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RE: Why Haven't We Ran Into Alien Lifeforms Yet?

in #life8 years ago

yes but most of the energy is required to leave earth, I'm unsure of how much energy is required to navigate the gravitational fields of other planets on our way out of the solar system, but it might be suprisingly low

I think we're only about 200 years away from leaving the solar system. By which time the trip may be a few orders of magnitudes faster and depending on anti aging technology, we, or our descendants can begin colonizing other solar systems.

Even if i'm way off with the estimate of tehcnological advancement (I dont' think I am) I think a lot can and should have happened already in 14 billion years and it is honestly a small wonder that we're so isolated outside of our planet.

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sorry...you're wrong.
Voyager II launched by NASA on August 20, 1977
it is now

  • At a distance of 114 AU (1.71×1010 km) from the Sun as of April 5th, 2017,[6] Voyager 2 is one of the most distant human-made objects, along with Voyager 1, New Horizons, Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11. The probe was moving at a velocity of 15.4 km/s (55,000 km/h) relative to the Sun as of December 2014

do the math...2017 - 1977?
fastest moving object ever made by the human race?
it hasn't even got out of the solar system yet?

According to Ben Rich Director of Lockheed Martin Skunkworks, "We now have the technology to take ET home." Here is the link -