StarTalk Radio - Revisiting the Drake Equation with David Grinspoon

Episode Date: September 17, 2024

Will alien life look like anything on Earth? Neil deGrasse Tyson and comedian Chuck Nice deep dive into questions about astrobiology, revisiting the Drake Equation, and life beyond Earth with NASA ast...robiology strategist, David Grinspoon a.k.a Dr. Funkyspoon.NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://startalkmedia.com/show/revisiting-the-drake-equation-with-david-grinspoon/Thanks to our Patrons Edvardo Cullen, Harriet Harmon, Andre Rivera Hinostroza, David Rolfe, Piotr Toruński, Karen Mills, Ghost Rider, Leonard Leonidas, Beatriz Clemente, Jon Johnson, Loren Blaine, John Bigelow, and Leslie Colonello for supporting us this week. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Chuck. Yeah. Dr. Funky Spoon. Back in the house. One of our favorites always. David Grinspoon. And in this episode, we found out exactly where we found life. We found it. Did we? I mean... Did we record the same episode together? Yeah. I mean, we didn't find it out in the universe. It's here. But we still found it. Join us again with one of the world's leading astrobiologists on StarTalk. Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
Starting point is 00:00:39 StarTalk begins right now. StarTalk begins right now. This is StarTalk. Neil deGrasse Tyson here. You're a personal astrophysicist. Chuck, nice with me too. Chuck, how you doing, man? What's happening, Neil?
Starting point is 00:00:55 All right. You're a comedian, also acting. Yes, I'm stealing money. That's all. I'm just stealing money, Neil. I don't even know. They don't even know. You make people laugh and they just hand you their money money and i'm like you don't even know i'm just acting like a comedian but i'll take that chuck so today chuck we got cosmic queries that's a fan favorite yeah and oh my gosh one of our favorite guests yes to help us out here
Starting point is 00:01:29 excited to have him back we got dr funky spoon dr funky spoon david's grinspoon longtime friend and colleague we kind of came up together through graduate school but we were sort of different sides of the fence i was sort of galaxies and cosmology he was like planets and asteroids and stuff oh man that's like the jets and the sharks right there just to put that in context right we had telescopes that would reach out to the galaxies we had telescopes that would see the planets the galaxies. We had telescopes that would see the planets, but then they started going to the planets. Is it still astronomy if you can go there?
Starting point is 00:02:11 You see, this was part of the divide. You go there and bring back samples and stuff. You're a lab technician. Well, you had to observe first. I know. You had to look through something and see it first. David Grinspoon, welcome back to StarTalk, dude. Oh, thanks a lot.
Starting point is 00:02:30 It's really great to see you guys. It's a pleasure, as always. And yeah, that divide between planetary and astrophysics, it's kind of funny. I mean, it is interesting how it evolved historically. And at times, it was kind of intense. Like, you know, when I was in grad school in planetary science, the astronomy department across the street,
Starting point is 00:02:52 the professors were like, oh, don't go over there. But now that was before exoplanets. Now we need each other more than we ever knew. Yeah, there's been a meeting of the melding of the minds and hearts and souls also our preeminent journal the astrophysical journal the the ordering i don't know if it still is this why i haven't paid attention the ordering of the articles in every released issue was in descending order of distance from earth so it's start out cosmic microwave background
Starting point is 00:03:30 large-scale structure of the universe all active and you keep doing and way at the bottom is observations of saturn it was like clearly the priority prioritization of the universe the universe is writ large in those pages. That's all. So, David, I noticed you have a title that you didn't have last time. At first, you're an astrobiologist. We get that. But you're also senior scientist for astrobiology strategy at NASA.
Starting point is 00:04:01 What is that? Yeah, so that's my new job. Since the last time I really had a good conversation with you guys, I started a new role. I've always worked with NASA and been supported by NASA for my research and the missions that I'm involved in my whole career. But just about a year ago this week, I started a new job at NASA. I am now a G-man. I work for the government.
Starting point is 00:04:29 Oh, look at that. Yeah. Now, see, you'll never take me alive, cop-out. That's right. I am now working at your nation's space agency, helping to run the astrobiology program. And it's just like it says, I'm doing astrobiology strategy. So really trying to understand
Starting point is 00:04:50 and figure out how we can expand astrobiology in new ways and plot the future. It's a really interesting role for me. It's fascinating. It's very different. I mean, I feel like my career up to this point was preparing me for this in a lot of ways, but it's fundamentally very different from any other job I've had. And it's been a year, but I feel like I'm still learning the ropes.
Starting point is 00:05:14 But you don't have power over missions, do you? We do that in our decadal surveys. So do you help shape it after the priorities are set? Yeah, so I don't. Yeah, absolutely. Like you say, the decadal surveys, which are, you know, these big community input exercises to set the priorities for that, you know, on a decadal timescale. So the public understands it's why you never see astro folk publicly arguing about how money should be spent. We do that among ourselves like in private. Well, yeah, like any good marriage.
