00:19:26 the minute Juice and, um, the Jupiterizing

00:19:26 --> 00:19:29 Moons Explorer and the Europa Clipper, which

00:19:29 --> 00:19:31 are to characterise those moons better to

00:19:31 --> 00:19:33 prepare for potential future landings in the

00:19:33 --> 00:19:35 2000-40s or-50s to get through the ice and

00:19:35 --> 00:19:37 look at what's underneath. We've got the

00:19:37 --> 00:19:39 Dragonfly mission going out to Titan,

00:19:40 --> 00:19:41 launching in a couple of years time, probably

00:19:41 --> 00:19:44 next year, ah, hoping to get there 2034.

00:19:44 --> 00:19:46 That will land on the only other place that

00:19:46 --> 00:19:49 has liquid on its surface exposed to the

00:19:49 --> 00:19:50 atmosphere in the solar system, and that's

00:19:50 --> 00:19:52 Titan. With lakes of liquid methane and

00:19:52 --> 00:19:54 ethane. The water there is harder than

00:19:54 --> 00:19:57 granite and makes up the mountain. But

00:19:57 --> 00:19:58 there's this huge effort to explore our solar

00:19:58 --> 00:20:00 system and actually go there and look, which

00:20:00 --> 00:20:02 we can't do when we're looking at planets

00:20:02 --> 00:20:05 around other stars. And by going there and

00:20:05 --> 00:20:08 looking if there is anything there, past or

00:20:08 --> 00:20:11 present, eventually we'll find it. Now, that

00:20:11 --> 00:20:13 immediately then poses a really fascinating

00:20:13 --> 00:20:16 one. So if we find life on Mars or find life

00:20:16 --> 00:20:18 on Europa, if we can

00:20:19 --> 00:20:21 look at that life and figure out

00:20:22 --> 00:20:25 its heritage, figure out its DNA, and I'm not

00:20:25 --> 00:20:27 a biologist, so I'll be a little woolly on

00:20:27 --> 00:20:29 that. It will be very quick and very

00:20:29 --> 00:20:31 apparent whether that life has a shared

00:20:31 --> 00:20:33 origin to life on Earth or whether it has a

00:20:33 --> 00:20:35 separate origin to life on Earth. Now, the

00:20:35 --> 00:20:37 separate origin would mean that life got

00:20:37 --> 00:20:40 started simultaneously on two

00:20:40 --> 00:20:43 objects in the same planetary system in

00:20:43 --> 00:20:46 an icy backwater of a fairly unremarkable

00:20:46 --> 00:20:48 galaxy. If it got started two places side

00:20:48 --> 00:20:51 by side, surely that means life gets started

00:20:51 --> 00:20:53 more easily than we expect. Therefore, life

00:20:53 --> 00:20:56 should be common in the universe. That would

00:20:56 --> 00:20:59 be an obvious logical continuation. The other

00:20:59 --> 00:21:00 option is that we find life elsewhere in the

00:21:00 --> 00:21:02 solar system and it has a shared heritage to

00:21:02 --> 00:21:04 life on Earth. What that means is that, uh,

00:21:04 --> 00:21:06 we analyse its makeup, we find that it has

00:21:06 --> 00:21:09 DNA like Earth, DNA that has a shared

00:21:09 --> 00:21:12 universal common ancestor. And what that

00:21:12 --> 00:21:13 suggests is that once life gets started

00:21:13 --> 00:21:16 somewhere, it's transmissible. You know,

00:21:16 --> 00:21:17 you've got that old thing of don't go near

00:21:17 --> 00:21:19 Earth, it's got humans, they're contagious.

00:21:20 --> 00:21:22 This is the same kind of idea. If we find

00:21:22 --> 00:21:24 life on Mars and that life has a shared

00:21:24 --> 00:21:26 heritage with life on Earth, that

00:21:27 --> 00:21:29 validates strongly support c idea of

00:21:29 --> 00:21:32 panspermia, which I've had a student just

00:21:32 --> 00:21:35 submit his PhD thesis studying the

00:21:35 --> 00:21:36 idea that life can transfer between the

00:21:36 --> 00:21:39 planets. Now, again, if life can transfer

00:21:39 --> 00:21:40 easily enough to be found in multiple

00:21:40 --> 00:21:42 locations in the solar system from a simple

00:21:43 --> 00:21:45 single origin and, uh, maybe even Earth, uh,

00:21:45 --> 00:21:47 wasn't that origin. You know, maybe we're

00:21:47 --> 00:21:50 Martians, maybe we're Venusians or Venerians.

00:21:50 --> 00:21:52 I think that Venerian used to be the

00:21:52 --> 00:21:53 adjective for Venus. Adjective, the right

00:21:53 --> 00:21:55 word, used to be the word for Venus in the

00:21:55 --> 00:21:57 way that Martian was for Mars, but it was a

00:21:57 --> 00:21:59 bit too close to venereal, um, because.

00:22:01 --> 00:22:03 So they changed it. But anyway, um, but we

00:22:03 --> 00:22:05 could be venereal creatures. Um, we don't

00:22:05 --> 00:22:07 know. But what that suggests is that if life

00:22:07 --> 00:22:10 is transferred easily and effectively once it

00:22:10 --> 00:22:12 originates, life could be coming in the

00:22:12 --> 00:22:15 universe. So to me, finding life in the solar

00:22:15 --> 00:22:16 system would be awesome. I think it's

00:22:16 --> 00:22:19 eminently feasible. And either way, it will

00:22:19 --> 00:22:21 shed new light on the commonality of life

00:22:21 --> 00:22:24 beyond the solar system. We will be looking

00:22:24 --> 00:22:27 for life like us. It is possible to imagine

00:22:27 --> 00:22:28 life that is not like us, that has different

00:22:28 --> 00:22:30 requirements, but that will probably be a bit

00:22:30 --> 00:22:33 harder to find and we don't know

00:22:33 --> 00:22:36 what it would be. Whereas with life like us,

00:22:36 --> 00:22:38 we know things to look for. So that makes it

00:22:38 --> 00:22:40 a bit easier for us to look for life like us.

00:22:40 --> 00:22:43 It also makes it, I'd say,

00:22:43 --> 00:22:45 a little bit stronger as a case when you're

00:22:45 --> 00:22:47 asking for funding because you can say, well,

00:22:47 --> 00:22:49 we already know this kind of life can exist,

00:22:50 --> 00:22:51 so we're going to look at a place where the

00:22:51 --> 00:22:53 conditions are similar to where we know it

00:22:53 --> 00:22:54 does exist and, um, see if we find it there

00:22:54 --> 00:22:55 as well.

00:22:55 --> 00:22:58 Andrew Dunkley: Okay, let's take a short break. Uh, this

00:22:58 --> 00:23:01 is Space Nuts with Andrew Dunkley and

00:23:01 --> 00:23:02 Professor Jonty Horner.

00:23:05 --> 00:23:06 Yeah, I'm going to step off the

00:23:06 --> 00:23:06 Jonti Horner: lamb now

00:23:09 --> 00:23:11 that's one small step for man,

00:23:14 --> 00:23:16 one giant leap for man.

00:23:17 --> 00:23:18 Space nuts.

00:23:19 --> 00:23:21 Andrew Dunkley: It's not Professor Fred Watson Watson at the

00:23:21 --> 00:23:22 moment. He's away. We've got Professor John

00:23:22 --> 00:23:25 T. Horner, and we're talking astrobiology in

00:23:25 --> 00:23:27 this little, uh, special edition.

00:23:28 --> 00:23:30 Um, one thing I heard in the news recently,

00:23:30 --> 00:23:32 and I think Fred Watson and I talked about it

00:23:32 --> 00:23:34 was, uh, you know, we've been talking about

00:23:34 --> 00:23:36 water. And if you want to find the people,

00:23:36 --> 00:23:38 find the water, that sort of thing. But there

00:23:38 --> 00:23:41 was one particular study that was, uh,

00:23:41 --> 00:23:43 recently released that says if you want to

00:23:43 --> 00:23:45 find the people, find the coal. What do you

00:23:45 --> 00:23:46 think of that theory?

00:23:47 --> 00:23:49 Jonti Horner: That's an interesting one. So that's the idea

00:23:49 --> 00:23:51 that, uh, if you want to find somebody to

00:23:51 --> 00:23:53 talk to, there needs to be something to fuel

00:23:53 --> 00:23:56 an industrial revolution. And again, this is,

00:23:56 --> 00:23:58 I think, science fiction sometimes. Does this

00:23:58 --> 00:24:00 really ask these really interesting questions

00:24:00 --> 00:24:03 of almost is the path that we

00:24:03 --> 00:24:06 have followed the one that everyone

00:24:06 --> 00:24:08 will follow? You know, because there's so

00:24:08 --> 00:24:10 much to some degree randomness in

00:24:11 --> 00:24:13 the things that have driven our knowledge

00:24:13 --> 00:24:16 and our development of things. You know, um,

00:24:16 --> 00:24:18 obviously a good example is a famous myth

00:24:18 --> 00:24:21 about penicillin that if, um, you leave your

00:24:21 --> 00:24:22 bread out and it goes mouldy, that makes your

00:24:22 --> 00:24:25 poultice more effective. Um, and that was an

00:24:25 --> 00:24:28 incredible scientific revolution driven

00:24:28 --> 00:24:30 by that discovery. There was.

00:24:31 --> 00:24:33 Who's to say other civilizations would have

00:24:33 --> 00:24:36 the same discoveries in the same order. Now,

00:24:36 --> 00:24:39 to advance, we have required advances in

00:24:39 --> 00:24:42 energy in order to allow us to better

00:24:42 --> 00:24:44 develop technology and develop the things

00:24:44 --> 00:24:46 that everything's made of. You know, if we

00:24:46 --> 00:24:49 didn't have anything that you could burn,

00:24:49 --> 00:24:51 it would be very, very challenging to smelt

00:24:51 --> 00:24:53 metal. If you couldn't smelt metal, how do

00:24:53 --> 00:24:55 you build electronics?

00:24:55 --> 00:24:57 Andrew Dunkley: You are spot on. That's exactly what the

00:24:57 --> 00:25:00 article was all about. And, uh, the

00:25:00 --> 00:25:02 bottom line was, uh, that because of the

00:25:02 --> 00:25:05 timing required, it lessens

00:25:06 --> 00:25:09 the likelihood of us finding, uh, people

00:25:09 --> 00:25:11 like us. It reduces the odds.

