The National Science Foundation.
NARRATOR: A hellish, fiery wasteland...
a molten planet hostile to life...
yet somehow, amazingly, this is where we got our start.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] How?
How did the universe, our planet,
how did we ourselves come to be?
How did the first sparks of life take hold here?
Are we alone in the cosmos?
Where did all the stars and galaxies come from?
These questions are as ancient as human curiosity itself.
And on Origins, a four-part NOVA miniseries,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] we'll hunt for the answers.
This search takes unexpected twists and turns.
Imagine meteors delivering Earth's oceans from outer space.
( loud explosion )
Descend into a toxic underworld,
where bizarre creatures hold clues to how life got its start.
And picture the view when the newborn Moon,
200,000 miles closer to Earth than today,
loomed large in the night sky.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] This cosmic quest takes us back in time
to within moments of the big bang itself
and retraces the events that created us,
this place we call home
and perhaps life elsewhere in the cosmos.
Coming up tonight: "Where Are the Aliens?"
MAN: I feel
like I'm six years old when I say it.
I...
I feel almost embarrassed.
I just want to know: Are they out there?
NARRATOR: And why do they always look so much like us?
MAN: When we look at these aliens
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] and they've got faces with two eyes and a nose and a mouth,
they can't be aliens-- they must have developed on Earth,
they must share that same ancestor
or they wouldn't have faces like that.
NARRATOR: E.T.
may not be like us,
but new discoveries are fueling optimism
that alien life really is out there.
MAN: We're finding new planets like crazy.
MAN: Places where life can exist
are far more extensive than we used to imagine.
Consider this: Just because a planet can support life,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] does that mean it will?
Are we likely to encounter anything as...
well, smart as you or me?
MAN: Intelligent life, like ourselves--
that's just a snap in the full history of the planet.
NARRATOR: Have the aliens advanced this far?
And if so, are any of them willing to communicate with us?
NOVA's on the hunt for alien life
on this episode of Origins, right now.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where ( cowboy singing in background )
NARRATOR: Anyone who visits New York City
will see all manner of different life-forms.
( playing hip-hop beat )
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
And you don't have to look far to realize
that our planet is teeming
with a diverse population of living creatures.
And for centuries we've been asking ourselves:
How unusual is all this?
What about the rest of the universe?
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Is our little planet Earth the only place where the action is?
Are we special?
I find it hard to believe
that we're the only people in this universe.
We're definitely not alone.
This is not just one universe, you know?
There's, like, a hundred thousand million galaxies
in the universe.
There's trillions and billions of universes.
Whatever-- the point is
it's inconceivable how big things are.
To think that we're alone is ridiculous.
( spacecraft whirring )
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] NARRATOR: Many people are ready, even eager to believe
that we're not at all alone, and that's the view prevalent
in lots of popular films and TV shows.
JAMES KIRK: These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise.
( phaser whirs )
NARRATOR: It's an appealing fantasy:
Star Trek...
Star Wars...
( shrieking )
NARRATOR: Men in Black...
all portray a universe
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] filled with a multitude of intelligent life-forms.
Show us the merchandise
or you're going to lose another head.
( dings )
NARRATOR: Sometimes they're friendly...
and sometimes they're not.
Screenwriters have come up
with some pretty interesting behaviors
for their extraterrestrials,
but they often ignore some basic principles of biology.
( screaming )
For example, in the film Alien...
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] ( flesh tearing )
a human being plays host to a parasitic alien...
( man shouting )
NARRATOR: Until it's ready to be born.
( man screams )
NARRATOR: This has long bothered biologist Jack Cohen.
COHEN: Alien is not concerned with the biology.
You can't have a creature living in your chest
which is bigger than your heart, and you don't know it's there,
and your immune system isn't turned on,
particularly if it's never seen a human being before.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] It doesn't work biologically.
But it works in a film,
because you see the thing coming out of the chest... ( shrieks )
and it's exactly what they want; it's a horror film.
Incoming!
NARRATOR: Another classic horror image of extraterrestrials
shows them as giant insects,
the alien of choice for the film Starship Troopers.
( insects shrieking )
OFFICER: Fire!
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] NARRATOR: But according to the laws of physics,
this kind of anatomy is impossible.
COHEN: It's like...
bringing a mouse up to be the size of an elephant.
Its little, thin legs wouldn't take the weight
and they would break.
You have to redesign.
And it's a lot easier to have a terrifying film with giant ants.