Starting point is 00:05:50 You know what I mean? So that sets like the major priorities, which we take as our foundational document. You know, those are in a way our marching orders. But within that, there's a lot of decisions to be made about how we prioritize different research areas and directions and, you know, what we put, what we emphasize and how we communicate about what we're doing. The decadal kind of defines the shape that we're acting within. But then within that,
Starting point is 00:06:21 there's a lot of, a lot of decisions to be made. And, you know, again, it's it's all about working with the community. We represent the astrobiology community. And so it's not like, oh, what ideas do I have today about what NASA should do? I'm just going to go do it. You know, of course, I hopefully am interjecting my own creativity and my own ideas. But it only works if we're really working a lot with that community and kind of moving. If you stray too far, somebody will come down to DC and kick your ass. Well, exactly. Exactly. You know, I'm a public servant, but you know, it's interesting. It's
Starting point is 00:06:56 a different kind of creativity. Before this, I was doing my own research. Now I'm putting a lot of time into facilitating other people's research and figuring out how to creatively get groups of people working together in new ways and helping create connections between people that think they're doing separate things but trying to get them to see how working together the whole can be greater than the sum of the parts. So it's a real new kind of – i feel like i'm tapping into a new sort of creativity for me and that's uh so we kind of need that and even expect it but are you following some mission statement that's been established for your for your strategic plan yeah so so as you mentioned there's the there's the decadal survey which is um you know and there's a there's a planetary science and astrobiology decadal survey, which is different from the astrophysics decadal survey, although they, you know, they play well together. And then beyond that, there's actually something called the astrobiology strategy, which is a 10-year document, which is much more detail about the research priorities and so forth.
Starting point is 00:08:01 And part of what I'm doing now, a big part is we're working on a new astrobiology strategy. So we're actually starting to canvas the community of astrobiology researchers and say, hey, what should our priorities be for the next decade? I'd solve that right now. Find life. That's, you know, that's the big goal. goal but then you know when but give us some detail how do you want us to do that we're trying to fill in the fill in the steps there here's the funny thing that you guys are always looking for life have you ever thought about creating it like maybe we're the progenitors like you know when know, when you look at like Prometheus, it's all about like, ah, you know, these aliens came, they left, you know, some microorganisms in our water and that made us. Oh, you mean Prometheus the movie?
Starting point is 00:08:55 The movie, not absolutely. People to aliens just to catch people up with your sci-fi fluency. That's my sci-fi, yes. your sci-fi fluency that's my sci-fi yes so so my is it ever us maybe we are the aliens that create and see the life elsewhere it's funny you should ask because there are people working on um well obviously there's there are people working on sort of origin of life experiments not necessarily they're literally trying to create uh organisms organisms but they're trying to recreate the chemical steps to help us understand how life started and that's you know that's astrobiology supports a lot of that kind of
Starting point is 00:09:31 uh experimentation there are people actually trying to work on synthetic life like could we create some kind of a life form and that you know it's a really interesting idea we that's certainly something how that's a avenue towards learning a lot about life if we could do that. Just to be clear, when someone says this is made of synthetic leather, it means it's not leather. It just kind of looks and smells like leather. If you're going to say synthetic life, you're not making it out of some ingredients that life is not made of. You're actually making life. Right.
Starting point is 00:10:08 So that word synthetic, it can mean a few different things. I think it means the wrong thing in terms of a person's first hearing of that phrase. Maybe you want to say artificial or laboratory created. And that's not a major effort of astrobiology now, but it's certainly something that some people are thinking about. And it is very related to this question of, you know, alien life. And some people have predicted, you know, sort of provocatively, but maybe they're right, that the first alien life that we will discover or come to know will be something made in a laboratory. You know, and then you can say well is that really alien it comes from earth but it's pretty alien in a way yes the impossible meat alien yeah exactly
Starting point is 00:10:57 what do they call the turkey made out of? Tofurkey? Tofurkey. Yes, tofurkey. Tofurkey. A new turkey out of tofurkey. I'm Kais from Bangladesh, and I support StarTalk on Patreon. This is StarTalk with Neil deGrasse Tyson. David, we had a guest recently who was a roboticist
Starting point is 00:11:41 describing a collaboration with NASA about the search for life in the subsurface of Enceladus. We know Enceladus has these striking plumes that we can see sort of in those side views when it's properly lit by the sun. You see these sort of geysers coming out. when it's properly lit by the sun. You see these sort of geysers coming out. So he's working with folks at NASA to make a worm, a robotic worm that'll go down that hole and then look around for life because it's frozen on the top
Starting point is 00:12:16 and then you have sort of liquid water, we presume, below. So do you know about that? And do they need your permission? Or do they need your blessing? Or do they need your permission or do they need your blessing or do they need a phishing license because he's like sam drucker right he's got i mean yeah we put we certainly uh put some resources into these um experimental and speculative engineering projects that could someday lead to a new way, a new kind of mission to search for life in a place like Enceladus. Not just a lander and the usual, right?