00:25:11 --> 00:25:14 Jonti Horner: And this is where there's a difference

00:25:14 --> 00:25:16 between the search for extraterrestrial

00:25:16 --> 00:25:18 intelligence and the search for life. So the

00:25:18 --> 00:25:20 search for extraterrestrial intelligence is

00:25:20 --> 00:25:22 like a subset of the search for life? Yeah,

00:25:22 --> 00:25:25 search for life is a search for bacteria as

00:25:25 --> 00:25:27 much as the search for, uh, communicative

00:25:27 --> 00:25:30 aliens. And there's been a lot of stuff

00:25:30 --> 00:25:32 written and discussed about whether

00:25:33 --> 00:25:35 evolutionary quirks have benefited us by

00:25:35 --> 00:25:37 being here. You know, in terms of we're a

00:25:37 --> 00:25:39 social communal animal that shares resources

00:25:39 --> 00:25:42 and shares learning. There have been other

00:25:42 --> 00:25:43 ones like that from Ant Colins. And I'm

00:25:43 --> 00:25:46 listening to a very Chill and very

00:25:46 --> 00:25:48 silly, um, lit

00:25:48 --> 00:25:50 rpg, I think would be the description of the

00:25:50 --> 00:25:53 genre series of books called Chrysalis at the

00:25:53 --> 00:25:55 minute, where a young boy who dies for

00:25:56 --> 00:25:58 reasons is reincarnated in the bottom born

00:25:58 --> 00:26:01 body of an ant. And it's a book about him

00:26:01 --> 00:26:03 as an ant and his life in the colony and

00:26:03 --> 00:26:06 stuff, and it's bonkers. But, um,

00:26:06 --> 00:26:08 you've got an advanced social species there

00:26:08 --> 00:26:11 and he finds ways, without too many spoilers,

00:26:11 --> 00:26:12 of giving them intelligence and what happens

00:26:12 --> 00:26:14 afterwards. There's a few species in the

00:26:14 --> 00:26:16 history of Earth that have that kind of

00:26:16 --> 00:26:19 communal sharing of information thing. We're

00:26:19 --> 00:26:20 the only ones that have achieved what we've

00:26:20 --> 00:26:23 achieved. Some arguments are that's down to

00:26:23 --> 00:26:26 the development of language and our ability

00:26:26 --> 00:26:28 to produce complex language, and also the

00:26:28 --> 00:26:30 opposable thumb being quite important. So

00:26:30 --> 00:26:33 there's a lot of stuff that there are many

00:26:33 --> 00:26:35 steps between the development of life and the

00:26:35 --> 00:26:38 development of intelligence. And, uh, the

00:26:38 --> 00:26:39 development of intelligence itself doesn't

00:26:39 --> 00:26:41 necessarily mean the development of

00:26:41 --> 00:26:43 technological intelligence. You know, a lot

00:26:43 --> 00:26:45 of discussions about all the things octopi or

00:26:45 --> 00:26:48 octopods or octopiddles, octopi could

00:26:48 --> 00:26:50 achieve if they lived for more than three

00:26:50 --> 00:26:52 years. And if they were a social animal,

00:26:52 --> 00:26:54 they've got incredible brands. We're learning

00:26:54 --> 00:26:56 more and more about some of the brain power

00:26:56 --> 00:26:59 that birds exhibit, but

00:26:59 --> 00:27:01 none of them have become technological

00:27:01 --> 00:27:02 intelligences. And the search for

00:27:02 --> 00:27:05 extraterrestrial intelligence is very much

00:27:05 --> 00:27:07 centred around a technology

00:27:08 --> 00:27:10 that allows civilizations to communicate with

00:27:10 --> 00:27:13 one another. That therefore is based on many

00:27:13 --> 00:27:15 prerequisites that lead to the development of

00:27:15 --> 00:27:17 the ability to broadcast your existence to

00:27:17 --> 00:27:18 the cosmos.

00:27:18 --> 00:27:20 The coal thing's interesting. I mean, I'm not

00:27:21 --> 00:27:23 sufficiently archaeologically

00:27:23 --> 00:27:26 minded to be able to

00:27:26 --> 00:27:29 say with certainty that without coal we

00:27:29 --> 00:27:30 wouldn't have got here. And, uh, the reason

00:27:30 --> 00:27:32 that I express caution on that coal and oil

00:27:33 --> 00:27:35 is that we have things that people burn for

00:27:35 --> 00:27:37 energy that are not coal and oil.

00:27:38 --> 00:27:40 And I think a lot of the smelting that was

00:27:40 --> 00:27:41 done, and I may be wrong on this because I'm

00:27:41 --> 00:27:43 not an archaeologist, I just picked bits up

00:27:43 --> 00:27:45 when my partner's watching Time Tim and

00:27:45 --> 00:27:46 things like that. She loves her archaeology,

00:27:46 --> 00:27:49 so I get a little bit of that as a very thin

00:27:49 --> 00:27:51 veneer. But I think a lot of this times when

00:27:51 --> 00:27:53 people smelted metals, talking about bronze

00:27:53 --> 00:27:55 and iron, they used wood or they used

00:27:55 --> 00:27:57 charcoal, which is a byproduct of burning

00:27:57 --> 00:27:58 wood.

00:27:58 --> 00:27:59 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah.

00:27:59 --> 00:28:02 Jonti Horner: So maybe it would be more challenging without

00:28:02 --> 00:28:05 the easy available energy of fossil

00:28:05 --> 00:28:07 fuels, without the easy available energy of

00:28:07 --> 00:28:10 coal, oil, gas, but it might be that

00:28:10 --> 00:28:12 that wouldn't be an insurmountable hurdle,

00:28:12 --> 00:28:13 but it would result in a different path being

00:28:13 --> 00:28:16 followed. You know, what would we get

00:28:16 --> 00:28:18 in terms of seam power if we were using wood

00:28:18 --> 00:28:21 and if we were using charcoal rather than

00:28:21 --> 00:28:23 other things? Would it lead to an earlier

00:28:23 --> 00:28:26 adoption of renewable energy in the form of

00:28:26 --> 00:28:28 wind power, which was actually being used for

00:28:28 --> 00:28:30 hundreds of years? You go back to Europe and

00:28:30 --> 00:28:32 you see the windmills people use and water

00:28:32 --> 00:28:35 mills peoples use. So I.

00:28:35 --> 00:28:37 I don't know whether.

00:28:38 --> 00:28:40 And this is a problem with all of

00:28:40 --> 00:28:42 astrobiology and it's a problem with a lot of

00:28:42 --> 00:28:43 the stuff that I'll talk about later, about

00:28:43 --> 00:28:45 what makes a planet more suitable or less

00:28:45 --> 00:28:48 suitable. People have this tendency to

00:28:48 --> 00:28:50 find something that is unusual about us.

00:28:51 --> 00:28:52 And there's a lot that's unusual about us. I

00:28:52 --> 00:28:54 mean, there's a lot that's unusual about me.

00:28:54 --> 00:28:56 And I hold my hand up about that. But they

00:28:56 --> 00:28:59 find things that are unusual. And, um,

00:28:59 --> 00:29:01 they say we are, as far as we know, unique in

00:29:01 --> 00:29:03 the cosmos. We are a technologically advanced

00:29:03 --> 00:29:05 civilization able to have this discussion.

00:29:06 --> 00:29:08 There has to be a reason that we're here.

00:29:09 --> 00:29:12 Everything that is unusual quite often gets

00:29:12 --> 00:29:14 held up as could this be the switch? If you

00:29:14 --> 00:29:17 didn't have this, we would not be here. And I

00:29:17 --> 00:29:19 tend to view them not as an on off switch,

00:29:19 --> 00:29:22 but as a slider. They're like. And again, a

00:29:22 --> 00:29:23 gaming analogy would be varying the

00:29:23 --> 00:29:26 difficulty on your game. Some games, it's

00:29:26 --> 00:29:28 very kind of on off, hard mode, easy mode.

00:29:28 --> 00:29:30 Others, particularly some of the role playing

00:29:30 --> 00:29:33 type games people play, have sliders for

00:29:33 --> 00:29:36 everything. And so you can change things to

00:29:36 --> 00:29:39 the nth degree to tweak the challenge

00:29:39 --> 00:29:41 level. And I think all of these things, like

00:29:41 --> 00:29:44 the existence of call that get proposed

00:29:44 --> 00:29:47 as being a boundary, as being

00:29:47 --> 00:29:48 something that would be a block if you didn't

00:29:48 --> 00:29:51 have it, are actually probably more like one

00:29:51 --> 00:29:52 of those sliders. They're things that can

00:29:52 --> 00:29:55 facilitate. But it's really interesting

00:29:55 --> 00:29:57 to discuss them because we don't know how big

00:29:57 --> 00:29:59 a filter they are. We don't know how big a

00:29:59 --> 00:30:02 hurdle they are without digging into it more.

00:30:02 --> 00:30:04 And the more we can suggest these things, the

00:30:04 --> 00:30:06 more we can narrow them down. But ultimately

00:30:06 --> 00:30:08 the only way we can finally test them is when

00:30:08 --> 00:30:11 we get a response to us, when we find

00:30:11 --> 00:30:14 technologically advanced life and

00:30:14 --> 00:30:16 then we learn about their heritage. What path

00:30:16 --> 00:30:19 did they follow? Did they invent fire

00:30:19 --> 00:30:21 before the wheel? Did they invent

00:30:21 --> 00:30:24 modern medicine before fire?

00:30:24 --> 00:30:27 And I've seen there's a fabulous

00:30:28 --> 00:30:30 famous old thread I don't know. It wasn't

00:30:30 --> 00:30:32 from Reddit, predates Reddit, but from one of

00:30:32 --> 00:30:34 the old messaging boards that talks

00:30:34 --> 00:30:37 about humans as the horror

00:30:37 --> 00:30:40 movie monsters of the universe. Because we

00:30:40 --> 00:30:42 always, in science fiction, all the monsters

00:30:42 --> 00:30:44 we face, all the aliens we face, are usually

00:30:44 --> 00:30:47 more something than us. And we overcome

00:30:47 --> 00:30:49 incredible odds to beat them. But this is

00:30:49 --> 00:30:51 taking the other perspective of another

00:30:51 --> 00:30:52 species kind of looking at us and going,

00:30:52 --> 00:30:54 those humans are terrifying. And it's listing

00:30:54 --> 00:30:55 all the ways we are. You know, we're an

00:30:55 --> 00:30:58 exhaustion hunter. We didn't beat things by

00:30:58 --> 00:31:00 speed or anything. We'd follow them until

00:31:00 --> 00:31:03 they died of exhaustion because we

00:31:03 --> 00:31:05 can go longer than they can. Where are you?

00:31:05 --> 00:31:07 They were saying, you know, it's the only

00:31:07 --> 00:31:09 intelligent technological species that, uh,

00:31:09 --> 00:31:11 invented amputation before painkillers.

00:31:12 --> 00:31:14 You know, we've got things like this that are

00:31:14 --> 00:31:17 very bizarre about us. And so that takes

00:31:17 --> 00:31:19 this perspective I've got of these things are

00:31:19 --> 00:31:22 a hurdle. And you develop things, you know

00:31:22 --> 00:31:24 that things are not on an off switch, but

00:31:24 --> 00:31:26 they're more of a slider. And the idea of

00:31:27 --> 00:31:29 will things naturally be developed in the

00:31:29 --> 00:31:31 same order? And turns it around and said,

00:31:31 --> 00:31:33 what would another species think looking at

00:31:33 --> 00:31:35 us? And I always find that really good fun.

00:31:35 --> 00:31:37 And it's effectively leads to the thing that

00:31:37 --> 00:31:39 humans are space orcs and where this

00:31:39 --> 00:31:42 terrible, terrifying, weird little species.

