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Space Alien Encounter Scenario Has Scientists Saying How We Will React

Posted: 03/30/2012 8:26 am Updated: 03/30/2012 12:44 pm

It is conceivable that humans could someday discover aliens. We scour the cosmos looking for their radio signals, and though we're not capable of interstellar space travel, it is remotely possible that we could find what we're looking for right here in our solar system.

Life could theoretically exist on Mars, or on Europa, a moon of Jupiter, which appears to have an underground ocean. It's even possible (though highly unlikely) that these nearby life forms could be sentient. "It is consistent with current human exploration of the solar system that intelligent beings could have evolved in the deep oceans of Europa," said Jacob Haqq-Misra, an astronomer at Pennsylvania State University.

Another possibility, Haqq-Misra said, is that "intelligent extraterrestrial beings have traveled from a distant star system and taken up residence in the solar system. They might be living in an underground base on Mars or the moon, or they could be residing in the asteroid belt (or any number of other plausible, albeit unlikely, options)."

Considering these scenarios, what would we do if we encountered an alien race? As it turns out, the question has garnered considerable academic thought since the first reported flying saucer sighting in 1947, not just as an inquiry in human psychology, but also as a way of contemplating what aliens might do if they ever found us. From astronomers to ufologists to anthropologists, scholars who have contemplated the various "contact scenarios" believe our course of action would strongly depend on the relative intelligence level of the newfound beings. Here, we outline what would happen if we encountered primitive, humanlike, and godlike aliens.

Voyage of discovery

According to Seth Shostak, senior astronomer at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, Calif., the most likely contact scenario is that the alien race we discover will be extremely primitive. This assumption is based on reality, given that the habitable worlds we're capable of exploring — such as Mars and Europa — show no signs of harboring advanced beings. But it also makes sense philosophically: Judging by how long inhabitants of Earth spent in the insectlike trilobite stage compared with how long humans have been around, there's a better chance that life found anywhere in the universe will be primitive.

Furthermore, in light of the immense difficulty of space exploration, it is thought that explorers will typically be far more advanced than the creatures they discover. This makes it easy to set the protocol for a first encounter: If we landed on Mars or Europa and discovered the alien equivalents of trilobites, "you would do what Darwin did — collect samples and take them back home," Shostak told Life's Little Mysteries.

Seven steps

Despite the tendency of Hollywood films and sci-fi novels to depict malevolent encounters between evenly matched space adversaries, Shostak says the size of the universe and the rarity of life makes it extremely unlikely that two races of roughly equal intelligence will encounter one another in the cosmos. That said, reports of UFO sightings led some scholars to develop theories about this scenario. They asked: what would we do if we were aliens discovering us? [Science Fact or Fiction: ET Will Look Like Us]

According to Robert Freitas, author of several books outlining possible alien contact scenarios, in 1950 the U.S. military developed a procedure called "Seven Steps to Contact," laying out the logical steps we would take upon discovering creatures with roughly human-level sentience. According to the steps, we would begin with remote surveillance and data gathering, and would eventually move on to covert visitations with the goal of gauging the performance characteristics of the aliens' vehicles and weaponry.

If we judged our technological capabilities to be superior to those of the other race, we would attempt near approaches to the planet to determine whether the alien beings were hostile, and if so, by what means. If all went well, we would then make brief touchdowns in isolated areas, securing specimens of plants, animals, and of the intelligent beings themselves. In other words, this phase would involve non-harmful abductions similar to those reported by some Americans. (Interestingly, the "Seven Steps to Contact" plan predated the first reported alien abduction incident in 1957, suggesting the theory could have influenced such reports.) [Alien Abductions May Be Vivid Dreams, Study Finds]

Next, we would make our presence known, making low-level approaches where our craft and its operators could be seen, but not reached. We would try to be witnessed by the greatest possible number of inhabitants, and would demonstrate our existence and our nonhostile nature. Lastly, if all went well and there was no reason to think that contact would be disastrous for the two races involved, we would land and attempt to communicate face-to-alien-face.

Half a century since that military report was penned, we'd still follow much the same procedure. "Let's say that a near-future mission to Europa reveals indisputable evidence of intelligent beings/civilization, Haqq-Misra said. "Continued remote exploration would probably be the most likely progression, with attempts at remote communication with the subterranean intelligent beings included as part of the missions. Eventually humans would want to land and make contact (wearing astro-scuba suits?), but a 'precautionary principle' might delay human exploration until robotic exploration has confirmed that Europa's inhabitants are safe."

Alien overlords

What if, as in the second scenario proposed by Haqq-Misra, we happened upon a race of aliens who were orders of magnitude smarter than us — beings capable of interstellar spaceflight who had established a base somewhere in our solar system? Just as ants can't make sense of human behavior, it's difficult or impossible for us to understand how this advanced race would react to us. "[The renowned astronomer] Carl Sagan figured any aliens that might be able to travel between the stars would be so advanced that they would be beyond all this business of aggression and war and so forth," Shostak said. "But that may just be a projection of what he hopes humans would do eventually."