Starting point is 00:12:54 That's not a current mission that's in our plan. We're definitely going to do this. But part of our strategy is to support people with innovative concepts that could lead to future missions. And certainly Enceladus is one of the places that's very high on our list of places that we would like to visit and characterize for habitability and perhaps search for life. For the reasons that you mentioned, Neil, it seems like a place, not only is there liquid water in the interior, but the hints we have about that ocean based on what we've seen in that plume suggests that the chemistry of that interior ocean may be really conducive to life. It may have the right mix of chemicals to have sources of
Starting point is 00:13:37 energy and the biogenic elements, the right elements to make life. So we have some hints that not only is there an ocean on Enceladus, but it might have the good stuff. So it's definitely high on our list of places that we intend to explore. You know what I never asked you guys, and this is for both of you, a very icy crust frozen over, right? And then underneath a liquid ocean. So what is making it so warm underneath that we can have a liquid ocean, but clearly it's like not in some Goldilocks zone because the outside is a frozen crust.
Starting point is 00:14:17 Yeah. Well, you know, it's been a big surprise of planetary exploration that so many of these moons of the outer solar system have these warm active interiors. We didn't expect that. Maybe we should have if we were smarter, you know, because the physics works out. But we thought they would, before we sent spacecraft to Jupiter and Saturn, we thought they'd just be these greater dead ice balls. But it turns out that being near these giant planets, the way the moons interact with each other flexes their interiors, basically by tides, the interiors are getting squished. And that makes certainly a place like Europa keeps the interior warm and keeps, you know, pumping heat from basically the gravitational influence of those giant planets. There's also any place with a rocky core, and all these moons have rocky cores, have some sources of just natural heat from radioactivity in the rock.
Starting point is 00:15:09 So it's some combination of natural radioactivity and the tidal history of these moons that have warmed their interiors. So I remember Enceladus, I'm not entirely moon fluent, but Enceladus, if memory serves, orbits Saturn, correct? That is correct. Okay. Yeah. Last I checked. Yeah. He was like, I'm just giving you that one, Neil.
Starting point is 00:15:35 I don't have to say that. Sorry. I thought you were just pausing for dramatic effect. When Neil deGrasse Tyson says En some of this uh orbits saturn correct i'm gonna think that that's rhetorical and just shut up i was going with that jupiter has no shortage of moons it's got tidally heated moons it's got moons with ice on it everybody's favorite europa all right and jupiter is only half the distance out there compared with sat. So why would Saturn moons have any priority at all relative to Jupiter's moons? Cassini at Saturn, which was the orbiter that really brought those
Starting point is 00:16:12 moons to us, turned up some really surprising things. And probably the biggest surprise was that Enceladus is so weird. And it's weird in enticing ways that it seems, some people think it's the best candidate for finding extant life. Some people think it's even a better candidate than Europa. Now, I don't want to get into that fight, but we're going to Europa with the Clipper mission, which is great because Europa is a very promising place to look. But what's amazing about Enceladus is, as you mentioned, it has these geysers. So it's literally shooting its guts out into space. And there is stuff from that ocean landing on the surface. Some people think we can go to Enceladus and just scoop up snow from the surface and look
Starting point is 00:16:57 for organisms in the snow. And never have to go down into the liquid. Right. The ocean is so accessible because it's literally squirting out into space. So what's this I heard, you know, some of the chemistry like hydrogen cyanide, is that right? Is it HCN or something? Yeah, yeah. Which sounds like, oh, that's poison.
Starting point is 00:17:15 But actually, it's a very, and if you're thinking about the origin of life and what primitive life may need, It's a very juicy chemical because whenever you've got nitrogen bound up in a carbon molecule, that's, you know, the basis of so much that's the basis of amino acids and all this stuff. So, so hydrogen cyanide is actually a very promising sign. If you're looking for a life somewhere, but just to be clear, it will kill you. If you ingest it, you're talking about the formation of life. Just, just to be clear. Yes. Yes. No, don't, don't try this at home, but it gets away.
Starting point is 00:17:52 There you go, Chuck. So it's hydrogen cyanide. I think that's the gas and gas chambers or some variant on that. But you're saying if hydrogen is HCN, the C and the N together together is what really that's what's fertile for organic chemistry that's that's enticing that's because we know you know one thing we've learned is that there's carbon molecules everywhere in the i mean many places in the universe which is encouraging for astrobiology that it's not hard to you know the universe likes to make carbon molecules which is great but you need certain things beyond that and carbon bonded with nitrogen is very key to all the biochemistry we
Starting point is 00:18:32 know so when you see that in a natural environment you go hey that's you know that's encouraging all right so this is this is what's attracting people all right we got interesting this is a cosmic queries that's right and Chuck has collected them. So, David, you may remember in our Cosmic Queries, we tell people, you're going to be on. They're reminded of your expertise, and they come in with their questions that are inspired by the curiosity that your work drives. So, let's see what you got, Chuck. Okay, we got it. Let's start off with Brad Lester.
Starting point is 00:19:07 Brad Lester says, hello, Dr. Tyson, Dr. Grinspoon and Mr. Nice. Didn't get the memo on the Lord part. Did you there, Brad? Okay. Chuck, these are paying customers. That's right. That's right. Nice for them. By the way, thank you all for supporting us on Patreon. We certainly appreciate you. And we appreciate you just even more than we appreciate your money. Just letting you know that. Okay.