00:31:42 --> 00:31:44 And maybe that's what it'll turn out to be.

00:31:45 --> 00:31:48 Andrew Dunkley: Well, yeah, look, uh, I don't

00:31:48 --> 00:31:51 dispute that because look how we treat each

00:31:51 --> 00:31:52 other or have treated each other,

00:31:53 --> 00:31:55 um, since civilization began,

00:31:55 --> 00:31:58 basically. I don't think you could add up

00:31:58 --> 00:32:00 how many wars we've fought against each

00:32:00 --> 00:32:03 other. I

00:32:03 --> 00:32:05 don't think that would stop. If we found

00:32:05 --> 00:32:07 another intelligent life form, I don't think

00:32:07 --> 00:32:09 we'd go in saying, hi, hey, we're really

00:32:09 --> 00:32:12 nice. I got a feeling we'd, you know,

00:32:12 --> 00:32:13 there'd be a bit of adversarial.

00:32:15 --> 00:32:17 Jonti Horner: It's a really, it is a really interesting

00:32:17 --> 00:32:17 one.

00:32:17 --> 00:32:19 It's one of the things that people factor

00:32:19 --> 00:32:22 into a lot of the discussions about the, the

00:32:22 --> 00:32:25 rights and wrongs of active seti.

00:32:25 --> 00:32:27 So active SETI is sending out a message

00:32:27 --> 00:32:29 saying, hi, we're here. Please talk to us.

00:32:29 --> 00:32:31 Whereas passive SETI is listening for people

00:32:31 --> 00:32:33 saying, please turn neighbours off. We're

00:32:33 --> 00:32:34 sick of seeing it. You know, they're

00:32:34 --> 00:32:36 effectively the two ways you can do seti.

00:32:37 --> 00:32:39 There are, uh, a lot of people in the past

00:32:39 --> 00:32:41 that have argued that active set is a bad

00:32:41 --> 00:32:42 idea because it will attract the wrong kind

00:32:42 --> 00:32:45 of attention. Well, Stephen Hawking certainly

00:32:45 --> 00:32:47 thought that, um, and throwing

00:32:47 --> 00:32:49 noshead. I think the great Mark Commode,

00:32:49 --> 00:32:52 who's a film reviewer in the uk, um, often

00:32:52 --> 00:32:54 says, you know, uh, other opinions are

00:32:54 --> 00:32:56 available. They're wrong, but they are

00:32:56 --> 00:32:58 available. I mean, this, I think, is a case

00:32:58 --> 00:33:01 of that. I think, if any, for me, and I will

00:33:01 --> 00:33:03 admit I'm an optimist, I'm also not exactly

00:33:03 --> 00:33:06 the world's most aggressive person. But for

00:33:06 --> 00:33:08 me, if you have survived as a species for

00:33:08 --> 00:33:11 long enough to be a thriving civilization to

00:33:11 --> 00:33:12 the point of wanting to communicate to the

00:33:12 --> 00:33:15 upscale upstarts that are broadcasting, you

00:33:15 --> 00:33:16 know, Big Brother and all the rest of it, to

00:33:16 --> 00:33:19 the universe, that suggests that to some

00:33:19 --> 00:33:22 degree you've overcome your martiality. Um,

00:33:22 --> 00:33:25 because I think for us to survive to the

00:33:25 --> 00:33:27 point where we're moving out into the stars

00:33:27 --> 00:33:29 will require us not to first wipe ourselves

00:33:29 --> 00:33:32 out. And the more advanced you get, the more

00:33:32 --> 00:33:35 you disperse, probably, fingers crossed,

00:33:35 --> 00:33:37 hopefully, the less likely that becomes. Now,

00:33:37 --> 00:33:39 we look at the world around us today, and

00:33:39 --> 00:33:40 without digging into politics, there's always

00:33:40 --> 00:33:43 something nasty going on. There's many, many

00:33:43 --> 00:33:45 tragedies that are both frontline in the news

00:33:45 --> 00:33:47 and forgotten by the news. But

00:33:48 --> 00:33:50 I saw a great article a few years ago

00:33:51 --> 00:33:53 that was arguing that, you know, when was the

00:33:53 --> 00:33:54 worst time to ever live, and saying that

00:33:54 --> 00:33:57 actually, despite the fact that all this war,

00:33:57 --> 00:33:59 all this aggression, all this violence is so

00:33:59 --> 00:34:02 front and centre, this is actually the safest

00:34:02 --> 00:34:03 era to live in that humanity's ever

00:34:03 --> 00:34:06 experienced. The number of people dying

00:34:06 --> 00:34:08 before their time, dying before they reach

00:34:08 --> 00:34:11 senescence, is lower per thousand people, up

00:34:11 --> 00:34:13 a hundred thousand people than ever before.

00:34:14 --> 00:34:16 You have a much lower chance as an average

00:34:16 --> 00:34:18 person of ever fighting in a war, of ever

00:34:18 --> 00:34:20 being murdered or assaulted. So

00:34:20 --> 00:34:22 we're already moving that way if it doesn't

00:34:22 --> 00:34:25 feel like it. And so to me, with that

00:34:25 --> 00:34:27 optimistic viewpoint, I would like to

00:34:27 --> 00:34:30 think that there is no reason for conflict

00:34:30 --> 00:34:32 and no reason for friction. And I think a lot

00:34:32 --> 00:34:35 of the arguments that humanity's, uh, future

00:34:35 --> 00:34:38 encounters with aliens must by necessity be

00:34:38 --> 00:34:41 violent is telling you more about people than

00:34:41 --> 00:34:42 it's telling you about aliens. Because it's

00:34:42 --> 00:34:44 saying when we look in the mirror, we see the

00:34:44 --> 00:34:47 angry, snarling, tribalist ape rather than

00:34:47 --> 00:34:49 the rational modern human that is a

00:34:49 --> 00:34:52 veneer. On m top. We're still a tribal

00:34:52 --> 00:34:55 species, we're still the product of our

00:34:55 --> 00:34:57 evolution and society is a veneer that we put

00:34:57 --> 00:35:00 on top of that as we learn, um, to be

00:35:00 --> 00:35:02 better, to be the kind of thinking social

00:35:02 --> 00:35:05 app, I guess. And the

00:35:05 --> 00:35:06 evidence is that over time we're getting

00:35:06 --> 00:35:08 better at that. Even though we're now more

00:35:08 --> 00:35:10 capable of killing each other than we ever

00:35:10 --> 00:35:13 were before. Yeah. We're doing it less often.

00:35:13 --> 00:35:14 Andrew Dunkley: Yes, we are.

00:35:14 --> 00:35:16 M. All right, we'll take a quick breather

00:35:16 --> 00:35:19 because I want to get into the, um, the

00:35:19 --> 00:35:22 area of, um, finding this

00:35:22 --> 00:35:25 life beyond our solar system. How, how are we

00:35:25 --> 00:35:26 going to. At where we're going to look and

00:35:26 --> 00:35:27 Jonti Horner: what we've got to look for.

00:35:27 --> 00:35:30 Andrew Dunkley: That's all coming up on this edition of Space

00:35:30 --> 00:35:30 Nuts.

00:35:35 --> 00:35:36 Jonti Horner: Space Nuts.

00:35:36 --> 00:35:38 Andrew Dunkley: So, Jotty, look, lead the way. Where do you

00:35:38 --> 00:35:40 want to go from here? We're gonna, uh, this

00:35:40 --> 00:35:41 is our final segment.

00:35:41 --> 00:35:44 So, um, I suppose if you're going to try and

00:35:44 --> 00:35:47 find life beyond our solar system,

00:35:48 --> 00:35:50 uh, you've got to find the right environment.

00:35:50 --> 00:35:53 Um, you know, rocky planet, habitable zone,

00:35:53 --> 00:35:54 perhaps. Um,

00:35:56 --> 00:35:58 and there's a lot more to it than that. It's

00:35:58 --> 00:36:00 not just, uh, a planet with perhaps liquid

00:36:00 --> 00:36:03 water on its surface. Uh,

00:36:04 --> 00:36:05 you've got to have, I suppose, the right kind

00:36:05 --> 00:36:08 of star. You don't want a red dwarf because

00:36:08 --> 00:36:10 you probably just, you know, get really bad

00:36:10 --> 00:36:12 sunburn. Uh, there's a lot to take

00:36:12 --> 00:36:13 into account.

00:36:14 --> 00:36:15 Jonti Horner: There's a huge amount of depth to it. And I

00:36:15 --> 00:36:18 think, as we saw with the previous episode,

00:36:18 --> 00:36:20 we could have talked another hour and we

00:36:20 --> 00:36:21 could have talked another week. To be honest,

00:36:21 --> 00:36:23 when we're talking about this stuff, one of

00:36:23 --> 00:36:25 the things I, I most adore about

00:36:25 --> 00:36:28 science is the infinite complexity. So you

00:36:28 --> 00:36:30 ask a question, when you get an answer that

00:36:30 --> 00:36:32 isn't it. But you get another 10 questions

00:36:32 --> 00:36:34 and the more you know about a subject, the

00:36:34 --> 00:36:36 more complexity there is. To me, that's just

00:36:36 --> 00:36:38 a wonder. And that's fascinating and this is

00:36:38 --> 00:36:41 a really good example of that. Now, one of my

00:36:42 --> 00:36:45 strongest arguments through my career

00:36:46 --> 00:36:49 has been that we can't just, when we're

00:36:49 --> 00:36:50 trying to think about where we're going to

00:36:50 --> 00:36:52 search for life beyond the solar system, use

00:36:52 --> 00:36:54 a habitable zone. Um, and that's it. You

00:36:54 --> 00:36:57 know, it seems like a lot of coverage and a

00:36:57 --> 00:36:59 lot of papers just go, Earth, like planet

00:36:59 --> 00:37:00 found in the habitable zone.

00:37:00 --> 00:37:01 Andrew Dunkley: Whee.

00:37:01 --> 00:37:04 Jonti Horner: And ah. And um, that's about it. Now the

00:37:04 --> 00:37:06 habitable zone has become a really effective

00:37:06 --> 00:37:08 communication tool in much same way the Drake

00:37:08 --> 00:37:11 Equation has. The Drake Equation is this

00:37:11 --> 00:37:12 fabulous tool with all the sliders where you

00:37:12 --> 00:37:15 can make your own, um, inhabited universe

00:37:15 --> 00:37:17 with lots of few aliens by varying the

00:37:17 --> 00:37:20 variables. The habitable zone has become

00:37:20 --> 00:37:22 another of these catch all kind of

00:37:22 --> 00:37:24 visualisations. And it's born of the idea

00:37:24 --> 00:37:26 that life needs liquid water with the

00:37:26 --> 00:37:29 implicit extension of that, that life needs

00:37:29 --> 00:37:31 liquid water on a planet's surface.

00:37:32 --> 00:37:34 Now, that's initially motivated by the fact

00:37:34 --> 00:37:36 that the Earth is the only place with life

00:37:36 --> 00:37:38 and back when this was being discussed, the

00:37:38 --> 00:37:41 only place with liquid water that we knew. So

00:37:41 --> 00:37:42 therefore it was natural to say you need

00:37:42 --> 00:37:45 surface liquid water. As we discussed

00:37:45 --> 00:37:46 earlier, there are plenty of places in the

00:37:46 --> 00:37:48 solar system that do not have liquid water on

00:37:48 --> 00:37:50 the surface, but do have it underneath.