Shostak tends to think differently. Aggression, he says, evolved as a trait among Earthlings because it helps us obtain and protect resources. Though aliens would probably have evolved under totally different conditions, pressure to secure finite resources would probably have molded their behavior, too. "I suspect resources would be finite anywhere in the universe."

If Sagan is right, then the wise race we encountered would treat us with immense consideration and respect, while having the technology to ensure that we treat them similarly. If Shostak is right, and the incredibly advanced aliens we stumbled upon were also as aggressive as we are, we'd probably be toast.

By: Natalie Wolchover Published: 03/29/2012 01:41 PM EDT on Lifes Little Mysteries

Well, not toast exactly. In Haqq-Misra's opinion, "A society capable of interstellar travel should have solved their development issues such that they do not need humans for food."

Follow Natalie Wolchover on Twitter @nattyover. Follow Life's Little Mysteries on Twitter @llmysteries, then join us on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 Lifes Little Mysteries, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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It is conceivable that humans could someday discover aliens. We scour the cosmos looking for their radio signals, and though we're not capable of interstellar space travel, it is remotely possible th...
It is conceivable that humans could someday discover aliens. We scour the cosmos looking for their radio signals, and though we're not capable of interstellar space travel, it is remotely possible th...
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07:50 PM on 07/04/2012
The strangest thing about all of this is that huffpost is still around!
07:28 PM on 05/10/2012
Thanks... great subject & wanted to share the following snippet of article on subject written by J.S. Thompson as follows:

When a society is on the doorstep of advanced technology, the entire society does not become advanced; only the elite, the powerful, and the rich. The rest of society goes on and even erodes over time. There are two things that need to be known about advanced societies (that have advanced technology), they need primitive people and they need those primitive people to not know who they are. Advanced societies operate under cover and under the radar (so to speak). They have other dimensional technology which means they can move about without being seen.

They live under ground because it is the best place to do what they do without being seen or accosted. Underground is a place of safety for them; they are truly more afraid of us than we are of them. Their sole purpose in life is to find the answers of true immortality which involves genetic studies and they use us… to do it. While seeking immortality, they also seek their humanity which they had to give up in order elongating their lives. [more…]

http://www.divineadvancedhumanbeings.com/do-advanced-beings-or-aliens-live-underground/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Trentonjordan
87 US cities and counting
01:46 AM on 04/20/2012
They say mathematics is the universal language, but how is that when mathematics as we understand it is man-made? The very laws of physics as we understand it is a man-made concept, everything we know about anything is a human concept, thought of by the human mind, so who is to say that faster than light travel is not possible? Maybe faster than light travel is not possible for us, humans, but what about a civilization a million, 2 million, 100 million years older than us.
I often laugh at the concept of what a alien would look like. The crab and the human being could not be more different physically, but both biologies are from the same planet! It is impossible, imo, to formulate what a alien might look like.
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12:25 PM on 04/08/2012
Of course aliens are among us. There will be a huge gathering in Tampa this summer.
JManson
My rights trump your fears
03:07 AM on 04/08/2012
I don't want to meet E.T.
Just look at how horribly we humans treat each other. Just ready history to see how we destroy our own human civilizations. Just imagine how much less a separate species would care about us. And who is to say we won't encounter the outcast pirates among an alien civilization? Not worth it.
09:06 PM on 05/24/2012
District 9
01:52 AM on 04/08/2012
They are already here people, in plain sight. Google Galatic Federation of Light.
01:55 AM on 04/08/2012
And they LOVE us.
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12:21 PM on 04/08/2012
I did.

"Andromedan women are noted for their alluring energies and their quite buxom figures."

They sound intriguing.
09:07 PM on 05/24/2012
WWKD

What Would Kirk Do?
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03:58 AM on 04/05/2012
Resources are certainly finite in any given star system, but they are still more vast than the human mind can conceive. The Solar system has the asteroid belt, all the various comets and rogue asteroids, the various moons which are too small to make terraforming practical, the planets which are too big/hot/gaseous to make terraforming practical, and then there's the Oort Cloud. Just mining out the asteroid belt would take thousands of years. Probably hundreds of thousands of years. The Oort Cloud is far more vast than the asteroid belt, and would take even longer to mine.

In the mean time, all of these resources would be being recycled. It's far cheaper to recycle the resources that are already in the system than it is to travel hundreds/thousands of light years to another star system to plunder the resources there.

