1
00:00:44,444 --> 00:00:46,878
SAGAN:
In the vastness of the cosmos...

2
00:00:47,080 --> 00:00:50,106
...there must be other civilizations
far older...

3
00:00:50,316 --> 00:00:52,181
...and more advanced than ours.

4
00:00:52,385 --> 00:00:56,253
So shouldn't we have been visited?
Shouldn't there be...

5
00:00:56,456 --> 00:01:00,256
...alien ships in the skies of Earth?

6
00:01:01,594 --> 00:01:03,721
There's nothing impossible
in this idea.

7
00:01:03,930 --> 00:01:06,831
And no one would be happier than me
if we were visited.

8
00:01:07,033 --> 00:01:10,059
But has it happened in fact?

9
00:01:10,270 --> 00:01:14,832
What counts is not what's plausible,
not what we'd like to believe...

10
00:01:15,041 --> 00:01:17,407
...not what one or two witnesses
claim.

11
00:01:17,610 --> 00:01:20,477
But only what is supported
by hard evidence...

12
00:01:20,680 --> 00:01:23,410
...rigorously and skeptically
examined.

13
00:01:23,616 --> 00:01:28,553
Extraordinary claims
require extraordinary evidence.

14
00:01:32,525 --> 00:01:37,462
Since 1947, there have been hundreds
of thousands of reports of UFOs:

15
00:01:37,831 --> 00:01:40,698
Unidentified flying objects.

16
00:01:40,900 --> 00:01:42,299
This subject has...

17
00:01:42,502 --> 00:01:46,495
...more to do with religion and
superstition than with science.

18
00:01:46,706 --> 00:01:50,608
Let's consider one of the most famous
accounts of a supposed encounter...

19
00:01:50,810 --> 00:01:52,778
...with alien beings.

20
00:01:53,146 --> 00:01:55,444
On September 19, 1961...

21
00:01:55,648 --> 00:01:59,311
...an American couple was driving home
through New Hampshire.

22
00:01:59,686 --> 00:02:01,153
What's the matter, Delsey?

23
00:02:02,989 --> 00:02:05,787
SAGAN: They were returning along
a lonely road, late at night...

24
00:02:05,992 --> 00:02:08,290
...from a vacation in Canada.

25
00:02:09,963 --> 00:02:13,558
Remember, we have only their word
for what happened next.

26
00:02:14,734 --> 00:02:17,498
(TUNES RADIO)

27
00:02:18,505 --> 00:02:20,473
(STATIC FROM RADIO)

28
00:02:20,940 --> 00:02:22,840
I'm only getting static.

29
00:02:25,078 --> 00:02:27,342
You still don't believe it, do you?

30
00:02:27,947 --> 00:02:31,178
No, I don't. There must be
a reasonable explanation.

31
00:02:31,384 --> 00:02:32,442
Oh!

32
00:02:32,652 --> 00:02:35,143
SAGAN:
They had observed, so they said...

33
00:02:35,355 --> 00:02:37,880
...a strange moving light in the sky.

34
00:02:38,091 --> 00:02:41,390
By definition,
an unidentified flying object.

35
00:02:41,761 --> 00:02:44,025
It seemed to follow them for miles.

36
00:02:45,198 --> 00:02:46,165
Easy there.

37
00:02:46,366 --> 00:02:48,300
What's the matter with that dog?

38
00:02:49,302 --> 00:02:51,327
(HUMMING NOISE)

39
00:02:51,538 --> 00:02:53,096
What's that sound?

40
00:02:57,010 --> 00:02:58,170
I don't know.

41
00:02:58,578 --> 00:03:02,776
After a time, the lighting patterns
on the UFO changed.

42
00:03:05,118 --> 00:03:07,678
It appeared to land.

43
00:03:11,291 --> 00:03:12,258
What the...

44
00:03:14,827 --> 00:03:18,092
It blocked the road,
preventing them from driving on.

45
00:03:23,403 --> 00:03:27,533
They said they saw
mouthless creatures approaching...

46
00:03:27,740 --> 00:03:30,641
...who were not exactly human.

47
00:03:30,977 --> 00:03:32,410
Barney!

48
00:03:32,612 --> 00:03:34,204
Barney, what is that?

49
00:03:36,583 --> 00:03:40,178
At this point, the story
becomes still stranger.