00:37:50 --> 00:37:53 They've got soft centres. But the habitable

00:37:53 --> 00:37:55 zone, um, says you need liquid water

00:37:56 --> 00:37:58 on the surface of a planet for that planet to

00:37:58 --> 00:38:00 be considered suitable for life to be

00:38:00 --> 00:38:03 habitable. Now, that isn't entirely

00:38:03 --> 00:38:05 true, but for the purposes of this, it's

00:38:05 --> 00:38:08 still useful because life buried beneath

00:38:08 --> 00:38:10 ice is so hard to find that we can't find it

00:38:10 --> 00:38:12 in our own solar system. Because the ice is

00:38:12 --> 00:38:14 in the way, we wouldn't have a chance to run

00:38:14 --> 00:38:16 planets around other stars. So even though I

00:38:16 --> 00:38:18 think the habitable zone is a bigger

00:38:18 --> 00:38:20 oversimplification, I see merit to it,

00:38:20 --> 00:38:22 because life on a planet's surface with

00:38:22 --> 00:38:25 only atmosphere above is much more likely to

00:38:25 --> 00:38:27 be detectable than life buried deep in the

00:38:27 --> 00:38:29 interior. So, fair enough, we'll go with it.

00:38:29 --> 00:38:31 The idea of the habitable zone, though, is

00:38:31 --> 00:38:33 that the closer you are to a star, the hotter

00:38:33 --> 00:38:35 you are, the further away you are, the cooler

00:38:35 --> 00:38:37 you are. And just like Goldilocks and the

00:38:37 --> 00:38:39 Three Bears, which is why it's often called

00:38:39 --> 00:38:40 the Goldilocks Zone, there's a place where

00:38:40 --> 00:38:42 it's just right, it's not too hot, not too

00:38:42 --> 00:38:44 cold, and therefore there could be liquid

00:38:44 --> 00:38:47 water on the surface of the planet. Now, a

00:38:47 --> 00:38:49 lot of the time when people say a planet is

00:38:49 --> 00:38:52 in the habitable zone, um, that's

00:38:52 --> 00:38:55 often taken as meaning that planet could and

00:38:55 --> 00:38:57 potentially will have liquid water on the

00:38:57 --> 00:38:59 surface. But actually, what it's saying is,

00:38:59 --> 00:39:02 if you took the Earth as the Earth is today,

00:39:02 --> 00:39:05 and put it in that system, would it still

00:39:05 --> 00:39:06 look like the Earth? Would it have liquid

00:39:06 --> 00:39:09 water on its surface? Now, now

00:39:09 --> 00:39:11 we've extended a bit beyond that. There are a

00:39:11 --> 00:39:13 couple of fabulous papers a bit more than a

00:39:13 --> 00:39:15 decade old now that set. What are our very,

00:39:15 --> 00:39:17 uh, contemporary scientific, mathematical

00:39:17 --> 00:39:19 definitions of the habitable zone, um, that

00:39:19 --> 00:39:22 people use for their papers, and they take

00:39:22 --> 00:39:24 the flux from the star, take into account the

00:39:24 --> 00:39:27 different colours of the stars and, um, there

00:39:27 --> 00:39:29 are two versions. There's the optimistic and

00:39:29 --> 00:39:31 conservative versions, where the

00:39:31 --> 00:39:34 optimistic version is a wider set of

00:39:34 --> 00:39:35 distances and the conservative version is a

00:39:35 --> 00:39:38 smaller set of distances, but it effectively

00:39:38 --> 00:39:40 uses Venus and Mars as A roughinger edge in

00:39:40 --> 00:39:42 our solar system and then scales that window

00:39:42 --> 00:39:44 up and down depending on the kind of star

00:39:44 --> 00:39:47 you're around. But that illustrates

00:39:47 --> 00:39:49 immediately that this is an

00:39:49 --> 00:39:51 oversimplification, because you can do a

00:39:51 --> 00:39:53 thought experiment. Let's take our solar

00:39:53 --> 00:39:56 system. Venus is way too hot, Mars is way too

00:39:56 --> 00:39:58 cold and the Earth is just right. All well

00:39:58 --> 00:40:01 and good. Swap the Earth. Sorry, swap Mars

00:40:01 --> 00:40:03 and Venus around. If you put Venus where Mars

00:40:03 --> 00:40:06 is, Venus's thick atmosphere and greenhouse

00:40:06 --> 00:40:07 effect would mean it'd be warming up liquid

00:40:07 --> 00:40:09 water on the surface. It wouldn't have cooled

00:40:09 --> 00:40:11 as much as Mars. So Venus will be

00:40:12 --> 00:40:14 habitable on the surface, outside the

00:40:14 --> 00:40:17 habitable zone. Um, if you put m Mars, where

00:40:17 --> 00:40:18 Venus is, with its very thin and tenuous

00:40:18 --> 00:40:21 atmosphere, it doesn't have much greenhouse

00:40:21 --> 00:40:24 effect at all. Mars would potentially still

00:40:24 --> 00:40:27 be habitable where Venus is, when

00:40:27 --> 00:40:29 Venus isn't. And so that's immediately

00:40:29 --> 00:40:31 pointing that the storey is actually

00:40:31 --> 00:40:33 significantly more complex. Yeah. That

00:40:34 --> 00:40:37 you can't just say, let's calculate the

00:40:37 --> 00:40:38 habitable zone, let's calculate the

00:40:38 --> 00:40:41 equilibrium temperature on a planet, which is

00:40:41 --> 00:40:44 a temperature it would have if it didn't have

00:40:44 --> 00:40:46 a greenhouse effect, that it was a certain

00:40:46 --> 00:40:48 reflectivity and it was in equilibrium with

00:40:48 --> 00:40:50 the light coming in and light coming out. And

00:40:50 --> 00:40:52 if that temperature is from about minus 20

00:40:52 --> 00:40:54 upwards, it's probably warm enough for water

00:40:54 --> 00:40:55 because, well, you'll have a bit of an

00:40:55 --> 00:40:58 atmosphere. To me, that's never been enough.

00:40:58 --> 00:41:00 Now, the reason it's really important, at

00:41:00 --> 00:41:02 least from my perspective, is that, uh,

00:41:03 --> 00:41:05 finding planets is hard. We'll talk about

00:41:05 --> 00:41:08 that in another episode. But once you find

00:41:08 --> 00:41:11 the first of something, astronomy, history

00:41:11 --> 00:41:12 and probably every other form of scientific

00:41:12 --> 00:41:14 endeavour history tells us finding the first

00:41:14 --> 00:41:16 of something is hard. But once you've got

00:41:16 --> 00:41:18 one, you quickly find more and more as your

00:41:18 --> 00:41:20 technology gets better. Finding evidence of

00:41:20 --> 00:41:23 life on a planet that is similar to the Earth

00:41:24 --> 00:41:26 is fundamentally at least an order of

00:41:26 --> 00:41:29 magnitude, if not more harder than finding

00:41:29 --> 00:41:31 that planet was. So it'll take time for our

00:41:31 --> 00:41:33 technology to get good enough to search

00:41:33 --> 00:41:36 comfortably for life elsewhere. So initially

00:41:36 --> 00:41:38 that search is going to be very restricted

00:41:38 --> 00:41:40 because we've got limited resources. So

00:41:40 --> 00:41:42 you're only going to be able to look at a few

00:41:42 --> 00:41:45 planets aggressively at first, to try and

00:41:45 --> 00:41:47 tease out any indication of life.

00:41:47 --> 00:41:49 But you're going to have loads to choose

00:41:49 --> 00:41:52 from. How should you choose? Well, to me, it

00:41:52 --> 00:41:53 can't just be the habitable zone.

00:41:56 --> 00:41:58 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, that's a valid point. Um,

00:41:59 --> 00:42:01 and we've reached a point where we've found

00:42:02 --> 00:42:04 thousands upon thousands of Exoplanets and

00:42:04 --> 00:42:06 counting like we haven't stopped. We're

00:42:06 --> 00:42:09 finding them more and more and more often of

00:42:09 --> 00:42:12 all different shapes of, uh, sizes. Um,

00:42:13 --> 00:42:16 some rocky planets, uh, they've been harder

00:42:16 --> 00:42:18 to find because they're usually much smaller

00:42:18 --> 00:42:21 and don't sort of indicate

00:42:21 --> 00:42:23 themselves like a gas giant does.

00:42:24 --> 00:42:26 But we're getting better at finding rocky,

00:42:26 --> 00:42:27 uh, planets.

00:42:27 --> 00:42:30 Um, I suppose the big

00:42:30 --> 00:42:33 question is, given how much we are finding,

00:42:34 --> 00:42:36 how do you identify prime targets for life?

00:42:37 --> 00:42:40 Jonti Horner: Yeah, and that is what the paper that I put

00:42:40 --> 00:42:42 together with Barry Jones back in 2010 was

00:42:42 --> 00:42:45 all about. So Barry was a very dear friend of

00:42:45 --> 00:42:47 mine. He was my boss when I moved to the open

00:42:47 --> 00:42:49 University from 2000 and 22 to 2009. I

00:42:49 --> 00:42:50 think he knew Fred Watson very well as well.

00:42:50 --> 00:42:52 So you can always mention to Fred Watson that

00:42:52 --> 00:42:54 we talked about Barry. I started work at the

00:42:54 --> 00:42:57 Open University in 2006 on the day Barry was

00:42:57 --> 00:42:59 forced to retire by the government because

00:42:59 --> 00:43:02 he'd hit 67. So he hired me and promptly

00:43:02 --> 00:43:04 retired. But, um, he kept working anyway as

00:43:04 --> 00:43:07 emeritus professor and Barry and I

00:43:07 --> 00:43:09 did a lot of work on this during my time that

00:43:09 --> 00:43:11 Barry unfortunately passed away a little bit

00:43:11 --> 00:43:13 more than a decade ago. So he's fondly

00:43:13 --> 00:43:15 remembered. I organise a, an award in the UK

00:43:15 --> 00:43:18 in his memory every couple of years. What

00:43:18 --> 00:43:21 we did in this 2010 paper was

00:43:22 --> 00:43:24 to essentially have the thought process we

00:43:24 --> 00:43:27 just outlined. So we're going to have a huge

00:43:27 --> 00:43:29 number of potential exo Earths, planets that

00:43:29 --> 00:43:32 could potentially be Earth like that could be

00:43:32 --> 00:43:35 places to look for life. But we're only going

00:43:35 --> 00:43:36 to be able to search a, ah, handful of them

00:43:36 --> 00:43:39 initially. So what should we do to select the

00:43:39 --> 00:43:41 best target? Now obviously the

00:43:41 --> 00:43:44 closer the planet's host star is to the solar

00:43:44 --> 00:43:46 system, the easier the observations will be.