NARRATOR: As unscientific
as the oversize insects of Starship Troopers are,
at least they don't look like people.
By far, most films,
even the ones with huge special-effects budgets,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/et.html>[type:PROGRAM][name:ET gallery][7E47] depict aliens that actually look like they evolved on Earth,
because they have faces that resemble ours.
Nearly all the vertebrates we see around us--
humans included-- have faces
with two eyes, two nostrils and a mouth below.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] This configuration came from a common ancestor
who lived hundreds of millions of years ago.
When we look at these aliens
and they've got faces with two eyes and a nose and a mouth,
they can't be aliens.
They must have developed on Earth.
They must share that same ancestor
or they wouldn't have faces like that.
( speaking alien language )
We expect a living thing, a dog or a cat or even a fish,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] to have a face.
Therefore, when we invent something for a film,
we give it a face,
and that really enables the people who are watching
to get moved by it.
Real aliens can't be like that.
NARRATOR: "Real aliens?"
What are we talking about?
UFO sightings and abductions that show up in tabloids?
I think they have traveled to this planet.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] MAN: They might have been here years ago
but became extinct like the dinosaur.
We've been visited.
Those lights in the sky aren't all weather balloons.
NARRATOR: Mmm...
There are some people who believe
that aliens are already among us,
but there's no credible evidence.
There's nothing in any of these stories
that can't be explained in some other more rational way.
And, of course, some people are just plumb crazy.
But is it crazy to believe
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] that somewhere beyond our planet, life has taken root?
Many scientists would say it's not only possible but likely.
One of the believers is Frank Drake.
DRAKE: I first believed there was life beyond Earth
when I was eight years old, not for any good reason,
only because my father told me there were other planets
something like the Earth out there.
To my young mind, that meant places just like where I lived
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] with houses and streets and, in fact, creatures
that look just like me, which was certainly wrong.
But I believed!
TYSON: Drake's childhood dreams led him to a career in radio astronomy,
and he soon began wondering
whether somewhere among the stars
there might exist aliens who, like us, had mastered radio.
( various radio broadcasts playing )
Ever since humans learned how to broadcast radio waves,
we've been leaking them out into the cosmos.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] ( big band music playing )
Everything from Duke Ellington...
LUCILLE BALL: ...this number to Fred and Ethel...
TYSON: To I Love Lucy...
JOHN F. KENNEDY: Now it is time...
TYSON: To the speeches of world leaders is, thanks to our ingenuity,
now traveling across space at the speed of light.
Drake reasoned that if aliens were transmitting
radio signals of their own, we might be able to detect them.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
And so he created the first experiment for SETI,
the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence.
It's now survived an on and off...
TYSON: For decades, SETI astronomers have been scanning the stars
of the Milky Way galaxy,
searching for signs of advanced alien civilizations.
Their goal is the ultimate prize in the life-finding game:
someone out there we can talk to.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Nothing to do but sit here
and wait for them to call.
( phone rings )
And on cue, they've called.
TYSON: SETI faces enormous challenges,
not least of which is the sheer size of our galaxy.
The Milky Way has hundreds of billions stars
swirling in a giant spiral about 100,000 light-years wide.
That's 600 quadrillion miles.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
So, what are the chances of finding intelligent aliens
in all that real estate?
Early in his quest, Frank Drake came up with an equation
to guide him.
DRAKE: Actually I first invented the equation
as the agenda for a meeting.
It seemed pretty obvious: It was a meeting about life in space,
and I asked the question, What do we need to know about?
And I realized if you multiply them all together,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] you get the number N.
TYSON: The now-famous Drake equation lists
the different factors we'd need to know to predict N,
the number of intelligent, detectable civilizations
in our own Milky Way galaxy.
It includes factors like how many stars have planets...
and how often will life become intelligent...
and how long
a technologically advanced civilization might last.
DRAKE: And if you put, in scientists' judgment,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] the most plausible values for the factors in this equation,
N equals 10,000 detectable civilizations in our galaxy.
TYSON: 10,000 intelligent civilizations just in the Milky Way alone.
That's Frank Drake's best bet, but it's far from conclusive.
If you put different values into the equation,
then it's easy to come up with other results,
anything from a billion civilizations
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] all the way down to one: ours.
For a long time,
the values for most of these terms were unknown.
The Drake equation was something of a list of mysteries,
leaving the equation unsolvable.
But in the last few years,
our knowledge of cosmic origins has been growing exponentially,
and we're on our way to solving
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/drake.html>[type:PROGRAM][name:interactive Drake equation][49C4] at least some of these mysteries.
