http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/science/space/article7107207.ece

>From The Sunday Times

April 25, 2010

Don’t talk to aliens, warns Stephen Hawking

Jonathan Leake


THE aliens are out there and Earth had better watch out, at least
according to Stephen Hawking. He has suggested that extraterrestrials are
almost certain to exist  -  but that instead of seeking them out, humanity
should be doing all it that can to avoid any contact.

The suggestions come in a new documentary series in which Hawking, one of
the world’s leading scientists, will set out his latest thinking on some
of the universe’s greatest mysteries.

Alien life, he will suggest, is almost certain to exist in many other
parts of the universe: not just in planets, but perhaps in the centre of
stars or even floating in interplanetary space.

Hawking’s logic on aliens is, for him, unusually simple. The universe, he
points out, has 100 billion galaxies, each containing hundreds of millions
of stars. In such a big place, Earth is unlikely to be the only planet
where life has evolved.

“To my mathematical brain, the numbers alone make thinking about aliens
perfectly rational,” he said. “The real challenge is to work out what
aliens might actually be like.”

The answer, he suggests, is that most of it will be the equivalent of
microbes or simple animals  -  the sort of life that has dominated Earth
for most of its history.

One scene in his documentary for the Discovery Channel shows herds of
two-legged herbivores browsing on an alien cliff-face where they are
picked off by flying, yellow lizard-like predators. Another shows glowing
fluorescent aquatic animals forming vast shoals in the oceans thought to
underlie the thick ice coating Europa, one of the moons of Jupiter.

Such scenes are speculative, but Hawking uses them to lead on to a serious
point: that a few life forms could be intelligent and pose a threat.
Hawking believes that contact with such a species could be devastating for
humanity.

He suggests that aliens might simply raid Earth for its resources and then
move on: “We only have to look at ourselves to see how intelligent life
might develop into something we wouldn’t want to meet. I imagine they
might exist in massive ships, having used up all the resources from their
home planet. Such advanced aliens would perhaps become nomads, looking to
conquer and colonise whatever planets they can reach.”

He concludes that trying to make contact with alien races is “a little too
risky”. He said: “If aliens ever visit us, I think the outcome would be
much as when Christopher Columbus first landed in America, which didn’t
turn out very well for the Native Americans.”

The completion of the documentary marks a triumph for Hawking, now 68, who
is paralysed by motor neurone disease and has very limited powers of
communication. The project took him and his producers three years, during
which he insisted on rewriting large chunks of the script and checking the
filming.

John Smithson, executive producer for Discovery, said: “He wanted to make
a programme that was entertaining for a general audience as well as
scientific and that’s a tough job, given the complexity of the ideas
involved.”

Hawking has suggested the possibility of alien life before but his views
have been clarified by a series of scientific breakthroughs, such as the
discovery, since 1995, of more than 450 planets orbiting distant stars,
showing that planets are a common phenomenon.

So far, all the new planets found have been far larger than Earth, but
only because the telescopes used to detect them are not sensitive enough
to detect Earth-sized bodies at such distances.

Another breakthrough is the discovery that life on Earth has proven able
to colonise its most extreme environments. If life can survive and evolve
there, scientists reason, then perhaps nowhere is out of bounds.

Hawking’s belief in aliens places him in good scientific company. In his
recent Wonders of the Solar System BBC series, Professor Brian Cox backed
the idea, too, suggesting Mars, Europa and Titan, a moon of Saturn, as
likely places to look.

Similarly, Lord Rees, the astronomer royal, warned in a lecture earlier
this year that aliens might prove to be beyond human understanding.

“I suspect there could be life and intelligence out there in forms we
can’t conceive,” he said. “Just as a chimpanzee can’t understand quantum
theory, it could be there are aspects of reality that are beyond the
capacity of our brains.”

Stephen Hawking's Universe begins on the Discovery Channel on Sunday May 9
at 9pm

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