00:43:46 --> 00:43:49 That's just a fundamental thing of if you're

00:43:49 --> 00:43:50 twice as far away, we only receive a quarter

00:43:50 --> 00:43:53 as much light from you. But also if you're

00:43:53 --> 00:43:55 twice as far away, the separation between the

00:43:55 --> 00:43:57 planet and the star on the sky will be half

00:43:57 --> 00:44:00 as much because the angle gets

00:44:00 --> 00:44:01 smaller the further away you go. Essentially

00:44:02 --> 00:44:03 we, uh, will want targets that are far enough

00:44:03 --> 00:44:05 from the star in the sky that with future

00:44:05 --> 00:44:06 missions like potentially the Habitable

00:44:06 --> 00:44:09 Worlds Observatory, we can separate the light

00:44:09 --> 00:44:11 from the planet from the light from the star.

00:44:11 --> 00:44:14 So probably even more important than the

00:44:14 --> 00:44:16 habitable zone, um, is this proximity thing.

00:44:16 --> 00:44:19 The planets in the main found by the Kepler

00:44:19 --> 00:44:21 space telescope won't be suitable for this

00:44:21 --> 00:44:23 search because they're mainly very far from

00:44:23 --> 00:44:26 the sun. And so therefore they'll be very

00:44:26 --> 00:44:27 hard to study. We want to look locally,

00:44:27 --> 00:44:30 that's a given. But

00:44:30 --> 00:44:32 we want to look for places where there is the

00:44:32 --> 00:44:34 possibility of liquid water on the surface

00:44:35 --> 00:44:37 because that means that the life will be in

00:44:37 --> 00:44:38 contact with the atmosphere and that might

00:44:38 --> 00:44:40 generate a signature we can detect in the

00:44:40 --> 00:44:42 atmosphere. And that's where the habitable

00:44:42 --> 00:44:45 zone comes from. But there's actually much

00:44:45 --> 00:44:47 more to it than that, I think, and I'm far

00:44:47 --> 00:44:48 from able to give an exhaustive list because

00:44:48 --> 00:44:51 I'm not an expert in, uh, all areas of

00:44:51 --> 00:44:53 astronomy. But we decided to put together a

00:44:53 --> 00:44:56 review paper which, about 32

00:44:56 --> 00:44:59 pages long, probably a little bit outdated

00:44:59 --> 00:45:01 now because science has moved forward, but

00:45:01 --> 00:45:04 was saying, effectively you can't just use a

00:45:04 --> 00:45:07 habitable zone. We need to think about

00:45:07 --> 00:45:09 all of the different factors that can

00:45:09 --> 00:45:10 contribute to make a planet more or less

00:45:10 --> 00:45:13 suitable for life. Now, many of these have

00:45:13 --> 00:45:15 been in the past suggested as that on off

00:45:15 --> 00:45:17 switch. And I do think that they're more

00:45:17 --> 00:45:18 sliders, like the numbers in the Drake

00:45:18 --> 00:45:21 equation or sliders on a mixing desk. But

00:45:21 --> 00:45:22 there are a lot of different things that have

00:45:22 --> 00:45:24 been suggested and as I dug into the paper,

00:45:25 --> 00:45:26 there were even more than I thought of. You

00:45:26 --> 00:45:29 can broadly break them down m into four

00:45:29 --> 00:45:32 areas. The first is galactic influences.

00:45:32 --> 00:45:35 So the impact of the galaxy itself, where you

00:45:35 --> 00:45:37 are in the galaxy, stuff like that, you've

00:45:37 --> 00:45:39 then got stellar influences, so the role of

00:45:39 --> 00:45:42 the star. You've got the planetary system and

00:45:42 --> 00:45:44 then you've got the planet itself. So they're

00:45:44 --> 00:45:46 the kind of four broad areas, the

00:45:46 --> 00:45:49 galactic influences. One is probably the

00:45:49 --> 00:45:50 least useful and the least well constrained.

00:45:50 --> 00:45:53 But the idea of the galactic influence is

00:45:53 --> 00:45:55 tied a bit to a theory that's been put

00:45:55 --> 00:45:57 forward by a few people called the Galactic

00:45:57 --> 00:46:00 Habitable Zone. It's an idea that

00:46:00 --> 00:46:03 ties back to the origin of stars and planets

00:46:03 --> 00:46:05 and also to the dangers that are experienced

00:46:05 --> 00:46:07 because of your environment. The idea that as

00:46:07 --> 00:46:09 time goes on, the universe is becoming more

00:46:09 --> 00:46:12 metal rich and by that I mean enriched in

00:46:12 --> 00:46:14 everything other than hydrogen and helium,

00:46:14 --> 00:46:16 because generations of stars run their

00:46:16 --> 00:46:18 furnaces and turn the light elements to the

00:46:18 --> 00:46:20 heavy ones and put them back into the cosmos.

00:46:20 --> 00:46:22 You need a certain amount of heavy elements

00:46:22 --> 00:46:24 to form planets like the Earth and to have

00:46:24 --> 00:46:26 the carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus for life.

00:46:27 --> 00:46:29 So as time goes on, the universe getting more

00:46:29 --> 00:46:32 enriched is a good thing. But there's also

00:46:32 --> 00:46:34 possibilities that too much enrichment will

00:46:34 --> 00:46:36 change the chemistry or it will make planet

00:46:36 --> 00:46:38 formation too easy. There's all sorts there,

00:46:38 --> 00:46:40 so you might have a sweet spot from that side

00:46:40 --> 00:46:43 of things. Now in the middle of the galaxy,

00:46:43 --> 00:46:46 star formation occurs at a more rapid pace

00:46:46 --> 00:46:48 and stars live and die quicker. So you get

00:46:48 --> 00:46:51 faster change in the abundance of

00:46:51 --> 00:46:54 materials. So you can imagine we have this

00:46:54 --> 00:46:56 concept in astronomy called metallicity,

00:46:56 --> 00:46:58 which is the amount. It's usually measured in

00:46:58 --> 00:47:00 the amount of hydrogen compared to the amount

00:47:00 --> 00:47:03 of iron in a star. And that gives you a

00:47:03 --> 00:47:05 number on a logarithmic scale. And that is an

00:47:05 --> 00:47:08 approximation to when the star formed and how

00:47:08 --> 00:47:10 enriched the world was at the time. And as

00:47:10 --> 00:47:12 time goes on, things get more and more metal

00:47:12 --> 00:47:14 rich within our galaxy. You'd expect there to

00:47:14 --> 00:47:16 be a gradient in this, so the things near the

00:47:16 --> 00:47:18 middle will be much more enriched in heavy

00:47:18 --> 00:47:19 elements of things, things near the outer

00:47:19 --> 00:47:21 edge. And there's probably sweet spot in the

00:47:21 --> 00:47:24 middle that moves outwards over time where

00:47:24 --> 00:47:26 conditions to form planets like the Earth,

00:47:26 --> 00:47:27 uh, and planetary systems like the solar

00:47:27 --> 00:47:30 system are perfect. So that's part of the

00:47:30 --> 00:47:32 galactic habitable zone idea. But the other

00:47:32 --> 00:47:35 idea is that if you're too close in and the

00:47:35 --> 00:47:37 stellar density is too high, eventually the

00:47:37 --> 00:47:39 stellar density gets, uh, so high that the

00:47:39 --> 00:47:41 likelihood of life being exterminated by

00:47:41 --> 00:47:43 nearby supernovae or planetary systems being

00:47:43 --> 00:47:46 stripped and disrupted becomes too high. So

00:47:46 --> 00:47:48 there's always been this idea that location

00:47:48 --> 00:47:50 within the galaxy is important.

00:47:51 --> 00:47:54 The challenge to that is twofold. Firstly,

00:47:54 --> 00:47:56 the proximity argument. We're gonna have to

00:47:56 --> 00:47:59 look at stars that are very nearby, which are

00:47:59 --> 00:48:00 all at the same distance from in the middle

00:48:00 --> 00:48:03 of the galaxy as we are. So where you are in

00:48:03 --> 00:48:06 the galaxy won't realistically impact this

00:48:06 --> 00:48:07 search because we're going to be looking

00:48:07 --> 00:48:10 locally. The other thing so is that stars

00:48:10 --> 00:48:12 have a huge degree of mobility. There was a

00:48:12 --> 00:48:14 recent storey talking about finding solar

00:48:14 --> 00:48:16 twin stars that have the same chemistry as

00:48:16 --> 00:48:19 the sun, that may have formed with the sun,

00:48:19 --> 00:48:22 and a suggestion that the sun and other stars

00:48:22 --> 00:48:24 may have formed as much as 10 light years

00:48:24 --> 00:48:26 nearer the middle of the galaxy than we are

00:48:26 --> 00:48:28 now. Stars are getting scattered inwards and

00:48:28 --> 00:48:30 outwards. So seeing a star here now doesn't

00:48:30 --> 00:48:32 imply that it's always been here.

00:48:33 --> 00:48:33 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah.

00:48:33 --> 00:48:36 Jonti Horner: So the galactic influences, I'm not going to

00:48:36 --> 00:48:38 go into really any more than that, but it's

00:48:38 --> 00:48:40 worth knowing that they're there, there. It's

00:48:40 --> 00:48:41 worth knowing that it's a point of discussion

00:48:41 --> 00:48:42 and that there is good research going on

00:48:42 --> 00:48:45 about this. It's really interesting area, but

00:48:45 --> 00:48:47 it doesn't, I think, impact our initial

00:48:47 --> 00:48:49 search for life, because we're going to be

00:48:50 --> 00:48:52 searching our local area. So it's a bit like

00:48:52 --> 00:48:54 me saying, I Want to search for signs of life

00:48:54 --> 00:48:57 on Earth, It's a lot easier for me to search

00:48:57 --> 00:49:00 in Kingstorp, where I live, than to search in

00:49:00 --> 00:49:02 Mumbai or in London. Places like this,

00:49:02 --> 00:49:05 you've got to look locally. Now, talking

00:49:05 --> 00:49:06 about that, you know, what would I expect to

00:49:06 --> 00:49:09 find? I'm, you know, the people in Kingsop

00:49:09 --> 00:49:11 have not all, but many of them have a similar

00:49:11 --> 00:49:13 background to me, formed in similar ways with

00:49:13 --> 00:49:16 similar cultural, the rest of it. So

00:49:16 --> 00:49:18 this is not a great analogy, I

00:49:18 --> 00:49:20 admit, but we've got to look locally. So the

00:49:20 --> 00:49:22 galactic influencer stuff is

00:49:23 --> 00:49:26 interesting, but I wouldn't say it

00:49:26 --> 00:49:28 is a big factor, but it's worth. Okay, I

00:49:28 --> 00:49:29 guess.

00:49:30 --> 00:49:31 Andrew Dunkley: So that leads us on to,

00:49:32 --> 00:49:35 um, I don't know, finding the right

00:49:35 --> 00:49:38 targets. Uh, and, and if we do find

00:49:38 --> 00:49:41 those targets, what, what do

00:49:41 --> 00:49:43 we do then to look for potential

00:49:43 --> 00:49:45 life on those targets?

00:49:45 --> 00:49:47 Jonti Horner: Absolutely. And that's a very hard question.

