Domain 39 · 100% Real Science · No Fiction
6EQUJ5

Beyond Earth

The universe is 13.8 billion years old. It contains approximately 2 trillion galaxies and 700 sextillion stars. The question is not whether life exists elsewhere. The question is why we haven't found it yet.

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The Numbers
2T
Galaxies in the
Observable Universe
700×10²¹
Estimated Stars
in the Universe
5,700+
Confirmed Exoplanets
NASA 2025
~40B
Earth-sized Planets
in Habitable Zones (Milky Way)
13.8B
Years Old
The Universe
4.5B
Years Old
Earth
August 15, 1977

The Wow! Signal

Ohio State's Big Ear telescope was scanning the sky as part of a SETI program when an astronomer named Jerry Ehman reviewed the printout the next day. He saw a sequence of characters — 6EQUJ5 — representing a narrowband radio signal at 1420.4556 MHz, the hydrogen line. It lasted 72 seconds. It was 30 times louder than the background noise. Ehman circled it in red and wrote: Wow!

The signal has never been detected again. From the direction of Sagittarius. No confirmed source. The strongest candidate for an extraterrestrial radio signal ever recorded. Not confirmed as extraterrestrial. Not explained by any known natural phenomenon at the time of detection.

Raw Printout · Big Ear Telescope · Aug 15 1977 · 22:16 EST
Signal strength encoded: 1-9 then A-Z (10-35). Background noise ≈ 1-2. Peak signal: U = 30.
The Equation

The Drake Equation (1961)

N = R* · fp · ne · fl · fi · fc · L
Frank Drake · Green Bank Conference · 1961

N = the number of communicative civilizations in our galaxy. R* = rate of star formation (~1.5–3/year). fp = fraction with planets (~1.0 — nearly all stars have planets, per Kepler data). ne = habitable planets per system (~0.2–0.5).

fl, fi, fc, and L — the fraction where life develops, the fraction developing intelligence, the fraction developing detectable technology, and the lifespan of such civilizations — remain entirely unknown. The Drake Equation is not a calculation. It is a framework for organizing ignorance. Its power is showing that even conservative estimates still produce a non-trivial number of civilizations.

The Paradox

The Fermi Paradox (1950)

At Los Alamos National Laboratory, physicist Enrico Fermi was having lunch with colleagues when the conversation turned to extraterrestrial life. Fermi asked the question that has haunted science ever since: "Where is everybody?"

If the universe is old enough and large enough to have produced billions of habitable worlds, and if even a small fraction developed technological civilizations, then the galaxy should be teeming with evidence. We should see their signals, their megastructures, their probes. We see nothing. That silence is the paradox.

Proposed resolutions: The Great Filter (some step in the development of life is so improbable that almost no civilization survives it); the Zoo Hypothesis (advanced civilizations are deliberately avoiding contact); the Dark Forest theory (civilizations hide because detection means destruction); Rare Earth (the conditions for complex life are extraordinarily rare); and the simplest: we haven't been looking long enough, with sensitive enough instruments, in the right places.

Real Events

A Timeline of the Search

1960
Project Ozma
Frank Drake points Green Bank telescope at Tau Ceti and Epsilon Eridani. First modern SETI experiment. No signal detected. The search began.
August 15, 1977 · 22:16 EST
The Wow! Signal
Ohio State's Big Ear telescope detects a 72-second narrowband signal from the direction of Sagittarius at 1420.4556 MHz. Jerry Ehman circles the printout and writes "Wow!" The signal has never been detected again. It remains the strongest candidate for an extraterrestrial radio signal ever recorded.
1992
First Confirmed Exoplanets
Aleksander Wolszczan and Dale Frail confirm two planets orbiting pulsar PSR B1257+12. The first confirmed planets outside our solar system. The Copernican revolution's second act.
2009–2018
Kepler Space Telescope
NASA's Kepler mission discovers 2,662 confirmed exoplanets by observing transits of 530,506 stars. Establishes that planets are common — roughly one per star in the Milky Way. The universe is full of worlds.
October 19, 2017
'Oumuamua
The first detected interstellar object to pass through our solar system. Unusual shape (extremely elongated), unexpected non-gravitational acceleration, no visible coma. Harvard astronomer Avi Loeb proposed it could be an artificial light sail. Scientific consensus: natural object. Its properties remain unexplained. Source: Meech et al. (2017), Nature.
2020–2023
U.S. Government UAP Investigations
The Pentagon's AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office) investigates hundreds of unidentified aerial phenomena from military personnel. 2021 DNI report confirmed 144 incidents, 143 unexplained. Congressional hearings 2022–2023. No confirmed extraterrestrial origin. Many remain unresolved.
2021–Present
James Webb Space Telescope
JWST can analyze exoplanet atmospheres by observing starlight during transits. It is specifically capable of detecting biosignature gases — oxygen, methane, water vapor. This is the instrument most likely to provide evidence of extraterrestrial life in our lifetime.
2024
K2-18 b Atmosphere Analysis
JWST detects carbon dioxide and methane in the atmosphere of K2-18 b, a sub-Neptune 120 light-years away in the habitable zone of its star. Possible detection of dimethyl sulfide (DMS), which on Earth is produced only by living organisms. Results under peer review. Source: Madhusudhan et al. (2023), The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
The Honest Answer

What We Actually Know

As of 2025, there is no confirmed evidence of extraterrestrial life of any kind — microbial or intelligent. Every signal, every anomaly, every unexplained aerial phenomenon remains just that: unexplained.

What we do know: the building blocks of life — amino acids, water, organic compounds — are common throughout the universe. Found in meteorites, in interstellar gas clouds, on the moons of Jupiter and Saturn. The conditions for life appear to be ordinary, not exceptional.

The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. But it is the current state of the evidence. Science does not speculate beyond the data. We are still looking. The James Webb Space Telescope, the Square Kilometre Array, and the next generation of ground-based telescopes will have the sensitivity to detect biosignatures in exoplanet atmospheres within the next decade. If life exists within 100 light-years of Earth, we may find it in our lifetimes.

· · · — — — · · ·
"The universe is under no obligation to make sense to you. But it is under no obligation to hide, either."
Glory to God · Lund Studio · Domain 39 · 100% Real Science

Sources: NASA, Nature, The Astrophysical Journal, U.S. DNI · All data verified

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