Take just one term in the Drake equation:
the percentage of stars-- other suns--
that have planets orbiting them.
If alien life is anything like us,
it needs some solid ground to call home,
and so we want to know how many planets are out there.
Depending on who you talk to,
our sun's got eight, maybe nine planets circling around,
including Earth.
Until recently, we haven't been able to see
any planets beyond our own solar system, none at all.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] The problem is,
planets in deep space are rendered practically invisible
by the blinding light of their suns.
That's the challenge
for the handful of scientists trying to track them down.
The team of Paul Butler and Geoff Marcy started their quest
in the 1980s with little more than their own enthusiasm.
We started off with virtually no money at all.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] The first proposal I wrote for a grant
to fund our planet search was for $930... for the whole year.
When Geoff and I started the planet search
back in the fall of 1986 at San Francisco State University,
we were... to say we were unknown is to overstate it.
We were sub-unknown.
TYSON: The young astronomers
were banking on an experimental technique
they believed could scope out planets
by focusing on the stars they orbit.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] MARCY: As a planet orbits a star,
the planet pulls gravitationally on the star,
making the star wobble.
You can tell a star has a planet or more than one planet
just by the motion of the star, which ought to be stationary
but wobbles due to the pull on it by the planet.
TYSON: The star's wobble, created by the gravity of orbiting planets,
is so subtle, Marcy and Butler can't see it directly,
so they use a special technique.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] It's hard to detect this motion directly,
so we thought we would use the Doppler effect.
As a star moves toward you, the light waves get compacted,
and that means they get shifted toward bluer colors.
And then as the star wobbles away from you,
the wavelengths of light get stretched out,
and that is interpreted by our eyes as redder.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
TYSON: Even using the Doppler effect, the only planets we can infer
would be ones with tremendous mass, like a Jupiter.
Marcy and Butler were confident that they had the best method
for hunting down big planets
and hoped they'd be the first to succeed...
when the unthinkable happened.
A team of Swiss astronomers beat them to the punch.
The first planet outside our solar system had been found,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] but by someone else.
Most astronomers were skeptical.
Although the planet was massive like Jupiter,
the Swiss discoverers claimed it orbited its star-- 51 Pegasi--
in only four days.
This seemed impossible.
Earth takes 365 days to orbit the sun,
and Jupiter takes 12 years.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Marcy and Butler felt certain there must be some mistake.
BUTLER: Almost every year for the last hundred years,
somebody has claimed to have found
the first extrasolar planet.
And the one thing all those claims had in common
was they were wrong.
And luckily
Paul Butler and I had telescope time the very next week,
and we thought, "Well, we'll just go up
"and take data on the star, 51 Pegasi, and show
that it probably doesn't really have a planet at all."
BUTLER: And when we got back
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] and we analyzed all the data, we were stunned.
We were stunned because their claim was right.
There really was a Jupiter-like planet in a four-day orbit.
We were stunned because this was
the first legitimate, real planet ever discovered,
and that furthermore...
that these planets could be much stranger, much more bizarre
than any theories that had ever been conjured before.
TYSON: Marcy and Butler had spent years
looking for massive planets like Jupiter,
far out from their stars, with long, slow orbits.
Now that they realized that big planets could make
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] a complete orbit in a matter of days,
they began to wonder.
Had they missed something?
The evidence for new planets might be buried
in their old data,
but to find it they'd need hundreds of hours
of computer time.
And we only had two little computers.
So we ran around madly, trying to borrow--
and in some cases, subverting our colleagues
and stealing their computers--
so that we could analyze all of this backlog of data.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
TYSON: They worked furiously around the clock for weeks
recrunching eight years of data.
BUTLER: I was literally in my office 24 hours a day
for about six months, reducing data.
MARCY: Some nights, you know, hardly sleeping at all
and just making sure the computers were all running.
God forbid the computer should sit idle
when we could've been finding planets with it.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
TYSON: But the marathon was worth it.
Within a month and a half of the discovery
of the planet around 51 Peg,
we found two planets sitting in our own data
right there on our computers:
the planet around 47 Ursae Majoris-- spectacular--
and then the other planet around 70 Virginis.
TYSON: Planets were finally being found,
but they were huge gas monsters circling close to their stars,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] often in highly elliptical orbits.
Scorching hot or with unstable climates, they were friendly
to neither life nor other Earthlike planets.