Starting point is 00:19:32 And just to be clear, if they call you Mr. Nice, they must be new members because they don't know the history. That's true. That's true. So be nice to the new folks. I will be nice. That's right, because he's new too. So we got to super nice. So be nice to the new. I will be nice. That's right, because he's new, too.
Starting point is 00:19:53 So we've got a super nice. So I've heard scientists speak about how unlikely it is for intelligent life to evolve into a humanoid form on other planets. That being said, has any study been devoted to the likelihood of other exoplanets that might contain trees or other plants or structures comparable to trees. If tree-like flora existing elsewhere in the universe is reasonably likely, and if we assume sentient life could also evolve on these planets, is it reasonable to conclude that some organisms would evolve to have limbs, hands, fingers, or similar appendages to allow them to spread to the tree-heavy environment? Maybe I'm mistaken, but isn't that the reason why primates evolved in the first place and thus why humans contain two arms and two legs and fingers in which to grab things?
Starting point is 00:20:33 So, you know. Damn. Damn. See, that's not where I thought he was going with that. I thought he was going to... No. I thought, can we have sentient trees like they have in Lord of the Rings? That's such a good question.
Starting point is 00:20:45 You should get this guy to be your next guest on this show. No, I mean, it's like what he's asking about is something that we call convergent evolution. Like, you know, on the one hand, we know evolution is full of accident and contingency. And, you know, like Stephen Jay Gould used to say, if you ran the tape again, you wouldn't get the same biosphere because there's so much randomness. Why would you expect anything to be the same since evolution is so random? But the opposite of that is that there are certain things you can see on Earth that evolve similarly in different environments multiple times because they make sense. They solve a problem. and evolution is all about solving problems, right? And so we do expect on other planets probably photosynthesis evolves, like the ability to use sunlight, because what is there all over the universe? There's stars in any environment with, you know, that's a great source of energy. So if you have photosynthesis, you're going to have some organism that spreads out and has something like leaves so it can capture that and then you're going to have something like branches because that's sort of a natural you know so you can make these arguments yeah there'll be things that are
Starting point is 00:21:53 like trees and similarly you can say well there's not going to be a humanoid because that would be unlikely why would you expect aliens to look just like us but then you go through some of our characteristics like a head makes sense to have one central processing system for the brain and two eyes make sense to have you know stereo vision and yeah like your uh your questioner astutely said something to grasp and swing from tree branches so you know i would not expect humanoids like we're going to mistake them and say oh oh, wow, that, you know, are they from Earth? I think nothing's going to be that similar. But some characteristics in common, there's rationale for that. And one of the fascinating things, if we ever did, when we if we ever get to meet complex aliens, that's how we'll answer this question.
Starting point is 00:22:43 You know, not by speculating but by like finding out what they're like and and i'd say by the way you don't have to actually uh i mean you can uh you don't have to necessarily uh evolve hands and instead of limbs you could just evolve tentacles right right right but but david when i think of convergence i wouldn't be so specific as you've been i would just say um there's convergent uh a convergent evolution that enable organisms to sense things at a distance for us it's sight uh and there's other versions of sight right so uh can see, but they don't have a retina eyeball situation. But they can see for sure, right?
Starting point is 00:23:32 And then locomotion, you don't have to talk about legs or arms, but can you move? Trees can't move, okay? Not at least, I mean, the ones in The Wizard of Oz, I think, chased Dorothy down the street. But I think. And Dorothy down the street. But I think there were some. And they threw their apples. Threw their apples at her. So you have locomotion. And in that need and that valuation of that talent, you have snakes with no arms and no legs at all, yet they move along just fine.
Starting point is 00:24:06 arms and no legs at all, yet they move along just fine. So when I think just come to it from the world of physics, I don't have the urge to be so specific about what it is so much as what it accomplishes. Yeah, no, absolutely. I mean, it's a fascinating question. You're right. It's all about the needs being met because that's what evolution does right and there are some cases on earth though of very specific things like like eyes evolve more than once yes and you can say that's all on the same planet with the same condition so who knows i mean i think we can speculate but this is what i love about astrobiology and exploration is that that's how we'll find the answers is by going out there and seeing give me some give me some more. This is Tom Lindelius from Sweden. He says greetings from Sweden.
Starting point is 00:24:50 Did he say greetings from Sweden? Okay. Yes, Chuck. Thank you for interpreting. Right after that, he says ishti bean or beeski bean or ishti bean or beeski board. Is that what he said right after that?