50
00:03:40,386 --> 00:03:44,584
They lost all recollection of what
happened in the next few hours.

51
00:03:48,094 --> 00:03:50,028
But weeks later, they said...

52
00:03:50,230 --> 00:03:54,564
...they recalled some details and
discussed the experience with others.

53
00:03:58,871 --> 00:04:02,170
26 months later, under hypnosis...

54
00:04:02,442 --> 00:04:04,910
...they reported that
a UFO had landed...

55
00:04:05,111 --> 00:04:07,579
...and that the crew had emerged.

56
00:04:17,857 --> 00:04:22,794
They were captured, they said,
and taken aboard the craft.

57
00:04:32,171 --> 00:04:33,331
(WHINES)

58
00:04:39,846 --> 00:04:43,714
That was the story told by
Betty and Barney Hill.

59
00:04:43,916 --> 00:04:47,613
Virtually all scientists
who've studied it are skeptical.

60
00:04:47,820 --> 00:04:52,348
But UFO enthusiasts think
the Hill case is a classic example...

61
00:04:52,558 --> 00:04:55,891
...of a "close encounter
of the third kind."

62
00:04:56,095 --> 00:04:59,326
Why? What makes it so special?

63
00:05:01,000 --> 00:05:03,161
While on board, Betty had noticed...

64
00:05:03,369 --> 00:05:06,634
...a book written in an unknown
hieroglyphic writing.

65
00:05:06,839 --> 00:05:10,297
She was also shown a strange window
through which she could see...

66
00:05:10,510 --> 00:05:13,707
...a glowing pattern of dots
connected with lines.

67
00:05:13,913 --> 00:05:16,404
It was, they told her, a star map...

68
00:05:16,616 --> 00:05:19,881
...displaying the routes
of interstellar commerce.

69
00:05:20,086 --> 00:05:23,385
Afterwards, they were released
and permitted to return home.

70
00:05:23,589 --> 00:05:25,682
Or at least, this is their story.

71
00:05:26,326 --> 00:05:29,591
Believers find this compelling,
or at least plausible...

72
00:05:29,796 --> 00:05:32,390
...chiefly because of
the alleged star map.

73
00:05:32,965 --> 00:05:35,934
Here's how Betty said it looked.

74
00:05:36,135 --> 00:05:38,763
Why would we take this seriously?

75
00:05:38,971 --> 00:05:43,772
Because here is a real map widely
publicized by UFO enthusiasts...

76
00:05:43,976 --> 00:05:48,242
...of 15 selected nearby stars,
including the sun...

77
00:05:48,514 --> 00:05:52,109
...as seen from one particular
vantage point in space.

78
00:05:52,318 --> 00:05:53,945
This map includes stars...

79
00:05:54,620 --> 00:05:57,350
...that were first cataloged
several years after...

80
00:05:57,557 --> 00:06:01,186
...Betty Hill recalled what she says
she saw in the alien ship.

81
00:06:01,394 --> 00:06:03,589
Her map required, we are told...

82
00:06:03,796 --> 00:06:06,230
...information that wasn't
available on Earth.

83
00:06:07,200 --> 00:06:10,636
There is a resemblance between
the two maps, but that's because...

84
00:06:10,837 --> 00:06:13,601
...the lines corresponding
to navigation routes...

85
00:06:13,806 --> 00:06:17,902
...have been copied from the Hill map
onto the real star map.

86
00:06:18,244 --> 00:06:22,544
If we were to substitute
some other set of lines...

87
00:06:22,749 --> 00:06:26,412
...for the Hill lines, we find that
the eye suddenly is biased...

88
00:06:26,619 --> 00:06:30,111
...against seeing any agreement
between the two maps at all.

89
00:06:31,290 --> 00:06:36,159
To make an objective test, however,
let's remove the lines altogether.

90
00:06:38,531 --> 00:06:41,500
And then there's very little
resemblance left.

91
00:06:41,701 --> 00:06:43,328
But these particular stars...

92
00:06:43,536 --> 00:06:46,835
...are selected from a large catalog
of star positions.

93
00:06:47,039 --> 00:06:50,008
Our vantage point is also
selected to make the best...

94
00:06:50,209 --> 00:06:52,677
...possible fit with the Hill map.

95
00:06:52,879 --> 00:06:56,474
If you can pick and choose
from a large number of stars...