MARCY: Any poor Earth
that got in the way would be slammed to death.
I mean, a little Earth anywhere nearby a Jupiter
would get slingshot out of the system,
or maybe the Jupiter would hit that Earth
and probably spell doom
for any life on any terrestrial planets in those systems.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] And it really begs the question: Is our solar system,
with its nice, neat, phonograph-groovelike orbits,
some kind of wacky weirdo in the universe,
or are there others like ours?
TYSON: In addition to its neat, round orbits,
our solar system provides particular shelter for Earth,
thanks to the presence and position of Jupiter.
Jupiter's enormous gravity
throws asteroids and comets off course,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] slingshotting them out of the solar system.
Without this protection,
these cosmic missiles would frequently smash into Earth...
and destroy life as we know it.
So if Marcy and Butler want to find Earthlike planets,
first they need to find Jupiters more like our own.
MARCY: The Holy Grail for us is to find a sunlike star
that has a Jupiter as far from it
as our own Jupiter is from the sun.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] That Jupiter would protect any Earths that were in there,
and of course the real super Holy Grail is to find a system
that has not only such a Jupiter but also the Earth itself.
TYSON: After almost 20 years of searching,
things are looking up.
MAN: Okay... 1014272, 11 hours 40.
Coming up.
MARCY: We're finding new planets like crazy, all the time.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Every week or two we find another new one, on average.
Look at that one.
That's a beauty.
Let's see how that corrects up.
Yeah, that's a planet.
BUTLER: We have about 700 stars on our program,
and I'd say the thing that's really most amazing to us is
how many of them appeared
like they have planetary signals embedded in them.
All right, let's go to the next star.
MAN: Roger.
BUTLER: Do you have it in your target, Les?
LES: I'm loading it right now.
TYSON: The team is tracking several stars that appear to have
"Jupiters" right where they want them--
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] far out from their host stars and in perfect position
to shield life-friendly planets like Earth.
We are always following some exciting Jupiters.
We don't tell anybody about them,
but at any given time we have a half a dozen Jupiters
that look like our own Jupiter.
TYSON: If their hunches are confirmed, then not only are there
other solar systems that look like ours;
there may be lots of them.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
MARCY: 90% of the stars show no close-in Jupiters.
Those are stars that could easily have an Earth
in an Earthlike orbit.
I think of the 700 stars we're following,
I would bet at least half of them have
rocky, Earth-sized planets going around them.
TYSON: Just a decade ago, astronomers could not be sure
if there were any planets beyond our solar system.
Today we have a much better picture of our galaxy,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] and Geoff Marcy estimates
that of the several hundred billion stars in the Milky Way,
about five percent have small, rocky planets
that might harbor life.
If he's right, that could mean ten billion Earthlike planets.
But before you start packing your bags
to visit an extraterrestrial neighbor, consider this:
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Just because a planet can support life,
does that mean it will?
It's a crucial factor of the Drake equation--
the percentage of planets where life does arise.
On a planet where no life exists,
like our own early Earth,
how does life suddenly come into being?
Is the spark of life rare or common?
MAN: 25 years ago
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] most people, when they thought about the origin of life,
thought in terms of inherently improbable reactions
that would actually occur because of the fullness of time.
TYSON: Andy Knoll is a paleontologist who studies fossils
for clues to how early life evolved on Earth.
Before about 600 million years ago,
all life on Earth was tiny--
single-celled creatures so small
that Knoll and his colleagues do most of their work
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] with microscopes or in chemistry labs.
The big surprise is
that no matter where they look for signs of ancient life,
they find it.
KNOLL: Our planet is
about 4½½ billion years old.
We have evidence from the oldest rocks that we know of,
at least the oldest sedimentary rocks we know of,
that by about 3.8 billion years ago,
life had already gained a foothold on our planet.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
TYSON: Scientists haven't figured out exactly
how that first spark of life happened,
but since it seems to have sparked early on,
then maybe it isn't so hard.
KNOLL: Most people think that whether or not we understand
what the chemistry that leads to life is,
that it's a chemistry that, under the right conditions,
will pretty much go and... and<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/knoll.html>[type:PROGRAM][name:how did life begin?
][4C14] is a fairly probable chemistry
and that therefore life doesn't take billions of years
to unfold on a planet;
it might unfold in thousands of years or a million years.
A lot of people think if you can't do it in a million years,
you probably can't do it at all.
TYSON: So, what is required to get it all started?