00:49:47 --> 00:49:48 Now, in terms of finding the right targets,

00:49:48 --> 00:49:50 there's a lot that comes into it from the

00:49:50 --> 00:49:52 star itself. Now,

00:49:53 --> 00:49:56 stars live very long lives.

00:49:56 --> 00:49:58 First question then is, how old is a star?

00:49:58 --> 00:50:00 Now, if we look at life on Earth, the oldest

00:50:00 --> 00:50:02 star fossils on Earth that are widely

00:50:02 --> 00:50:04 accepted are about three and a half thousand

00:50:04 --> 00:50:06 million years old, are in the Pilbara, which

00:50:06 --> 00:50:08 is about a billion years after the Earth, uh,

00:50:08 --> 00:50:10 formed. There are some that are older that

00:50:10 --> 00:50:13 are still controversial, possibly as old as 4

00:50:13 --> 00:50:14 billion years. But if we take the 3 1/2

00:50:14 --> 00:50:17 billion years as a threshold and we do what

00:50:17 --> 00:50:19 we're doing with the liquid water thing, and

00:50:19 --> 00:50:20 we say we expect life to follow a similar

00:50:20 --> 00:50:23 path, to us, the fact that it took a billion

00:50:23 --> 00:50:25 years for life to get established enough to

00:50:25 --> 00:50:27 leave fossils we could find possibly means

00:50:27 --> 00:50:29 that it might have taken a similar length of

00:50:29 --> 00:50:30 time for that life to modify its environment

00:50:30 --> 00:50:33 enough to be detectable from elsewhere. So we

00:50:33 --> 00:50:35 can put an arbitrary kind of timer here

00:50:35 --> 00:50:38 saying that any planetary system younger

00:50:38 --> 00:50:41 than, say, a billion years may have planets

00:50:41 --> 00:50:42 that are suitable for life, but that life

00:50:42 --> 00:50:44 might have not had enough time to get

00:50:44 --> 00:50:47 established yet. So that might

00:50:47 --> 00:50:50 immediately say that's not as good a place to

00:50:50 --> 00:50:51 look as a star that is more like the edge of

00:50:51 --> 00:50:54 the sun, while life's had 4 billion years to

00:50:54 --> 00:50:56 get going. Now, tied to that is

00:50:56 --> 00:50:59 the fact that the lives of stars are very

00:50:59 --> 00:51:01 dependent on the mass. So the more massive a

00:51:01 --> 00:51:03 star is, the brighter it shines, but the

00:51:03 --> 00:51:06 shorter its life is. And at a very rough

00:51:06 --> 00:51:08 level, this number varies a little bit

00:51:08 --> 00:51:09 depending on the mass of the star. But

00:51:09 --> 00:51:12 typically, the luminosity of a star Is

00:51:12 --> 00:51:14 proportional to its mass to the power four.

00:51:14 --> 00:51:16 So if you've got a star that is 10 times the

00:51:16 --> 00:51:18 mass of the sun, it will be roughly 10

00:51:18 --> 00:51:20 times brighter than the sun. But these

00:51:20 --> 00:51:22 stars are burning their own material. They're

00:51:22 --> 00:51:24 turning hydrogen to helium, and they're made

00:51:24 --> 00:51:26 of hydrogen. So a star that is 10 times the

00:51:26 --> 00:51:28 mass of the sun will only have 10 times as

00:51:28 --> 00:51:31 much fuel as the sun, but it's burning that

00:51:31 --> 00:51:33 fuel 10 times quicker, which means it'll

00:51:33 --> 00:51:36 run out a lot quicker. And what that means is

00:51:36 --> 00:51:37 that, uh, the more massive a star is, the

00:51:37 --> 00:51:40 longer, the shorter its life will be. And the

00:51:40 --> 00:51:42 less massive a star is, the longer its life

00:51:42 --> 00:51:45 will be. That means that beyond

00:51:45 --> 00:51:47 a certain, uh, stellar mass, the star will

00:51:47 --> 00:51:50 die before that billion year cutoff. So we

00:51:50 --> 00:51:52 can probably rule out the most massive stars.

00:51:52 --> 00:51:54 They'll just live fast, die young, and it's

00:51:54 --> 00:51:55 unlikely that life will get well enough

00:51:55 --> 00:51:58 established. On the flip side, the dim little

00:51:58 --> 00:52:00 red dwarfs will just go forever. You know,

00:52:00 --> 00:52:02 Proxima Centauri will still be trundling

00:52:02 --> 00:52:03 along in a trillion years when we're a decent

00:52:03 --> 00:52:06 memory. So they might be a good place to

00:52:06 --> 00:52:08 look. The challenge there though is, uh,

00:52:08 --> 00:52:11 those stars are, uh, quite active quite

00:52:11 --> 00:52:13 often. And um, to be in the habitable zone

00:52:13 --> 00:52:15 around them, you've got to be very close in

00:52:15 --> 00:52:16 because they're called little embers. You've

00:52:16 --> 00:52:18 got to snuggle up to the fire. So there's a

00:52:18 --> 00:52:20 lot of discussion about the fact that m dwarf

00:52:20 --> 00:52:22 planets, planets around these coolest,

00:52:22 --> 00:52:25 smallest stars are probably not ideal places

00:52:25 --> 00:52:27 to look for knife initially, few reasons. One

00:52:27 --> 00:52:29 is that activity and a lot of discussions

00:52:29 --> 00:52:31 that the activity of red dwarfs when they're

00:52:31 --> 00:52:33 young could scour a planet's atmosphere away.

00:52:33 --> 00:52:35 And that seems to have possibly been backed

00:52:35 --> 00:52:38 up with the Trappist 1 planets that all seem

00:52:38 --> 00:52:41 to be airless worlds. The other is that those

00:52:41 --> 00:52:43 planets, if they are close enough in to be

00:52:43 --> 00:52:45 warm enough for liquid water on the surface,

00:52:45 --> 00:52:47 would have to be tidally locked like the moon

00:52:47 --> 00:52:49 is to the Earth. Which means they'll keep one

00:52:49 --> 00:52:51 face permanently pointed towards the star and

00:52:51 --> 00:52:54 the other permanently away, which may make it

00:52:54 --> 00:52:56 harder to look for life on them. It might be

00:52:56 --> 00:52:57 the case, uh, any life would be on the

00:52:57 --> 00:52:59 sunward side. And that's kind of hard to

00:52:59 --> 00:53:01 observe because when that side is best

00:53:01 --> 00:53:04 presented to us, it's near the star. So

00:53:04 --> 00:53:06 that's challenging. Another thing that

00:53:06 --> 00:53:08 factors into it ties into something called

00:53:08 --> 00:53:10 the faint early sun paradox on Earth.

00:53:11 --> 00:53:13 The lives of

00:53:13 --> 00:53:16 stars. They shine brightly, their brightness

00:53:16 --> 00:53:18 Is measured good compared to their mass, but

00:53:18 --> 00:53:20 their brightness increases with time. Stars

00:53:20 --> 00:53:22 get more luminous as they age a little bit,

00:53:22 --> 00:53:24 and it's a slow process. But with the sun,

00:53:25 --> 00:53:27 we think the sun was 30 dimmer

00:53:28 --> 00:53:31 when it was born to how it is now. So

00:53:31 --> 00:53:33 that means the Earth at the time got 30% less

00:53:33 --> 00:53:35 energy, which would have put it, with its

00:53:35 --> 00:53:38 current atmosphere, too cold to support

00:53:38 --> 00:53:41 life. Um, that was offset by the

00:53:41 --> 00:53:43 fact we had a very different atmosphere than

00:53:43 --> 00:53:46 in a significant greenhouse effect,

00:53:46 --> 00:53:48 which was lessened due to the influence of

00:53:48 --> 00:53:51 life stripping out carbon dioxide,

00:53:51 --> 00:53:53 particularly from the atmosphere, and keeping

00:53:53 --> 00:53:55 us mostly there and thereabouts. But what

00:53:55 --> 00:53:57 that means is that if we find a planet now

00:53:58 --> 00:54:00 and that planet is near the outer edge of the

00:54:00 --> 00:54:02 habitable zone, um, everybody will go, well,

00:54:02 --> 00:54:03 it's in the habitable zone. That's great.

00:54:04 --> 00:54:06 Whereas my question would then be, but how

00:54:06 --> 00:54:08 long has it been in the habitable zone?

00:54:08 --> 00:54:10 Because when the SAR was younger, it was a

00:54:10 --> 00:54:13 little bit dimmer. The habitable zone would

00:54:13 --> 00:54:14 have been closer in, and that planet might

00:54:14 --> 00:54:16 well have been outside it. So I don't

00:54:16 --> 00:54:18 necessarily think that that 1 billion year

00:54:18 --> 00:54:20 clock would start until the planet was in the

00:54:20 --> 00:54:22 habitable zone. So we'll probably then be

00:54:22 --> 00:54:25 able to rule some planets out on the

00:54:25 --> 00:54:28 basis of the fact that they could be

00:54:28 --> 00:54:29 in the habitable zone, uh, now, but they

00:54:29 --> 00:54:32 haven't been full long enough. Yeah, the star

00:54:32 --> 00:54:34 has all these effects. Never mind the fact

00:54:34 --> 00:54:36 that astronomers often joke that three out of

00:54:36 --> 00:54:38 every two stars are in a multiple star

00:54:38 --> 00:54:41 system. Them multiple, um, stars are

00:54:41 --> 00:54:43 very, very common. And uh, that adds a whole

00:54:43 --> 00:54:46 extra level of complexity, Both to

00:54:46 --> 00:54:48 the understanding of the lives of the planets

00:54:48 --> 00:54:50 in those stars, but also in our ability to

00:54:50 --> 00:54:52 study them. Because you've got more than one

00:54:52 --> 00:54:54 stars like to factor rain all close together.

00:54:55 --> 00:54:57 It's much nastier and much more complicated.

00:54:58 --> 00:55:00 So there's a lot of ways that the stars can

00:55:00 --> 00:55:01 factor in. And I think that's only a, ah,

00:55:02 --> 00:55:04 very, very broad brushstrokes view, but

00:55:04 --> 00:55:07 you can see how. So what I'm thinking is you

00:55:07 --> 00:55:10 can bring in all these different ideas and

00:55:10 --> 00:55:13 halve them as a slider. This kind of star

00:55:13 --> 00:55:14 could have planets around it with life, but

00:55:14 --> 00:55:17 it's not as good a target as this one. Now,

00:55:17 --> 00:55:19 everybody could build their own algorithm out

00:55:19 --> 00:55:20 of this, But I'd like to think that when

00:55:20 --> 00:55:22 we're trying to pick the target, you take

00:55:22 --> 00:55:25 into account the star that it's going around,

00:55:25 --> 00:55:28 how active it is. Is it a single star, Is

00:55:28 --> 00:55:30 it old enough, all these kind of factors

00:55:31 --> 00:55:33 and Then you can start looking at the

00:55:33 --> 00:55:35 planetary system that it's in. And there's a

00:55:35 --> 00:55:37 lot to talk about there, I think.