96
00:06:56,682 --> 00:06:58,980
...viewed from any vantage point
in space...

97
00:06:59,185 --> 00:07:03,246
...you can always find a resemblance
to the pattern you're looking for.

98
00:07:03,456 --> 00:07:05,549
I'm surprised that nobody found...

99
00:07:05,758 --> 00:07:08,784
...a better fit to the Hill map.

100
00:07:10,263 --> 00:07:15,030
The Hills' own psychiatrist described
their story as a kind of dream.

101
00:07:15,234 --> 00:07:19,295
There's no corroborating evidence.
The star map argument is worthless.

102
00:07:19,505 --> 00:07:22,474
And yet this is one of
the best attested cases...

103
00:07:22,675 --> 00:07:25,007
...of UFO close encounters.

104
00:07:25,211 --> 00:07:27,008
For all I know, we're visited...

105
00:07:27,213 --> 00:07:31,149
...by a different extraterrestrial
civilization every second Tuesday.

106
00:07:31,350 --> 00:07:34,581
But there's no support
for this appealing idea.

107
00:07:34,787 --> 00:07:39,019
The extraordinary claims are not
supported by extraordinary evidence.

108
00:07:40,560 --> 00:07:43,893
There are curious daylight photos
of UFOs.

109
00:07:46,466 --> 00:07:48,457
Some look suspiciously like...

110
00:07:48,668 --> 00:07:51,796
...hats or hubcaps thrown
into the air.

111
00:07:52,004 --> 00:07:54,131
Photos can be faked.

112
00:07:59,178 --> 00:08:01,976
More common are unidentified
lights at night.

113
00:08:02,181 --> 00:08:03,341
They're often aircraft.

114
00:08:03,549 --> 00:08:07,212
But if we can't identify a light,
that doesn't make it a spaceship.

115
00:08:12,492 --> 00:08:15,052
Here's a movie of what
you might think is a UFO.

116
00:08:15,261 --> 00:08:18,196
Actually it's a piece
of an asteroid burning up...

117
00:08:18,397 --> 00:08:20,729
...as it enters the Earth's
atmosphere.

118
00:08:27,406 --> 00:08:31,740
Most reports of UFOs turn out
to be something else, like...

119
00:08:31,944 --> 00:08:36,677
...the refracted image of a planet or
re-entry of an artificial satellite.

120
00:08:36,883 --> 00:08:40,512
Some are psychological aberrations.
Some are hoaxes.

121
00:08:40,753 --> 00:08:44,587
Never is there any compelling
physical evidence...

122
00:08:44,790 --> 00:08:48,157
...a detailed close-up photograph
of a strange spacecraft...

123
00:08:48,361 --> 00:08:51,524
...or a small device of
extraterrestrial manufacture...

124
00:08:51,731 --> 00:08:54,666
...or a book written in
alien hieroglyphics.

125
00:08:54,867 --> 00:08:55,925
Never.

126
00:08:56,135 --> 00:09:00,731
There are reports of such things,
but never the things themselves.

127
00:09:03,309 --> 00:09:07,939
The search for alien civilizations
retains its importance despite...

128
00:09:08,147 --> 00:09:11,173
...the striking failure
of the UFO evidence.

129
00:09:11,384 --> 00:09:14,376
Most astronomers consider
extraterrestrial life...

130
00:09:14,587 --> 00:09:18,648
...a subject worthy of vigorous,
if cautious, pursuit.

131
00:09:18,858 --> 00:09:22,988
For myself, I find something
irresistible in the idea of...

132
00:09:23,195 --> 00:09:26,562
...discovering a token,
maybe a simple inscription...

133
00:09:26,766 --> 00:09:31,703
...which would provide the key to
understanding an alien civilization.

134
00:09:32,071 --> 00:09:35,939
This is an appeal we humans
have felt before.

135
00:09:52,291 --> 00:09:53,519
In 1801...

136
00:09:53,726 --> 00:09:58,663
...a famous physicist was governor
of the French province of Isère.

137
00:10:00,833 --> 00:10:03,563
His name was Joseph Fourier.

138
00:10:04,971 --> 00:10:07,599
On an inspection of the schools
in his province...

139
00:10:07,807 --> 00:10:10,742
...Fourier discovered an exceptional
11-year-old boy:

140
00:10:10,943 --> 00:10:13,002
Jean Francois Champollion.

