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I think our best bets are in nicer planets orbiting other stars. TPF could help us find them, if it ever gets off the ground.
Unfortunately, we won't have the means to go there for some time.
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http://amssolarempire.blogspot.com |
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Setting attempts at humor aside and in the spirit of Daniel Dennett's faith in the strength and versatility of evolution including the spontaniety of origination of life and the outside chance that panspermia holds, I expect that life will be found on or in most planetary-sized bodies (equal to or more massive than Pluto) in the solar system including the atmospheres of the gas giants. For Mars, Mercury, and earth's moon subsurface acquifers containing water will be the likely abode. If multicellular life is not discovered in the oceans of the Gallilean moons of Jupiter, I'll be forced, well strongly encouraged, to tone down my optimism.
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For those inclined to oppose human meddling with the structure of the universe or the composition and configuration of objects and groups of objects within the universe, consider: Whether there is a limit to the magnitude of a modulation of chaos below which order remains invariant? Or, is order but a fiction invented by perspectives applied over finite, however large, time intervals? |
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I think Jupiter's moons are the most likely. There are tidal forces and other heat sources that reduce the effects of their distance from the sun, and the variety of different environments lead me to think there's a good chance of some sort of life there.
Although we might find rudimentary life on Mars, I think the really interesting stuff might be with the gas giants.
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Spike :) |
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There may be life on titan ~ but if your includeing the whole universe then there must be many hundred's of thousands of planets out there some where full of life.
It would be good one day to see life from another planet, but would the "powers that be" try to Control it / kill it / Experiment on it / or deny that it ever was found... I think that life has visited here before now, maybe over thousands of years from time to time, but i dont think we deserve to see life from another planet yet, seeing as we can look after our own kind and planet.
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ŠTRÒÑÓMY~ÑÕW |
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Europa.
I used to work with a former British Royal Navy Nuclear Submarine Commander, and sometimes we would idle ourselves at lunch by "designing" a Europan submarine. Good times! Dive Officer, The Christmas tree is Green! h34r:
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Pre-Quote: 'To survive one has to experiment. When the environment changes, the traditional way of doing things doesn't work.' Quote: "It's the outriders, the organisms that seem to be maladjusted before the change, which are the only ones that survive these changes...in that way a species continues." Carl Sagan |
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I don't think there will be life anywhere in our solar system outside the Earth; life needs some specific conditions to develop in, so we will haver to go to other solar systems to find worlds resembling Earth.
Probably there will be lots of different types of Earths, but you won't get life on Europa unless it got there from Earth somehow. Mars was slightly Earthlike once, and so was Venus; so there might be fossils there, or (if we are lucky) some life surviving deep underground; but it will be well hidden.
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Orion's Arm . The Starlark . Voices: Future Tense- Novella Contest Issue! . OA Flickr set |
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I must agree with "sp1ke" - I believe that the Galilean moons are the most likely place to bear life. Europa of course is the most likely. Everyone's first comment when anyone brings up Europa bearing life is "no, it's too far away from the sun" but of course, backing up what "sp1ke" said again, there are sufficient heat sources available to bear life forms.
There is of course a likelyness that there once was life on Mars, but basically, reality is, we won't be able to tell until technology develops even further (I think!)!
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Science is wonderfully equipped to answer the question "How?" but it gets terribly confused when you ask the question "Why?" Erwin Chargaff |
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Can anyone here take a guess as to what year or even century that space programmes will start moving colonies of people up to Mars or any other planet that's capable of holding life?
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Science is wonderfully equipped to answer the question "How?" but it gets terribly confused when you ask the question "Why?" Erwin Chargaff |
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Probably not before 2100. We might, if we are motivated enough, set up a lunar base and a mars program before 2050.
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http://amssolarempire.blogspot.com |
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I think it'll be really amazing when colonies of people will be moved up into space - who knows what would be next!
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Science is wonderfully equipped to answer the question "How?" but it gets terribly confused when you ask the question "Why?" Erwin Chargaff |