00:55:37 --> 00:55:40 Andrew Dunkley: Yes, absolutely. Uh, and in

00:55:40 --> 00:55:42 our next, um, ah, special,

00:55:43 --> 00:55:46 um, between Q and A episodes, we will,

00:55:46 --> 00:55:49 um, look more into, um, the, the

00:55:49 --> 00:55:50 planet side of things.

00:55:50 --> 00:55:53 I, I guess just to conclude, um, I'll throw

00:55:53 --> 00:55:56 one at you. Um, and, and this answer is

00:55:56 --> 00:55:58 always different, depending on who you ask.

00:55:58 --> 00:56:00 But, uh, we. What do you think the odds are

00:56:00 --> 00:56:03 that we will find some form of life?

00:56:05 --> 00:56:08 Jonti Horner: I'm an optimist. I think the answer to

00:56:08 --> 00:56:10 it will be yes, we will find some sort of

00:56:10 --> 00:56:12 life. I think the harder question is when?

00:56:13 --> 00:56:16 Now, if we find life in

00:56:16 --> 00:56:18 a million years time when we're not even

00:56:18 --> 00:56:19 human anymore, but we've hung around, we've

00:56:19 --> 00:56:22 managed to survive. That's not very edifying

00:56:22 --> 00:56:23 for me and you because it's long time to

00:56:23 --> 00:56:25 work. But as I said earlier on, I don't think

00:56:25 --> 00:56:27 it's a question of if, it's a question of, of

00:56:27 --> 00:56:30 when. Because I find it vanishingly

00:56:30 --> 00:56:32 improbable for us to be the only

00:56:33 --> 00:56:36 system with life. And it's a numbers game for

00:56:36 --> 00:56:38 me. You know, we've got a galaxy with between

00:56:38 --> 00:56:40 200 and 400 million

00:56:40 --> 00:56:43 stars. There are more galaxies in the

00:56:43 --> 00:56:46 visible universe, certainly than there are

00:56:46 --> 00:56:49 planets in our galaxy, probably more than

00:56:49 --> 00:56:51 there are grains of sand in our galaxy. All

00:56:51 --> 00:56:53 of them with hundreds of thousands of

00:56:53 --> 00:56:55 millions of stars to say that

00:56:55 --> 00:56:58 out of. If you run the numbers, you get

00:56:58 --> 00:57:00 sextillions, septillions, even

00:57:00 --> 00:57:03 octillions bonkersly full

00:57:03 --> 00:57:06 on numbers of planets out there that

00:57:06 --> 00:57:09 were the only place that got life. That tells

00:57:09 --> 00:57:11 you that life is effectively impossible and

00:57:11 --> 00:57:14 we're a fluke. Now, that

00:57:14 --> 00:57:16 could be the case. If that's the case, what

00:57:16 --> 00:57:18 we've got here on Earth becomes even more

00:57:18 --> 00:57:20 precious. And there is an even greater

00:57:20 --> 00:57:23 incentive for us to keep an eye on what

00:57:23 --> 00:57:25 we're doing so that Earth is still capable of

00:57:25 --> 00:57:28 hurting life in the future. But I think in

00:57:28 --> 00:57:30 reality, life will actually be more common

00:57:30 --> 00:57:32 than that. And you don't need to be much more

00:57:32 --> 00:57:34 common than that for life to be abundant in

00:57:34 --> 00:57:37 the galaxy. Let's imagine that life is

00:57:37 --> 00:57:40 found on one planet in one

00:57:40 --> 00:57:43 billion. That's billion with a B. So one in a

00:57:43 --> 00:57:45 thousand million. Now we're finding that on

00:57:45 --> 00:57:47 average, all stars have planets, probably

00:57:47 --> 00:57:49 have a number of planets. So if we say

00:57:49 --> 00:57:51 roughly there are 10 planets per star, there

00:57:51 --> 00:57:54 will be 4,4 trillion planets in our galaxy.

00:57:54 --> 00:57:57 If one in a billion had life on

00:57:57 --> 00:58:00 it, that will mean there were 4 inhabited

00:58:00 --> 00:58:03 planets in our galaxy. Not a

00:58:03 --> 00:58:04 big number. The nearest one will be so far

00:58:04 --> 00:58:06 away. In that case we wouldn't find life for

00:58:06 --> 00:58:09 a long time. But life could be common

00:58:09 --> 00:58:11 and we still wouldn't find it. The more you

00:58:11 --> 00:58:14 increase that likelihood of life, the nearer

00:58:14 --> 00:58:16 uh, the nearest examples will be in, the

00:58:16 --> 00:58:18 sooner we'll find it. And that's why I think

00:58:18 --> 00:58:20 proximity will tell us a lot about the

00:58:20 --> 00:58:23 probability of life and that

00:58:23 --> 00:58:26 if we find life, the next step is to

00:58:26 --> 00:58:28 figure out we are not alone, we know we're

00:58:28 --> 00:58:31 not alone, how common is life. Now the other

00:58:31 --> 00:58:33 thing I think factors into it, I think is a

00:58:33 --> 00:58:35 lovely kind of sci fi thing to discuss all

00:58:35 --> 00:58:36 the way through. You mentioned early on

00:58:36 --> 00:58:39 carbon based life and technologically

00:58:39 --> 00:58:42 advanced life and we drifted away. The

00:58:42 --> 00:58:45 one place where I think that life that is

00:58:45 --> 00:58:46 different to us is something we could

00:58:46 --> 00:58:49 possibly find is silicon based life.

00:58:50 --> 00:58:53 Now the reason for that is not from

00:58:53 --> 00:58:56 the point of view of um, silicon

00:58:56 --> 00:58:59 people who have evolved in the way we have

00:58:59 --> 00:59:01 done. I'm thinking more kind of second

00:59:01 --> 00:59:03 generation life. Now our exploration of the

00:59:03 --> 00:59:06 solar system is done by our robot envoys and

00:59:06 --> 00:59:08 we're sending them near enough to harm that

00:59:08 --> 00:59:11 we can tell them what to do. But we are

00:59:11 --> 00:59:14 developing to certain controversy at the

00:59:14 --> 00:59:15 current time. We're developing a greater and

00:59:15 --> 00:59:17 greater ability to visualise, develop things

00:59:17 --> 00:59:19 that can make decisions for themselves

00:59:19 --> 00:59:21 without human input, things like AI and other

00:59:21 --> 00:59:24 systems. And if we get to the point where we

00:59:24 --> 00:59:26 want to explore around other

00:59:26 --> 00:59:29 stars, we'll need to develop spacecraft that

00:59:29 --> 00:59:31 have enough autonomy to make their own

00:59:31 --> 00:59:34 decisions. You go back to the idea and I

00:59:34 --> 00:59:35 don't know what's happened to it in recent

00:59:35 --> 00:59:36 years, but the idea of Project Starshot,

00:59:36 --> 00:59:38 where they made a little spacecraft, shot

00:59:38 --> 00:59:40 them off with laser, then they got to proxima

00:59:40 --> 00:59:43 Centauri in 25 years, travelling at a fifth

00:59:43 --> 00:59:45 of the speed of light. You do that,

00:59:46 --> 00:59:48 they get to Proxima Centauri. If they've got

00:59:48 --> 00:59:49 to ask us what to do, they send a signal to

00:59:49 --> 00:59:52 us. Takes four and a bit years to get here,

00:59:52 --> 00:59:54 takes five years to get back, and by the time

00:59:54 --> 00:59:55 it reaches them, they're a light year beyond

00:59:55 --> 00:59:57 the system and it's like, well too late. So

00:59:57 --> 00:59:59 we have to give them a certain level of

00:59:59 --> 01:00:01 autonomy. And the more complex their mission

01:00:01 --> 01:00:03 is going to be, the more autonomous it have

01:00:03 --> 01:00:05 to be. Which leads to uh, the very science

01:00:05 --> 01:00:08 fiction idea that when we move out beyond the

01:00:08 --> 01:00:10 solar system, if we move out beyond the solar

01:00:10 --> 01:00:13 system, we will be preceded by

01:00:13 --> 01:00:15 a wave of life that is not us,

01:00:16 --> 01:00:18 that is our life that has a

01:00:18 --> 01:00:21 creator. That creator is humanity. That is

01:00:21 --> 01:00:23 silicon based life that we send out, whether

01:00:23 --> 01:00:25 they're von Neumann machines, whether they

01:00:25 --> 01:00:28 are incredibly advanced AI machines without

01:00:28 --> 01:00:31 the capacity to reproduce themselves. We

01:00:31 --> 01:00:33 will send out artificially

01:00:34 --> 01:00:37 built silicon life forms. And again,

01:00:37 --> 01:00:40 that's a lovely, fairly lost X

01:00:40 --> 01:00:42 sci fi series called the Bobby Verse,

01:00:42 --> 01:00:45 um, which follows that kind of idea in terms

01:00:45 --> 01:00:48 of future Earth. Well, guy

01:00:48 --> 01:00:50 in the current day dies, but has invested in

01:00:50 --> 01:00:53 cryogenics and his head is frozen and he

01:00:53 --> 01:00:55 wakes up and he's essentially put into a Van

01:00:55 --> 01:00:57 Neumann machine and shot out into the stars.

01:00:58 --> 01:00:59 And that, that's a really interesting one

01:00:59 --> 01:01:01 because it's silicon based life that is also

01:01:01 --> 01:01:03 human. Let me figure that one out. But it's

01:01:03 --> 01:01:06 good fun following again that very

01:01:06 --> 01:01:08 dangerous assumption that other life would

01:01:08 --> 01:01:10 follow the same path where we follow. And it

01:01:10 --> 01:01:12 seems like we are going down this AI and

01:01:12 --> 01:01:15 increasing complexity and increasing autonomy

01:01:15 --> 01:01:18 route. You'd then argue that other species

01:01:18 --> 01:01:20 sending out craft into the galaxy

01:01:20 --> 01:01:23 would send out autonomous

01:01:23 --> 01:01:25 intelligent silicon machines

01:01:26 --> 01:01:28 before they send themselves out. And

01:01:28 --> 01:01:30 therefore, you know, I think we're more

01:01:30 --> 01:01:32 likely, if we're ever to bump into aliens, to

01:01:32 --> 01:01:34 run into one of these probes or one of these

01:01:34 --> 01:01:36 machines rather than the aliens themselves. I

01:01:36 --> 01:01:38 think there is a very real chance that if we

01:01:38 --> 01:01:41 find intelligent advanced life, it could be

01:01:41 --> 01:01:43 silicon based rather than carbon based. But

01:01:43 --> 01:01:45 it's silicon based life that was created by

01:01:45 --> 01:01:48 carbon based life, which I mean,

01:01:48 --> 01:01:50 leads to really interesting questions about

01:01:50 --> 01:01:52 philosophy and religion and all those kind of

01:01:52 --> 01:01:54 things which are not my forte. But you know,

01:01:54 --> 01:01:56 it does ask interesting questions about

01:01:56 --> 01:01:58 origin and creation when you think about it

01:01:58 --> 01:02:00 from the context of that, which is one of the

01:02:00 --> 01:02:02 things that driven, like I said, a lot of

01:02:02 --> 01:02:04 wonderful and wonderfully entertaining sci fi

01:02:04 --> 01:02:05 over the years.