Here on Earth,
the chemistry of life relies heavily on the element carbon.
Carbon is one of the most versatile elements.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Each carbon atom can hook up
with one... two... or three... or four other atoms.
It can even link up with other carbon atoms,
creating long chains or rings.
Throw in a few other elements, and you've got amino acids,
the ingredients of proteins--
the building blocks of life as we know it.
Carbon is a very useful element
to sit at the center of life's chemistry.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] There's a lot of it in the universe.
It's made very easily in stars.
It makes very complicated, meshed-together compounds
which have the possibility
of changing each other's properties.
You can have
a really complicated, complex setup with carbon.
I'd expect that very nearly all life-forms we come across
that are matter-based are going to be carbon-based.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] TYSON: If carbon helps make life happen,
then there might be a lot of life out there.
Carbon is one of the most common elements in the universe.
So, if it's got carbon, what else does life need?
Lots of oxygen in the air?
72 degrees?
We tend to think life belongs in a place that's, well...
comfortable for us.
But is that really true?
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] In the last few years, we've been finding life
practically everywhere on Earth, and not just the obvious spots.
Microbes are thriving under rocks
in the driest, hottest deserts.
Life's doing just fine in the dark bottom of the oceans,
warmed by deep-sea vents.
And now life is turning up
in some of the coldest, bleakest conditions imaginable,
including the ice sheets of Antarctica and Greenland.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
So now that we've found life
not just surviving, but thriving just about everywhere on Earth,
suddenly it's looking more likely that life might thrive
in lots of places beyond Earth,
even if we would find them a bit uncomfortable.
If life is common, then we should be able
to find signs of it beyond our own little planet.
Unfortunately, the evidence has been elusive.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] It seems as if one crucial ingredient has been missing.
The most important requirement for life is liquid water,
and that's the defining requirement for life
in terms of our solar system.
There's plenty of energy; there's plenty of carbon;
there's plenty of other elements
on all the planets in our solar system.
What's rare and which, as far as we know,
only occurs now on Earth is liquid water.
TYSON: Liquid water is crucial because it's an ideal solvent.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Molecules can easily move around in it
and react with one another,
allowing the complex chemistry of life to do its thing.
For years, it seemed that Earth, with its oceans of liquid water,
was an oddball
and perhaps the only place in the solar system
where life had ever thrived.
Then we started to look more closely at our neighbors.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
In recent years, NASA spacecraft have sent back images of Mars
with stunning detail,
and there are clear signs of a watery past.
McKAY: From orbit around Mars,
we can see ancient rivers that are now dry canyons,
which look like they had lakes in the middle of them,
even what looks like an ancient ocean floor
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] in the northern hemisphere.
We see unmistakable signs that Mars was a wet place.
TYSON: And now there's even more information
from NASA's twin Rovers that roamed the Red Planet,
taking pictures and probing the rocks
for their chemical makeup.
The photos reveal clear sedimentary layers
in the Martian rocks,
and chemical analysis shows
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] they must have been laid down in the presence of water.
Mars might be too cold and dry to harbor life today,
but if water was once there, then perhaps life was, too.
And now there's hope that life may thrive
even farther out in the solar system.
McKAY: I think Mars is the number one candidate
for the search for life beyond the Earth,
especially if we're going to find it soon.
But we do have a backup plan,
and in this case, the backup plan is Europa--
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] one of the moons of Jupiter.
TYSON: A little smaller than our moon, Europa is covered with ice,
but there are cracks in its surface--
perhaps signs of ice sheets
floating on a deep ocean of liquid water.
What might be melting the ice is internal friction,
created by the gravity of Jupiter and its other moons.
Europa's ocean is suddenly considered
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] a potential home for life.
DRAKE: The places where life can live and exist are far more extensive
than we used to imagine.
We used to think a life-bearing planet
had to be just like the Earth,
and a little closer to the sun, it would be too hot,
a little farther away, it would be too cold.
And now we realize, oh, gosh, there's a place
which has an ocean with three times as much water
as the ocean of Earth, and the water's warm,
and that's way out in the solar system
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] where we used to think
the temperatures were ridiculously low--
there could never be life there.
So the likelihood of life existing on planets in space
is just going up enormously.
So even though we've yet to find life
elsewhere in the solar system or beyond,
we're getting more optimistic that life may be widespread.
But if life is common in the galaxy,
what kind of life would it be?
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Is it merely the kind of life we had here
for about three billion years--
microorganisms happily brewing away
with nothing bigger or more interesting than bacteria?
