elActual - Periódico digital sobre actualidad y tendencias
viernes, septiembre 22, 2023
  • Actualidad
  • Consumo
  • Turismo y Cultura
  • Social
  • Estilo de Vida
  • Ciencia y Tecnología
No hay resultados
Ver todos los resultados
Suscríbete
elActual - Periódico digital sobre actualidad y tendencias
  • Actualidad
  • Consumo
  • Turismo y Cultura
  • Social
  • Estilo de Vida
  • Ciencia y Tecnología
No hay resultados
Ver todos los resultados
elActual - Periódico digital sobre actualidad y tendencias
No hay resultados
Ver todos los resultados

Humanity Will Out-Communicate all Life on Earth Within 90 Years

13 de septiembre de 2023
en Ciencia y Tecnología
0
Humanity Will Out-Communicate all Life on Earth Within 90 Years
Compartir en FacebookTwittear

Andorra frena les negociacions porentrar a la Unió Europea

10 Best All-Inclusive Resorts in Mexico

Polònia posa fi a l’enviament d’armes a Ucraïna porla disputa sobre el gra

Life on Earth is a glorious dance of data. From the songs of backyard birds to the chemical exchanges of forest trees, the exchange of information between living things is an essential part of its existence and evolution. Humans, too, are a part of that dance, with friendship chats over morning coffee, bold headlines in newspapers, and TikTok videos of teenagers. Right now human data is just one part of Earth’s living data exchange, but it could soon become the overwhelming dominant part. If the same is true for all advanced civilizations, it could impact our search for alien life.

Although it would be nearly impossible to get a precise measure of the rate of data exchanged between terrestrial organisms, you can estimate the rate as an order of magnitude. One way to do this is to look at the number of living cells and their data exchange since they constitute the bulk mass of life on Earth. Based on several studies, the total number of prokaryotes, such as bacteria, amounts to about 1029 cells. These cells exchange a single bit of information in about 3 hours, so very broadly the Earth’s biosphere exchanges about 1024 bits of information each second.

In contrast, the technosphere, or the sum of digital information exchanged by humans, is a bit easier to estimate. Based on Internet data exchange, our bit rate is about 1015 bits/second, which is a billionth of the biosphere rate. But while the biosphere is relatively stable over time (barring the occasional mass extinction), our digital data is growing at an exponential rate. If our technosphere continues to expand at historical rates, it will outpace the biosphere in less than a century.

So what does this have to do with alien civilizations?

Data is exchanged at the physical level. Whether through chemical interactions, optical fiber, or electrical circuits, all data takes power to create and maintain. Currently, this energy is centered on biosphere data, but it could become dominated by technosphere data in the blink of a cosmic eye. If this trend is typical for advanced civilizations, the power spectrum of a planet with intelligent life is more likely to be technological, not biological. We therefore might be able to distinguish the worlds of an alien civilization by looking for a distinctly synthetic thermal signature.

But even we we don’t concern ourselves with aliens, the growing technosphere will have significant consequences for life on Earth. Humans already have a tremendous influence on Earth’s biodiversity and global temperatures. If we continue our trend of exponential growth, we could significantly diminish the data resources for non-human life. Perhaps that’s something we should talk about.

Reference: Lingam, Manasvi, Adam Frank, and Amedeo Balbi. “Planetary Scale Information Transmission in the Biosphere and Technosphere: Limits and Evolution.” Life 13.9 (2023): 1850.

Anterior artículo

JWST Gazes into the Dark Molecular Clouds at the Heart of the Milky Way

Siguiente artículo

A New Telescope Could Detect Decaying Dark Matter in the Early Universe

Federico G.

Federico G.

Licenciado y Doctor en Ciencias Biológicas por la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Ahora compartiendo mis conocimientos y las últimas noticias del ámbito tecno-científico.

Más en el Actual

It's Going to Take More Than Early Dark Energy to Resolve the Hubble Tension
Ciencia y Tecnología

It’s Going to Take More Than Early Dark Energy to Resolve the Hubble Tension

13 de septiembre de 2023
A Hubble Space Telescope view of M87's core and its jet. it points nearly directly at us and is also known as a blazar. Astronomers are studying other blazars that have meandering jets and think that binary black holes may be hidden inside some of them. Courtesy STScI.
Ciencia y Tecnología

Some Galaxies Contain Double Supermassive Black Holes

13 de septiembre de 2023
A New Telescope Could Detect Decaying Dark Matter in the Early Universe
Ciencia y Tecnología

A New Telescope Could Detect Decaying Dark Matter in the Early Universe

13 de septiembre de 2023
JWST Gazes into the Dark Molecular Clouds at the Heart of the Milky Way
Ciencia y Tecnología

JWST Gazes into the Dark Molecular Clouds at the Heart of the Milky Way

13 de septiembre de 2023
TESS Finds a Planet That Takes 482 Days to Orbit, the Widest it’s Seen so Far
Ciencia y Tecnología

TESS Finds a Planet That Takes 482 Days to Orbit, the Widest it’s Seen so Far

13 de septiembre de 2023
TESS Finds a Planet That Takes 482 Days to Orbit, the Widest it’s Seen so Far
Ciencia y Tecnología

TESS Finds a Planet That Takes 482 Days to Orbit, the Widest it’s Seen so Far

13 de septiembre de 2023
The Space Station is Getting Gigabit Internet
Ciencia y Tecnología

The Space Station is Getting Gigabit Internet

13 de septiembre de 2023
India Follows its Lunar Mission by Sending a Spacecraft to Study the Sun
Ciencia y Tecnología

India Follows its Lunar Mission by Sending a Spacecraft to Study the Sun

13 de septiembre de 2023
Siguiente artículo
A New Telescope Could Detect Decaying Dark Matter in the Early Universe

A New Telescope Could Detect Decaying Dark Matter in the Early Universe

Deja una respuesta Cancelar la respuesta

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *

El Actual Diario Digital estimulante y cosmopolita

Categorías

  • Actualidad
  • Ciencia y Tecnología
  • Consumo
  • Estilo de Vida
  • Social
  • Turismo y Cultura

Enlaces de Interés

  • ¿Qué es El Actual?
  • El equipo
  • Aviso Legal
  • Política de Cookies
  • Contacto

© 2021 el Actual.

No hay resultados
Ver todos los resultados
  • Actualidad
  • Consumo
  • Turismo y Cultura
  • Social
  • Estilo de Vida
  • Ciencia y Tecnología

© 2021 el Actual.