01:02:05 --> 01:02:08 Andrew Dunkley: Yeah, yeah, as you said earlier, we could, we

01:02:08 --> 01:02:10 could talk about this for a week, but we

01:02:10 --> 01:02:13 can't. Um, but uh, I

01:02:13 --> 01:02:16 do uh, want to direct people to your paper if

01:02:16 --> 01:02:18 uh, people are interested in reading your

01:02:18 --> 01:02:21 paper from 2010. Uh, it's

01:02:21 --> 01:02:24 uh, called Determining Habitability. Which

01:02:24 --> 01:02:27 exo Earths, uh, should we search for for

01:02:27 --> 01:02:30 life? And you can find it on the ARXIV

01:02:30 --> 01:02:31 website, is that right, John?

01:02:31 --> 01:02:33 Jonti Horner: Yeah. So that was published in the

01:02:33 --> 01:02:35 International Journal of Astrobiology in

01:02:35 --> 01:02:36 2010. So the ones who want the kind of

01:02:36 --> 01:02:38 scientific reference, it's International

01:02:38 --> 01:02:41 Journal of Astrobiology, Volume 9, page

01:02:41 --> 01:02:44 273 onwards. But um, if

01:02:44 --> 01:02:46 you find it on NASA rads, it'll give you the

01:02:46 --> 01:02:48 archive link which is the pre print Version,

01:02:48 --> 01:02:51 which basically means it's in my formatting

01:02:51 --> 01:02:53 rather than journal formatting. And this is,

01:02:54 --> 01:02:56 it's actually a, uh, handy aside that I'm

01:02:56 --> 01:02:58 sure, as we mentioned before, the

01:02:59 --> 01:03:01 way that a lot of science

01:03:01 --> 01:03:04 works has led to the creation of the most

01:03:04 --> 01:03:06 profitable, um, um, and

01:03:06 --> 01:03:09 problematic, um, companies in the world,

01:03:09 --> 01:03:11 which are the publishing companies. And so

01:03:11 --> 01:03:13 the way a scientist works is we do all this

01:03:13 --> 01:03:15 work, da da da da da. Hooray, hooray, hooray.

01:03:15 --> 01:03:17 We then write a paper to tell the world about

01:03:17 --> 01:03:19 it. We send that off to a journal who

01:03:19 --> 01:03:21 gets another scientist to volunteer their

01:03:21 --> 01:03:23 time, unpaid for free, to referee it.

01:03:24 --> 01:03:27 Then they're charged, typically the scientist

01:03:27 --> 01:03:28 who's written that paper money to publish

01:03:28 --> 01:03:31 that paper for them and then charge everybody

01:03:31 --> 01:03:33 for the privilege of reading it. So if I want

01:03:33 --> 01:03:35 the journal, if I want to read the journal

01:03:35 --> 01:03:37 versions of my papers. Fortunately,

01:03:37 --> 01:03:39 universities have paid access to a lot of

01:03:39 --> 01:03:41 journals, but I'm fundamentally paying to

01:03:41 --> 01:03:44 read my own work. And this is

01:03:45 --> 01:03:47 not ideal. Big deal. I think partly because

01:03:47 --> 01:03:48 as a scientist, you know, I'm paid by

01:03:48 --> 01:03:51 taxpayers money, people are paying me to do

01:03:51 --> 01:03:54 this work. To me, it is really important that

01:03:54 --> 01:03:55 they know what we're doing, they know what

01:03:55 --> 01:03:57 they're getting for their money. And, um,

01:03:57 --> 01:03:59 part of that is be a science communicator.

01:03:59 --> 01:04:00 And I encourage any scientists or budding

01:04:00 --> 01:04:03 scientists, don't refocus on the science.

01:04:03 --> 01:04:04 Focus on communication as well, because if

01:04:04 --> 01:04:06 you do science but can't communicate it, no

01:04:06 --> 01:04:09 one will know what you've done. But to get

01:04:09 --> 01:04:12 around that, what we do in astronomy and

01:04:12 --> 01:04:14 what many disciplines do, is that, uh, we put

01:04:14 --> 01:04:17 preprints up on a publicly

01:04:17 --> 01:04:19 accessible free place. And it's in astronomy,

01:04:19 --> 01:04:21 it's just accepted that with very rare

01:04:21 --> 01:04:24 exceptions, journals will let you do this. So

01:04:24 --> 01:04:26 when we get our paper and we've written it,

01:04:27 --> 01:04:29 some disciplines in astronomy will put the

01:04:29 --> 01:04:31 paper up on the archive when it's submitted.

01:04:31 --> 01:04:33 Some will wait until it's accepted by the

01:04:33 --> 01:04:35 journal when it's refereed. I've always

01:04:35 --> 01:04:37 waited till acceptance, but occasionally if

01:04:37 --> 01:04:38 you've made a big discovery, you want to stop

01:04:38 --> 01:04:40 somebody scooping you to you, you put it up

01:04:40 --> 01:04:42 at submission. There's a growing effort by

01:04:42 --> 01:04:44 scientists to put it up at submission, to

01:04:44 --> 01:04:46 actively solicit feedback from the community

01:04:46 --> 01:04:48 to improve the work, which is good. But those

01:04:48 --> 01:04:50 papers go upon arXiv.

01:04:51 --> 01:04:53 ArXiv, yeah. Um, be very

01:04:53 --> 01:04:56 careful. There is another platform out

01:04:56 --> 01:04:59 there where the letters in ARXIV are shifted

01:04:59 --> 01:05:01 around, which is where a community of people

01:05:01 --> 01:05:04 who espouse Ideas that are not scientifically

01:05:04 --> 01:05:07 verifiable will put their work, uh, and

01:05:07 --> 01:05:08 publish their own little papers. It's a

01:05:08 --> 01:05:10 different thing. But ARXIV is a

01:05:10 --> 01:05:13 repository of free to view things. So if

01:05:13 --> 01:05:16 you are searching for papers, NASA's ADS

01:05:16 --> 01:05:18 system is wonderful. When you click on a

01:05:18 --> 01:05:21 given paper in there, most of them, but not

01:05:21 --> 01:05:22 all of them will have a line that says

01:05:22 --> 01:05:25 journal version or ADS version. But there'll

01:05:25 --> 01:05:27 also be a line that says preprint. And if you

01:05:27 --> 01:05:28 click on the preprint links, it will take you

01:05:28 --> 01:05:31 to the archive and allow you to read the

01:05:31 --> 01:05:33 paper for free. Just to be aware that that is

01:05:33 --> 01:05:36 a version some of the time before

01:05:36 --> 01:05:37 refereeing, most of the time after

01:05:37 --> 01:05:39 refereeing, but before publishing in edits

01:05:40 --> 01:05:42 effectively. So the link you've got to that

01:05:42 --> 01:05:45 is the pre print version of that paper. The

01:05:45 --> 01:05:47 other caution I give to people is that uh, it

01:05:47 --> 01:05:49 is 16 years old. So all of the areas I talk

01:05:49 --> 01:05:51 about in it have moved on. We've learned

01:05:51 --> 01:05:53 more, um, we can talk a bit more about it

01:05:53 --> 01:05:56 next time as well. But always when you read

01:05:56 --> 01:05:58 things, be conscious of the fact that that

01:05:58 --> 01:06:00 science, uh, is fluid. Science changes, our

01:06:00 --> 01:06:02 knowledge changes. I see just in the news

01:06:02 --> 01:06:05 recently, Jason Isaacs Isaacson,

01:06:05 --> 01:06:07 who's I think the head guy at Nashville at

01:06:07 --> 01:06:10 the minute, who's a wealthy multi billionaire

01:06:10 --> 01:06:13 type guy, um, is arguing that the US is

01:06:13 --> 01:06:15 wanting to strongly build a scientific case

01:06:15 --> 01:06:17 why Pluto should be restored as a planet

01:06:17 --> 01:06:19 because fundamentally we discovered it, so it

01:06:19 --> 01:06:21 should still be a planet. And Clyde Tomball

01:06:21 --> 01:06:22 would be turning in his grave.

01:06:24 --> 01:06:27 That is what it is. But it's, it is

01:06:27 --> 01:06:30 important to keep in mind that science

01:06:30 --> 01:06:33 is fluid, it moves. Whereas once something is

01:06:33 --> 01:06:35 published that's static, you know, it's a

01:06:35 --> 01:06:38 window on our knowledge at a time rather than

01:06:38 --> 01:06:41 necessarily the modern version. If I were

01:06:41 --> 01:06:43 to rewrite that paper now, there'd be

01:06:43 --> 01:06:46 advances of course, absolutely.

01:06:46 --> 01:06:49 Andrew Dunkley: But um, yes, um, I think we're trying to

01:06:49 --> 01:06:51 arrange to put the link on the show notes.

01:06:51 --> 01:06:53 I'll just have to remind Huw you about that.

01:06:53 --> 01:06:55 We might wrap it up there. Jonty. Fascinating

01:06:55 --> 01:06:58 topic and uh, it's one we get a heck of a lot

01:06:58 --> 01:07:01 of questions about. So, um, yeah, hopefully

01:07:01 --> 01:07:03 there's a, uh, bit of information in there to

01:07:03 --> 01:07:05 keep people's minds whirring.

01:07:06 --> 01:07:08 Johnty, thanks very much. We will, uh, see

01:07:08 --> 01:07:09 you again real soon.

01:07:09 --> 01:07:10 Jonti Horner: It's an absolute pleasure. Thank you for

01:07:10 --> 01:07:11 having me.

01:07:11 --> 01:07:13 Andrew Dunkley: Professor John Dee Horner, professor of

01:07:13 --> 01:07:15 Astrophysics at the University of Southern

01:07:15 --> 01:07:17 Queensland, standing in for Fred Watson

01:07:17 --> 01:07:20 Watson. And thanks to Huey in the studio. Uh,

01:07:20 --> 01:07:23 Huw couldn't be with us today. Um, he got,

01:07:23 --> 01:07:24 uh, a bit confused.

01:07:24 --> 01:07:24 Jonti Horner: We.

01:07:24 --> 01:07:26 Andrew Dunkley: We know of one planet where there is life.

01:07:27 --> 01:07:29 Huw thought we meant that he was the only

01:07:29 --> 01:07:32 life form on the planet, so he didn't see any

01:07:32 --> 01:07:34 need to turn up today. And from me, Andrew

01:07:34 --> 01:07:36 Dunkley, thanks for your company. We'll see

01:07:36 --> 01:07:38 you on the next episode of Space Nuts.

01:07:38 --> 01:07:41 Jonti Horner: Bye. Bye. You've been listening to

01:07:41 --> 01:07:42 the Space Nuts podcast,

01:07:44 --> 01:07:47 available at Apple Podcasts, Spotify,

01:07:47 --> 01:07:50 iHeartRadio or your favourite podcast

01:07:50 --> 01:07:51 player. You can also stream on

01:07:51 --> 01:07:53 demand@bytes.com.

01:07:53 --> 01:07:55 Andrew Dunkley: this has been another quality podcast

01:07:55 --> 01:07:57 production from bytes.um.com.