Or is it the complex plant and animal life
we find in our oceans, of all shapes and sizes?
Or could it be what SETI is banking on-- intelligent life
that builds cities, computers and radio transmitters?
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] We now know that the way we got to this...
from something like this...
was through evolution.
Does that mean evolution would work the same way
wherever life appears?
Frank Drake thinks so.
DRAKE: Once you have life, evolution goes to work.
Life is very opportunistic.
It expands.
It finds ways to survive.
It finds ways to cope with changing environments.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] And in the process, it becomes more intelligent.
And in the long run, you end up with something like us--
exploiting technology to live in even more inhospitable habitats.
TYSON: Drake's optimism shows up
in the estimates he's plugged into his own equation.
His guess is that wherever life arises,
it will evolve into intelligent life ten percent of the time--
not quite inevitable, but a fairly common outcome.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] It's hard to know how likely or common intelligence is
when it's shown up so recently in Earth's history.
So, the short history goes like this: life early,
but the familiar life that we think of-- plants and animals--
that is really
a relatively recent development on this planet.
And intelligent life-- people like ourselves,
technologically competent humans--
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] that's just a snap in the full history of the planet.
TYSON: After about three billion years with only microscopic life,
Earth finally became home to true plants and animals.
And after another 500 or 600 million years, we came along.
One of the major mechanisms for all these changes has been DNA,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] the long chain of molecules
that carries the blueprint for every living thing.
Every time a cell divides, its DNA makes a copy of itself,
and in that copy, there are often some mistakes.
Sometimes those mistakes result in an animal or plant
that's more successful than its parents.
It's these kinds of mistakes
that have allowed the tree of life
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] to branch out in so many directions,
creating the great diversity we see on our planet.
So, if there's life on other planets,
does it have to have DNA?
COHEN: Would aliens have DNA?
Well, I would be surprised to find aliens with DNA
as their heredity, because DNA is a useful molecule--
it can replicate; it can do the mirror-image bit;
it can do the... it's a very useful trick.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] But other chemicals can do that, and I'd be surprised
if aliens latched onto the same one that we did.
TYSON: To get from microbes to complex animals and intelligent life,
you might not need DNA...
but there's one ingredient that could be absolutely crucial
for the evolution of intelligence,
and it may be the rarest of all-- time.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Some scientists say that the key to our evolution was
Earth's long and relatively peaceful history.
Among them is paleontologist Peter Ward.
TYSON: In this big galaxy of ours--
hundreds of billions of stars--
surely Earth is repeated many places, many times.
Why not?
Well, I think the question is,
how much time do we have?
For instance, we got to intelligent organisms
on this planet after 500 million years of animal life.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] So you've got a long period of time.
Now, that doesn't say
you couldn't get it sooner in other places,
but you still need finite periods of time.
And to me, that is the major argument
against there being intelligent civilizations.
You can't go from a bacterium to an intelligence
in a million years,
maybe not even ten million years,
probably not even in a hundred million years.
How many other planets are going to have
such long periods of time?
Not many, I think.
TYSON: In the half billion years when intelligence was evolving,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Earth's plant and animal life might have been pushed back
to square one--
single-celled organisms-- with one catastrophic event.
At least a couple of times, we came pretty close.
This crater-- about a mile across--
was made by a meteor that plunged to Earth
nearly 50,000 years ago.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] As violent as that event must have been,
it was nothing compared with earlier catastrophes.
Just ask the dinosaurs.
The dinosaurs ruled Earth for about 150 million years.
They had the size.
They had the power.
It seemed that nothing could stop them.
Then, 65 million years ago,
an asteroid about six miles across headed toward Earth.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
In the aftermath of a collision of epic proportions
and widespread volcanic eruptions,
as many as two-thirds of all living species were wiped out.
The big guys didn't stand a chance.
Among the survivors were little mammals,
and with the dinosaurs conveniently out of the picture,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] they thrived.
Over the eons, their descendants evolved
into lots of different animals,
including primates, including us.
That's how we got our start.
But what if you turned back the clock?
What if that asteroid had taken a slightly different course
and missed Earth completely?
Little mammals may have never gotten their chance,
because the dinosaurs could still be in charge today.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] And instead of me, one of them might be hosting this show.
Thank you, thank you very much.
( roars )
TYSON: In some ways, we owe our existence to serendipity,
and some argue that this makes the evolution of intelligence
far less likely.
