Eps 1: where is the alien

Where is the alien

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Ken Chavez

Ken Chavez

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At the beginning of the 20th century, the physicist Enrico Fermi asked himself a now famous question: Why have we not yet found intelligent alien life? Perhaps we should be a little afraid, because even the genius Stephen Hawking believes that aliens could destroy us if they ever found us, and we are mired in events that would prevent us from finding them. But if we can't detect alien life or leave our solar system with a lot of matter, why haven't we found it? Given the expansion of the universe, we should perhaps not worry too much about finding aliens, if we ever find them.
They could treat the earth as a wildlife reserve or simply wait until we reach a certain epoch. They may want to destroy us by destroying more species on Earth or discovering how to build themselves - by recreating their own ships and becoming a threat to us.
In a move that has led some to turn their heads and consider AvP canon almost impossible at this point, Lance Henrickson has returned to the fold as the alien who was on Earth before David created him. Either way, it seems Scott is now trying to conceive the original Alien for a new movie.
UFOs focus on what sets them apart from other alien species, such as the alien from Alien: Covenant. What science tells us about the plausibility of what these aliens are supposed to do, and why?
Direct explorations of the solar system have yielded no evidence of alien visits or extraterrestrial probes. If there were an alien probe in our solar system that could make direct contact with us, there would be enough evidence to detect it. As described in Chapter 29, it is unlikely that we would have found them once the aliens had come to Earth and left the Bracewell probe in the solar system to wait for its activation.
There is no possibility that this possibility would dampen the search for radio signals from alien spacecraft, or that there is life in the universe beyond our own. If terrestrial life proves as strange as we once imagined, how much stranger could it be with a strange biosphere on Mars?
How many alien civilizations are currently in our own galaxy and how far away are the next ones? If the number of habitable worlds is so great, if the universe has existed for so long, where are all the aliens?
How many intelligent alien civilizations lurk among the hundreds of billions of stars of the Milky Way? Why did we hear then that there are probably up to 36 alien civilizations in our Milky Way?
What do you think about how much money the federal government should give to American researchers to look for aliens and evidence of aliens? SETI, I work in the scientific search for extraterrestrial intelligence, and no one wants to find evidence of extraterrestrial beings and life, any more than I do in this area. We need to search the skies for evidence, such as alien technology, to understand what is going on inside it, but we have not yet found anything convincing. By the way, we were very lucky with our own telescopes, like the Hubble Space Telescope and the Chandra X-ray Observatory.
The Bracewell probe that would find humans is the extraterrestrial probe, but since we have not yet made contact, one theory assumes that there must be something that excludes life from interstellar travel, or at least prevents us from communicating with other alien species. Other explanations for the Fermi paradox are aliens who completely ignore the Earth, spy on the Earth, visit the Earth after a civilization has emerged, and visit it in a way that cannot be recognized. Perhaps the paradox is that some civilizations avoid contact with other civilizations even if there are no other obstacles.
First of all, we have no evidence that our planet has ever been visited by an intelligent alien, and we have no evidence that there is life on Earth, intelligent or not. Most of this is reserved for what is out there in the Milky Way, and although our broad understanding of the stars is far from being the basis for our knowledge of our own solar system and the universe as a whole, we still do not know if there is intelligent life on other planets. There is no sign of life beyond Earth or any other star system except the Sun, and we have not even found bacteria. Given that the planet still looks like a barren wasteland, there is little reason to write off the possibility that we could find aliens in caves and crevices.
Most alien encounters in stories give the alien something they want, whether it wants something from us or wants us to kill them. Given the lack of evidence of intelligent life on Earth and the absence of any signs of life outside our solar system, it is more likely that an alien visiting Earth will be greeted by angels than by an angel.