Facts:
- Speed of light in miles per second: 186,282 mps (miles per second)
- Distance to nearest galaxy like system: 169,000 Light Years
Given that light is like a transmitted image being sent out into space that is picked up by our telescopes here on Earth. Why is it that we are currently, right now, even making an effort to study images that were created and sent out into space 169,000 years ago? I mean what is the point? For all we know this galaxy died out 69,000 years ago and we will have to wait 69,000 years before the light created by such and event, or lack there of, will reach earth and is visible to us. This is why I think space exploration outside our own solar system at our current technological ability is pointless. The data you get is data that is irrelevant to the present because it is so old. Especially in the sense of searching for extraterstrial life. Say tomorrow our telescopes see a solar system 300,000 light years away that shows definiate signs of life, just hypothetically speaking here. That meas that 300,000 years ago there was a planet that had signs of intelligent life. Great but hardly useful since for all we know they blew themselves up 100,000 years ago and we still have yet to see that this has occured as the images of light from such an event, if any light at all, will not arrive here on earth for another 100,000 years.
I don't know it just seems so pointless to divert precious monies into exploring parts of space we will never be able to reap any direct benefit from. Instead of working on moving out from our own planet in to the surrounding space and learning more and more about the solar system we live in and CAN reap direct benefits from.
What say you?
Cliff Notes:
If I spent 30 minutes to write this you can spend 5 minutes reading it.
- Speed of light in miles per second: 186,282 mps (miles per second)
- Distance to nearest galaxy like system: 169,000 Light Years
Given that light is like a transmitted image being sent out into space that is picked up by our telescopes here on Earth. Why is it that we are currently, right now, even making an effort to study images that were created and sent out into space 169,000 years ago? I mean what is the point? For all we know this galaxy died out 69,000 years ago and we will have to wait 69,000 years before the light created by such and event, or lack there of, will reach earth and is visible to us. This is why I think space exploration outside our own solar system at our current technological ability is pointless. The data you get is data that is irrelevant to the present because it is so old. Especially in the sense of searching for extraterstrial life. Say tomorrow our telescopes see a solar system 300,000 light years away that shows definiate signs of life, just hypothetically speaking here. That meas that 300,000 years ago there was a planet that had signs of intelligent life. Great but hardly useful since for all we know they blew themselves up 100,000 years ago and we still have yet to see that this has occured as the images of light from such an event, if any light at all, will not arrive here on earth for another 100,000 years.
I don't know it just seems so pointless to divert precious monies into exploring parts of space we will never be able to reap any direct benefit from. Instead of working on moving out from our own planet in to the surrounding space and learning more and more about the solar system we live in and CAN reap direct benefits from.
What say you?
Cliff Notes:
If I spent 30 minutes to write this you can spend 5 minutes reading it.