Starting point is 00:25:05 I don't know. Anyway, he says, we already know that Neil's favorite alien movie is The Blob. But what is your favorite alien movie, Dr. Funky Spoon? And what do you think the first encounter, actually bigger than microbes, might look like when we encounter aliens let me just clarify that's my favorite it's not my favorite alien movie it's my favorite alien
Starting point is 00:25:33 right just to be just to be clear because it it has no bones no skin no mouth eyes teeth hair fingers it's it is i think it's the most creative alien ever put on the screen because it looks nothing like any other life form on earth and if you're going to come visit from another planet and you look more like humans than either humans or you look like anything else on earth you're not being creative in hollywood right so yeah so i want to know too david what's your favorite so so i mean i have to give you two answers if that's OK, because in terms of favorite, I'm old school with a favorite movie. To me, it all goes back to 2001. And part of that is because, as Neil says, you know, if you show the aliens, they're going to look cheesy no matter what.
Starting point is 00:26:19 And in 2001, they did the brilliant thing of implying them without really showing them in this pretty mind blowing way. By the way, I'm told that you might have some other insight here that Carl Sagan at the time, though young, advised the producers of that film to not show the aliens and leave it to your imagination. And that fact was preserved in his novel Contact when the screen version, at least, you don't see the aliens at all. Yeah, no, that's a new way, you don't see the aliens at all. Yeah. No, that's absolutely right. So that became a new way to think about it. That's absolutely right. I think, you know, rumor has it, or the story is that Sagan and Kubrick
Starting point is 00:26:54 didn't really get along that well, and Carl didn't have that much input into that film, but his one substantive piece of advice that was followed was don't show the aliens, because in some some earlier drafts they were going to try to. But it's always a brilliant storytelling ploy is is to leave things to the imagination. When you think about Jaws, you don't see the shark until how long into the movie. Right. Right. Yeah. And again, you're right. You're right, Neil. That's what that was, what they did in contact to brilliant effect. did in in contact to brilliant effect um the the one depiction that's coming to mind of an alien organism in a movie that i think is pretty good is in arrival um you know where they have those
Starting point is 00:27:33 oh the septipoids is that true i didn't i just i just saw it a few days ago awesome awesome i like that odd an odd number is good, too. But but, you know, and they're kind of floating there and behind this frosted glass in their own atmosphere. And you can sort of see them. But to me, there's nothing about them that seems like fake or implausible. I'm like, yeah, that looks like an alien. So I give them high. I give them high points. I marks. Yeah, but you miss the ray guns and stuff like that, you know? Yeah. Well, so you said you had two movies so the arrival by the way there's another movie the arrival with charlie sheen in it playing an astrophysicist yes so you're talking about the more recent one where they have the the ash yeah the physicist and the linguist to decode
Starting point is 00:28:22 amy adams amy adams yes yes yes so that's the more recent one from a few years ago so what's the other film you're the charlie sheen one by the way is it is underrated let me just say that charlie sheen one is pretty cool because it's about climate change oh okay i'll go back and check it out yeah all right go ahead no the other one i already mentioned 2001 i said that's my sort of foundational one where that's you know i like the aliens because you don't see them nice this is uh ivan or ivan de souza who says hello doctors and lord greetings from abu dhabi united arab emirates long time fan and recent patreon member. Well, thank you. My question is about Jupiter's moon Europa.
Starting point is 00:29:06 I can't help but wonder what life may possibly find in that vast ocean that insulates its icy surface. Yes, I am ruling out impossibility because I really want to be there. What do you think we will find and in what form? Please do visit the side of the world this side of the world would love to take y'all around okay there you go very cool open standing invitations if if that existed more frequently in the world imagine how much more at peace we would be because there's an invitation awaiting you right not a wall preventing you it's just a very
Starting point is 00:29:45 very kind forward thinking gesture we're gonna put a door in the wall there's a door yeah no i love that and i love the fact that these kinds of questions make it so obvious that we're all we're all on the same side when we're thinking of what's out there you know so uh that that's great what's your best what's the best thinking about europa because that's that gets everybody's imagination for sure europa was in uh 2010 the sequel to 2001 and europa has shown up in several storytelling uh efforts there's another one called the europa report which is a, sort of lower budget sci-fi film. I know about that because I'm in it. Oh, get out! Interesting! I have a very short cameo, and it was simple because they just clipped something from
Starting point is 00:30:35 when I was on CNN. And the clip was, I can't wait to go ice fishing on Europa. Cut a hole in the ice, put a camera lens down there and see if anything swims up and licks it. I think that was my entire quote. I love it. Licks the camera. Could you imagine the giant Europa tongue?
Starting point is 00:30:58 Europa is one of those places that's just been in our imagination for a long time. I have a cameo too in the um in episode six of the original um cosmos with carl sagan um travelers tales they show the scene in um at jpl when voyager 2 showed the first close-ups of europa that had ever been seen by a spacecraft somehow carl convinced them to let a camera crew in the room while this was happening.