Our brains evolved through many stages:
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] the little rodents, the early primates,
and later on, we branched from the apes.
This worked for us, but is it the only route to intelligence?
Would an alien species have to go through the same steps?
There's no way to know for sure, but on our planet,
lots of animals have remarkable brains and behavior...
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
including some that are very distant from us
on the evolutionary tree.
Among them are the cephalopods--
including octopus, squid and cuttlefish.
MAN: Cephalopods are mollusks.
They're related to clams and oysters,
but they don't look much like them at all.
And in evolutionary terms,
they've evolved in a very different way.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
TYSON: Roger Hanlon has spent the last 30 years
studying the behavior of these animals--
behavior that is their main defense
from ending up as dinner.
HANLON: These animals are
a yummy hunk of protein swimming around in the ocean,
and once they're caught, they have no defenses.
So they have to have a good primary defense--
that's camouflage.
Don't be seen.
We could move over this tank here...
TYSON: In the lab, Hanlon and his team study
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] how cephalopods, like this cuttlefish,
control and change their skin patterns.
HANLON: It's taking that visual information
and translating it to the skin on the back.
This is beautiful.
Look at that-- perfect white square.
TYSON: To see how they apply their tricks in their natural habitat,
Hanlon tails them with his underwater camera.
His biggest challenge: finding them in the first place.
Octopus and cuttlefish have an uncanny ability
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] to completely disappear into the background.
We all think of the chameleon
as sort of the king or queen of color change,
but that's not true.
A cephalopod can show many more patterns
and can show them instantaneously.
An octopus can be so camouflaged you literally cannot see it.
So every place they go, they are morphing into something
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] that looks a lot like that environment.
So, here's the scene.
You've got a rock with algae all over it.
There appears to be nothing there
except the swimming fish going by.
Okay, so take a look here and just watch for a moment.
There it is.
Whoa!
( laughs )
Isn't that amazing?
This animal was completely camouflaged on that rock,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] and suddenly it was there.
TYSON: This remarkable camouflage--
changing both pattern and three-dimensional texture--
is performed by skin unlike any other animal's.
HANLON: It's an amazing skin, because there are up to 20 million
of these chromatophore pigment cells,
and to control 20 million of anything
is going to take a lot of processing power.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] We call it a computer; animals have brains.
These animals have
extraordinarily large, complicated brains
to make all this work.
TYSON: For Hanlon, the brains and sophisticated behavior
of these animals suggest that there's more than just one way
to get smart.
HANLON: Very inquisitive animal.
That's quite extraordinary.
Even an invertebrate animal related to a clam or a snail
can develop an incredibly complicated brain.
This is one of the true wonders of nature.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] It's hard to explain why, but it's everywhere.
And what does this mean
about the universe and other intelligent life?
The building blocks are potentially there,
and complexity will arise.
Evolution is the force that's pushing that.
I would expect, personally, a lot of diversity
and a lot of complicated structures.
It may not look like us, but my personal view
is that there is intelligent life out there.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
TYSON: But intelligent life is not necessarily
life we can talk to across the depths of space.
For that, you need technology.
As smart as an octopus or a dolphin is,
neither one of them is going to build a radio transmitter
or a spaceship.
When paleontologist Peter Ward looks at Earth's track record,
the odds for technological aliens
don't seem very promising.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
WARD: There's maybe 30 million species on the planet today.
And if we look at the fossils,
there were hundreds of millions of species in the past
but only one of them which has risen to technology.
It's happened one time
out of hundreds of millions of possibilities
on planet Earth.
One time, one time only.
So that's an astronomically small number.
TYSON: Here on Earth, we are the only species
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] that has mastered technology.
Since it's so rare here,
should we really expect technology to be common
among the aliens?
Many would say no, but the folks at SETI continue to hope.
Hey, Tom, look at this one, because...
TYSON: Searching for alien signals night after night
can test anyone's patience... unless, of course, you find one.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Most evenings, SETI will get a false alarm or two,
but one night in 1997,
they received a signal so strong and true,
it looked as if their long search might be over.
MAN: We were observing at another telescope in West Virginia,
and we got this signal that started to pass
all the automated tests that we use to determine
is it really extraterrestrial or is it just more interference.
TYSON: The lead astronomer that evening was SETI director Jill Tarter.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Following standard procedure,
she pointed the receiving dish away from the star
where the signal appeared to originate.
If the signal remained,
it was just a stray transmission from Earth.
But when they moved the dish, the signal went away,
and when it was pointed back at the star, the signal returned.