Humanity will travel to other star systems due to our drive to explore long before we are driven to do so due to a lack of resources in the home system.
07:02 PM on 04/04/2012
1. Any race capable of interstellar trave can acquire resources from any lifeless solar system they want. I doubt trade is their agenda. All the abductions leads me to believe they have a breeding program in progress. I think they are altering us geneticly again for the future of space travel and much higher technologies. 2. But one possibility is maybe they are not aliens, but they are humans from the far future. We may have changed ourselves so much with genetic manipulation that we can't breed no more. Maybe they are trying to reintroduce our DNA back into their genetic pool. 3. They are aliens playing god and are populating another plant with some type of hybrid alien/human. They may even use some of the hybrids to make first contact. Last time i checked i'm not telepathic. maybe a hybrid could use language to talk to us.
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bobo28
No home no job no peace no rest. . .
06:59 PM on 05/08/2012
One possibility you didn't mention is one that I think all people who lived through the "Cold War" (& born since , as well as it's apparent recent re-birth, according to HuffPost) is that humanity may not poses the maturity . . . indeed the "humanity" not to destroy ourselves or our planet. Whether you believe we are alone in the Universe or not and leaving politics out of it, I can't imagine any adult that hasn't considered, at one time or another, the probability that humanity may very well end up being responsible for our own destruction.The number of possibilities seems nearly endless. We are, if anything, infinitely creative. Whether it's an "alien breeding program" or humans from the future trying to insure that ( hopefully all) the descendants of the inhabitants of Earth survive some coming holocaust . . . I wish "them" and all of us luck ! Of course, I have to confess that ever since I learned that the book" To Serve Man" was a cookbook ( Thank You, Damon Knight & Rod Serling), I have had my moments where I woke in the middle of the night wondering if I was about to become dinner. . . Live Long and Prosper !
01:27 PM on 04/04/2012
If you were traveling across the US on a major INTERSTATE Highway like I-80, how many bugs a day do you think you would splatter across your grill, one hundred, one thousand? Do you stop in your hotel room at night and think about those bugs? Who they are, what they think about? Of course not -- you do not think about them at all, or care about them at all -- because to you, as you are whizzing by in your car, they are insignificant! And that is just what would happen if there was a race advanced enough to travel the INTERSTELLAR highways of deep space, and come across our planet... we would be so insignificant to them as to be beneath their notice...
03:12 AM on 10/17/2012
Dumb analogy. Insects aren't capable of the level of sophisticated thought and cooperation as humans are. Medical science and nuclear fusion are two examples as to why an alien race would be interested in checking us out. Even if only to laugh at how primitive we are.
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BigBearcatBill
This is the real Bearcat - a Binturong
01:56 AM on 04/04/2012
We can send Newt Gingrich with his electromagnetic beam weapon to greet them, pull R2D2 and CP3O out of storage to join him, heck all the Star Trek and Star Wars non-earthlings too. No probably not a good idea, they may recognize some species they never got along with too well.
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12:22 PM on 04/08/2012
Newt Gingrich would look better wearing a brown robe with a hoodie.
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BigBearcatBill
This is the real Bearcat - a Binturong
12:28 PM on 04/08/2012
no, Darth Vaders black outfit so it would cover up the grease ball totally.
06:23 PM on 04/02/2012
Umm, abducting (read kidnapping) sentient aliens sound slike a really bad idea.
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verflixed
It will come to pass
05:43 PM on 04/02/2012
No need to look into the Universe Aliens are here now. But you can not see them because they are within you and they control everything on this globe. BUT they are not too smart. I hope they don't get me for saying that.
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wutrup
We are here to Evolve
03:04 PM on 04/02/2012
Who's your Daddy? www.bluelight.ru/vb/archive/index.php/t-488614.html
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ArjenBoatsma
No such thing as too much coffee.
10:57 PM on 04/01/2012
" If all went well, we would then make brief touchdowns in isolated areas, securing specimens of plants, animals, and of the intelligent beings themselves. "

Would we probe the aliens THERE?
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wutrup
We are here to Evolve
03:12 PM on 04/02/2012
We would probably, just exchange life threahening virues.
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03:23 AM on 04/05/2012
Actually, alien viruses would be completely harmless to terrestrial life, and vice versa. Terran pathogens have evolved over millions of years in order to more easily target local life forms. Alien life would be so foreign that they wouldn't stand any chance successfully attacking them.
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Dave24
Without God, life is everything.
06:56 PM on 04/01/2012
We'd be wiped out en masse before we could acknowledge a threat.
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wutrup
We are here to Evolve
07:09 PM on 04/01/2012
And what is are silly military doing, when they try to "chase" them around with F-16's. Are the ones they chase around the ones we are not dealing with? Or drop frairs like they did over Phoenix in 1997, to cover up a mother ship that traversed the state, that was seen by thousands.
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Dave24
Without God, life is everything.
08:34 AM on 04/02/2012
If aliens can travel trillions of miles, they're smart enough not to be detected by our primitive technology.

Eyewitness testimony is the lowest form of evidence in the court of science. "Hey, I saw something and I don't know what it was. Therefore, it's aliens!"

Or not.