Starting point is 00:31:30 And I'm actually an undergraduate intern in a skinny kid with a giant afro holding a clipboard in the very back of that scene on screen for like three frames. in the very back of that scene on screen for like three frames. Did your mom have a booster of that, you know, with a circle and an arrow? Of course, of course. Yeah. But so Europa, you know, and that was 1979, summer of 1979. And that was the first, you know, Europa came to our attention as like a really weird world. But just to be clear, Cosmos was released in 1980 in 1980 so it was filmed that moment took place in 1979 yeah and that you know we saw with voyager uh a moon with with no visible craters on the surface so that tells you it's
Starting point is 00:32:16 young there's no hasn't been sitting there getting hit and these weird lines turned out you know cross which turned out to be cracks in a thin ice shell with an ocean of liquid water. And the more we've learned about that, it seems the ocean probably has probably the right kinds of chemicals to support some kind of metabolism. And, you know, it's more and more encouraging to imagine some life form there. And what's really cool is that we're going back there. I have to interrupt you again, Chuck. He said a thin coat of ice, but let's get him to quantify that.
Starting point is 00:32:47 By thin, I mean maybe between 10 and 100 kilometers. Oh my God. Little thin little coat of ice. Thin little coat of ice. This is not dangerous ice to go ice skating on. You would not fall through.
Starting point is 00:33:04 Just to be clear, i'm just trying to truth in advertising here thin ice out of david's mouth this is a this is a object a world about the size of our moon so if it's just got 10 kilometers of ice over a deep ocean that's it might be it's probably our solar system's largest ocean of liquid water, more water than all on earth. So it's, it's impressive in that way. As far as we know, life on earth began in our oceans. Absolutely. I mean, it must've begun in water and either oceans or a pond or, you know, we think maybe a hot spring at the bottom of the ocean,
Starting point is 00:33:36 which actually that's really interesting because they're probably your hot spring, you know, or like these, these vents, C4 vents at the bottom of Europa's ocean, we think fed by that tidal energy we were talking about earlier. So we're sending a spacecraft back there, if all goes well, launching later this year called Europa Clipper, which is going to orbit Jupiter and make lots of close passes of Europa to examine this question of habitability and to look at things like, are there pockets of water in the ice shell itself, which would be one place you could have life if there are, because then you have chemicals coming in from the surface and chemicals coming up from the from the ocean below that are kind of mixing.
Starting point is 00:34:17 So that's one place you could have in the ice shell itself. NASA astrobiology strategist. Why go back to Jupiter and just keep orbiting? Isn't it high time we'd landed on Europa? What is the delay? So there's a couple of things. We can only do what we can do. It's very difficult to, at one point we wanted to maybe orbit Europa rather than orbit Jupiter.
Starting point is 00:34:45 Dude, we landed on Saturn's moon Titan. Come on now. Don't tell me you can't land on Jupiter's moon Europa. But Huygens wasn't even... It was supposed to touch down and then die, right? And it lasts for 45 minutes on the surface. We don't want to do that on Europa. Eventually, by the way, we do want to send a lander to Europa. But with the budget that we had, it was decided that what we want to do first is characterize Europa much more carefully. For one thing, you want to know where to land. You want to know if it's safe and you want to pick the right spot. You can't do that without surveying more than we've done. A hundred kilometers thick. You're not falling through. do that without surveying more than we've done a hundred kilometers thick you're not falling through you're not falling through but you don't want to land in the wrong spot and be like oh if only we had been over there that's where the interesting stuff is a lot of people don't know because you know the apollo program was was so visible there was an entire uh lunar uh ranger was it the ranger
Starting point is 00:35:42 series that photographed the entire surface of the moon to enable people to study it and figure out where the best landing sites would be right so that was all the homework we did before the famous words were spoken and the other thing is interesting is you might say well so why aren't we just going to orbit europa rather than orbit jupiter and make lots of passes by europa because and there there have been europa orb studied. But the problem is, Jupiter's radiation field is so intense that if you're at the distance of, if you're at Europa's distance from Jupiter, that's pretty close in to Jupiter, you would get fried. And I don't just mean you, I mean, our electronics don't survive very long with that intense radiation. So what you do is you orbit Jupiter. You spend time farther out when you're doing things like sending the images back to Earth and doing other things. And then you make these quick, close passes by Europa where you dash through the radiation and then you retreat to safety. And if you do that enough time, you can build up these really detailed maps
Starting point is 00:36:47 of all the different qualities we want to study of Europa, the images, the spectra, the gravity data, the radar data that's going to tell us of what's underneath the ice. The radio data is going to tell us if that ocean is salty by looking at the conductivity. But we do it quickly on these close passes and then you retrieve you sure you can't just wrap the vessel in one of those blankets
Starting point is 00:37:12 that my dentist wears and just land well believe it or not we're doing that with this thing even even with what i said the radiation the biggest danger is radiation. We have all these radiation-hardened components, and it's in a vault. It's in something that's literally called the vault, which is this radiation-hardened container where all the electronics are. Even without that, you still get way too much of a dose. Wow. So this reminds me of the monster movies from Japan in the 1950s and 60s. I think many of them, if not all of them, they got that way because of radiation.