Excited, the SETI team repeated the test.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
We went off in another direction
and the signal went away,
and we came back and it was there,
and we went off in another direction
and the signal went away,
and we came back and it was there.
And it was now getting very interesting.
TYSON: Interesting because the signal might actually be coming
from deep space.
The excitement quickly spread back to SETI headquarters
in Mountain View, California.
I was back in Mountain View.
We were watching the signals on remote monitors, okay?
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Well, after about four or six hours
of this still passing the tests,
needless to say, our blood pressure definitely was rising.
TARTER: And I was so excited that exactly
what I was looking for was right there, staring me in the face.
TYSON: By now, the star had set.
The next night would tell the tale.
If the signal returned, perhaps E.T.
was finally on the line.
I for one couldn't sit down.
I was just sort of pacing around.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] A lot of people were huddled around the... the computers.
Nobody went home, nobody went out for a burger.
In a sense, you know, it could have been an historic moment.
TYSON: The "historic moment" didn't survive the night.
Most of the time,
SETI used a second telescope, located in Georgia,
to weed out false alarms.
Unfortunately, the backup antenna wasn't working,
so it took a little longer than usual
for the SETI team to discover the truth on their own:
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] The signal was coming from a distant research satellite.
The champagne remained unpopped.
Despite the disappointment, SETI has never lost faith.
Its scientists remain convinced that our universe is capable
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/ward.html>[type:PROGRAM][name:are we alone?
][A84D] of producing intelligent life on many different worlds.
DRAKE: I truly believe there are signals out there.
I also recognize full well
that our instruments, as powerful as they are,
are hardly beginning the search.
The number of stars we've looked at,
the number of radio frequencies, is minuscule
compared to the total inventory of combinations
of stars and frequencies there are to search.
So we've hardly started.
We should not have succeeded.
Only through a great fluke of good luck
would we have succeeded by now.
( various radio broadcasts playing )
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Humans have been leaking radio waves into space
for most of the past century.
Compared to the history of our Milky Way galaxy--
about ten billion years-- that's a tiny blip.
And we've been actively listening
for radio signals from distant civilizations
for only about 40 years.
If the aliens are on the other side of the galaxy,
any signal they send could take tens of thousands of years
to reach Earth.
It's as if the aliens were throwing a dart...
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8]
and trying to hit one tiny spot
on this enormous landscape of time and space.
Let's face it--
the odds of our capturing that signal aren't very good.
And yet, who can blame us for trying?
TARTER: For me, it's the most interesting question:
Are we alone?
What's our place in this universe?
How do we fit in?
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] Are we just run of the mill, are we totally exceptional,
or are we somewhere in between?
TYSON: Exploring our own world and the universe beyond
has been full of surprises.
Just a few hundred years ago,
we assumed that everything about us and our surroundings
was special and unique.
Now we know there are lots of stars out there--
many like our sun.
We're discovering other solar systems with planets.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] And the chemicals of life, forged in stars,
are abundant in the universe.
If those common chemicals
have caught the spark of life somewhere else,
who knows how that life will evolve,
what path it will follow...
and whether we'll ever meet?
I feel like I'm six years old when I say it.
I...
I feel almost embarrassed.
I just want to know: Are they out there?
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] And all of my science training and math
and skills as a researcher kind of go out the door.
I just feel that this is a question
that is going to be so profound for us as a species
but also individually.
Each one of us will have to look within ourselves
and figure out what it means to us.
TYSON: Are we alone?
Are we rare?
Are we common?
We still do not know.
But perhaps someday we will.
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins/>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA Origins "Where Are the Aliens?
"][5AE8] And the answer-- whatever it is--
will reshape our sense of ourselves
and our place in the universe.
Next time on NOVA...
The ultimate mystery.
MAN: How did the universe,
our planet...
how did we ourselves come to be?
Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson is on a cosmic quest
that starts with the Big Bang, ends with us
and tells a new story of what happened in between.
MAN: We are actually on the brink
of a revolution of unimaginable proportions.
On "Origins," a NOVA miniseries.
To order this program on VHS or DVD,
<http://www.pbs.org/nova/origins>[type:PROGRAM][name:NOVA: Origins: Back to the Beginning][D337] or the book,
Origins: Fourteen Billion Years of Cosmic Evolution,
please call 1-800-255-9424.
Captioned by Media Access Group at WGBH access.wgbh.org
NOVA IS A PRODUCTION OF WGBH BOSTON.