Starting point is 00:37:52 And of course, let's not soon forget that Japan is the only country to ever have nuclear weapons used against them. So the idea that radiation would create some next world order with these giant monsters so that is cinematic evidence that godzilla is in europa because there you go well it's funny though because um you know so you think of radiation is just going to like destroy everything so there's going to be no life on europa but of course course, underneath the ice shell, the ocean is shielded from that radiation. And not only that, the radiation is interacting with the surface of the ice in ways that can actually make Europa more habitable. Because when that radiation hits the H2O ice, it knocks off hydrogens and leaves behind some oxygen and oxidized compounds in that ice,
Starting point is 00:38:47 which then can make their way over time into the ocean. And so that could be a source of energy in the ocean that's coming indirectly from that radiation. So just like Godzilla on Earth, those Europans may be fueled by radiation in some indirect way. Wow. Chuck, only a few more minutes here. Let's see if we can tighten up these answers. This is Mac Lamkin who says, Question.
Starting point is 00:39:31 If you, Neil, Chuck, David, could have one definitive understanding of anything from life on another planet, what would you like to understand most? Ooh, look at that. I only get one? We only get one. Okay. I got one.
Starting point is 00:39:49 I want to know how they encode information. I want to know how they create a global technological civilization that survives long term. It survives itself. That assumes they're intelligent. The question didn't require that. Right, right, right, right. I think between Neil and I, we kind of covered the gamut.
Starting point is 00:40:08 Well, no, you guys missed what I want to know. Do you have weapons? That's what I want to know. And are they better than guns? Because if they're better than guns, then we're not contacting you. This is Patrick Weglinski.
Starting point is 00:40:28 And Patrick Weglinski says, hello, Dr. Grinspoon, Dr. Tyson, Lord Nice. This is Patrick from Salt Lake City, Utah. What is your and your colleagues algorithm for characterizing something that's being alive? for characterizing something that's being alive. I'd imagine that if we found life far away from our planet that evolved in a vastly different environment, it could be hard to directly compare it to life on Earth and therefore make it difficult to say whether indeed it's life or not.
Starting point is 00:40:58 Yeah, David, what's the biologist's current stand on the definition of life? The definition of life has evolved. Yeah, yeah, that's right. And, you know, this could be a long answer, but we're keeping it short because people still argue about this. And it's another one of these things that we'll be much more sophisticated about when we find other life. But, you know, in brief, something that reproduces itself and is evolving by something like Darwinian evolution. Okay.
Starting point is 00:41:29 Except if you find a life form that is perfectly suited for its environment, it would never have to evolve and they would never discover evolution because they were just always the same. That doesn't sound like much fun though, Neil. Okay. All right, Chuck, give me another quick. This is David Geiger. though neil all right chuck give me another quick this is david geiger david geiger says greetings dr tyson dr funky spoon lord nice david geiger here from crescent iowa has anyone updated the estimate of the number of active extraterrestrial civilizations postulated by the
Starting point is 00:41:59 drink equation given the enormous amount of data that is available now. I love it. Just a quick thing. In a book I co-published a few years ago with two fellow professors, we co-taught a course at Princeton, and it's called Welcome to the Universe. We actually give the latest estimate there of the number of technologically capable civilizations in the galaxy. But that was as of maybe eight years ago. So, David, what would you say is the latest number if you give the galaxy several hundred billion stars? So what do you give it now?
Starting point is 00:42:36 You know, my first answer to the question is people are updating it all the time because it does, it requires a lot of assumptions of parameters that we don't know that we fundamentally don't know the answer to. And the Drake equation is really meant as a medium for a discussion of how the different factors would influence the answer, not as a way to calculate a definitive answer. So just to remind people, the Drake equation, you start with the number of stars and you just hack away at it with fractions.
Starting point is 00:43:08 What fraction of the stars have planets? What fraction of those with stars with planets have life? What fraction of those that have life have intelligent life? What fraction of those that have life that have intelligent life have technology? This sort of thing. And by the time you hack away with these fractions, there's not much.
Starting point is 00:43:23 But if you start with a big enough number, there should be a few left. Come on now. It's got to be at least one. So give me a number here. Well, we know there's one. Unless you consider, you know, you could debate whether it's an intelligent civilization. We rescind the intelligent status. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:39 Yes. Yeah. But, you know, there's so many, you know, I hate to just come up with a number. I love to just like talk about the possibilities. If you asked me to come up with my own personal number, not wearing my NASA hat, but just my Dr. Funky Spoon, David Grinspoon hat, I would say I would say a thousand civilizations in the galaxy. But with a huge error bar that ranges from zero to a million. So what fraction of those civilizations would you suggest might be considerably more advanced than we are? Most of them. Okay. Okay. There it is. And how many of them would still be around?
Starting point is 00:44:21 Because there's a possibility that many of them have come and gone. Yeah. No, that's an estimate for the current number. If you want to talk about all the ones that have ever been, then it's, of course, going to be a larger number. Okay. Although I tend to think, and this is, again, we're trying to keep our answers short. I tend to think that over a certain threshold of success that they last really the the longevity gets huge because you pass this sort of unstable immature phase that arguably we're at and if you make it to the point where you've learned how to be sustainable then you know enough to not get wiped out so the longevity you know they stick
Starting point is 00:44:59 around if you get out of your teenage years yes you got a damn good chance of making it. Your brain sets in. If you make it to adulthood, you're probably going to be okay. We're not quite there yet, unfortunately. Chuck, we got time for one last question. Just squeeze this in. All righty. This is Starry-Eyed Mama.
Starting point is 00:45:21 It says, greetings, Drs. Grinspoon, Tyson, Lord Nice. If mathematics is the universal language, what would it look like to be able to convey a message and communicate with another intelligent life form? Can't wait to watch you live here in Columbus, Ohio this fall, Dr. Tyson. I'm a grateful fan, Maria Gale. She already bought tickets, bro. That's amazing. Yeah, coming through Columbus, Ohio. I generally don't give my speaking schedule
Starting point is 00:45:48 publicly. You got to go find it. Well, she did. You didn't. She did. She did. Give her free free free Patreon pass. Exactly. We can get you some Patreon passes, Maria Gale.
Starting point is 00:46:03 Go ahead, Dr. Funky Spoon. Well, starry-eyed mama, if can get you some patreon passes uh maria gale all right so go ahead dr funky spoon yeah well starry-eyed mama if um if mathematics is not a universal language then i feel like we have a much much harder task in trying to establish any understanding with other creatures out there with whom all we share in common is the same universe of origin. So it seems to me, and, you know, this is an interesting philosophical question, that mathematics kind of has to be a universal language because it seems sort of built into the universe, not something we've created so much as something we've discovered. If that's correct, then presumably other intelligences could have, should have discovered the same mathematics. And that creates a basis,
Starting point is 00:46:45 you know, like even you can think of two-dimensional, you know, we have these ways of making two-dimensional messages, just send, send a circle, a perfect circle. Then you at least know this is, that's another mind. Nothing made that randomly. And then once you've established we're a mind, you're a mind, we're trying to to communicate then you can start to get more sophisticated so to me mathematics is the thing that gives us hope of being able to establish that connection with some other circles are everywhere with large planets and things i would send a triangle there's no natural triangles out there yeah well no right a circle is is ubiquitous but but something that is encoding a digital message that makes a circle. That's like, oh.
Starting point is 00:47:28 Got it. Got it. You know the first idea how to communicate with aliens? You know what that was? You surely know this, David. Was this like making giant triangles of fire in the Siberian forest or something? Exactly. No. So what you do is you create a right triangle as big as you can on earth so it's got a right angle and then the other two angles okay now do you remember your pythagorean theorem chuck um that's 180 degrees well those are the sum of the three angles 45 45 and 90 a b and c these are the three sides you remember how they relate right yes there's a squared plus
Starting point is 00:48:05 b squared equals c squared c is the hypotenuse okay okay so now this is what's so brilliant okay you make this triangle as big as you can and it's got to be you got to be able to ignite it i mean not blow it up but uh light it with fire so you can see it at night on the on the side of the earth that's not lit right so the aliens could then then see it. So first you get a right triangle. Okay. Then you fill out the sides of the triangles with squares. Okay? So one side of a triangle is the side of a square.
Starting point is 00:48:37 So you create squares, three squares off the side of that triangle. Off the side of the triangle. Why would you do that? Three squares off the side of that triangle. Off the side of the triangle. Why would you do that? Because the area of one of the squares plus the area of the other squares equals the area of this third square. How do I know that? That's the Pythagorean theorem.
Starting point is 00:48:57 A squared plus B squared equals C squared. What's the area of a square? The one dimension times the other dimension so it links like trigonometry and geometry and it's and and you get to an alien say oh this there's intelligence down there right the aliens say there was intelligence down there they're like well uh clearly they were smart enough to figure out our Galoopian theorem. However, they were dumb enough to burn down their whole damn planet trying to show it to us. Wouldn't it be cool if the first time we get a direct imaging picture of an exoplanet with our super duper space telescope, that's what we see?
Starting point is 00:49:44 That'd be amazing. The the galupians would be the galupian theorem that's that's a good one chuck we gotta keep that so david we gotta call it quits here remind remind us of the book that you wrote about pluto a few years back what's that that title again? Yeah, Chasing New Horizons with Alan Stern. Oh, both of you were together on that. Excellent. And the subtitle was? Oh, gosh, you want to remember the subtitle?
Starting point is 00:50:13 It was, no. Chasing New Horizons, Inside the Epic First Mission to Pluto. Okay, that's the only mission to Pluto. Just stop trying to number them before they're numbered. So far. And we find you on, you're also like a musician. Dr. Funky Spoon, that's your moniker, your musical moniker. Yeah, you can find me on YouTube and the usual channels.
Starting point is 00:50:40 And I think in our archives, we have you playing the guitar. That's right. We did the Astrobiology Blues that Chuck and I wrote together. Yeah, that's in there. Oh, it's in our archives. Dig that one up. All good. All right, Chuck, good to have you, man.
Starting point is 00:50:55 Always a pleasure. All right. Neil deGrasse Tyson, yet another installment of Cosmic Queries. This one with the one and only Dr. Funky Spoon. We'll see you next time. As always, keep looking up.

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