141
00:10:17,550 --> 00:10:21,748
The boy's precocious intellect and
remarkable flair for languages...

142
00:10:21,954 --> 00:10:25,014
...had earned him the admiration
of local scholars.

143
00:10:25,224 --> 00:10:27,886
Fourier too was impressed.

144
00:10:32,598 --> 00:10:35,761
What Champollion first saw
in Fourier's house...

145
00:10:35,968 --> 00:10:37,868
...determined the course
of his life...

146
00:10:38,070 --> 00:10:41,767
...and unlocked the secrets
of an alien civilization.

147
00:10:44,210 --> 00:10:47,873
Fourier had recently participated,
as one of many scientists...

148
00:10:48,080 --> 00:10:50,742
...in Napoleon's expedition
to the Middle East.

149
00:10:50,950 --> 00:10:55,649
He had been in charge of cataloging
the astronomical monuments of Egypt.

150
00:10:57,790 --> 00:11:00,884
The boy was entranced by
Fourier's collection...

151
00:11:01,093 --> 00:11:03,357
...of ancient Egyptian artifacts:

152
00:11:03,562 --> 00:11:06,497
The mysterious fragments
of a lost world.

153
00:11:15,274 --> 00:11:18,300
France at this time was flooded
with such artifacts...

154
00:11:18,511 --> 00:11:20,240
...plundered by Napoleon...

155
00:11:20,446 --> 00:11:25,042
...and now arousing intense interest
among scholars and the general public.

156
00:11:36,796 --> 00:11:38,388
His attention was caught...

157
00:11:38,597 --> 00:11:42,033
...by a specimen of
Egyptian hieroglyphics.

158
00:11:54,380 --> 00:11:56,439
"What do they mean? " he asked.

159
00:11:57,116 --> 00:11:59,744
"Nobody knows," was Fourier's reply.

160
00:12:00,820 --> 00:12:03,220
Then and there,
Champollion resolved...

161
00:12:03,422 --> 00:12:06,550
...he would understand this language
no one could read...

162
00:12:06,759 --> 00:12:10,695
...he would decode the messages
from another world and another time.

163
00:12:10,896 --> 00:12:15,765
He became a superb linguist and
immersed himself in the hieroglyphics.

164
00:12:21,874 --> 00:12:26,436
Fourier edited the illustrated
description of Napoleon's expedition.

165
00:12:26,645 --> 00:12:29,944
The young Champollion
studied it hungrily.

166
00:12:31,517 --> 00:12:32,882
To the people of Europe...

167
00:12:33,085 --> 00:12:38,022
...these exotic images revealed
an utterly alien civilization...

168
00:12:38,357 --> 00:12:43,294
...a world of towering monuments
and magical names.

169
00:12:43,662 --> 00:12:45,323
Dendera.

170
00:12:45,531 --> 00:12:47,089
Karnak.

171
00:12:47,500 --> 00:12:48,933
Luxor.

172
00:12:51,637 --> 00:12:56,574
Every illustration was a riddle
posed by the past to the present.

173
00:13:02,548 --> 00:13:06,985
And among them were pictures of
something called the Rosetta Stone...

174
00:13:09,455 --> 00:13:14,358
...and portraits of the people who
lived among the ruins of the pharaohs.

175
00:13:17,997 --> 00:13:21,489
Egypt became the land of
Champollion's dreams.

176
00:13:23,502 --> 00:13:25,561
But it was not until 1828...

177
00:13:25,771 --> 00:13:29,036
...27 years after his fateful
visit with Fourier...

178
00:13:29,241 --> 00:13:32,677
...that Champollion
first set foot in Egypt.

179
00:13:38,684 --> 00:13:43,417
With his companions, Champollion
chartered boats in Cairo...

180
00:13:43,622 --> 00:13:46,557
...and sailed slowly upstream...

181
00:13:46,759 --> 00:13:50,217
...following the course of the Nile.

182
00:14:03,342 --> 00:14:05,833
It was a journey of many weeks...

183
00:14:06,045 --> 00:14:10,038
...which Champollion recorded
in extraordinary detail.

184
00:14:20,292 --> 00:14:23,284
This was an expedition through time...

185
00:14:23,495 --> 00:14:26,055
...a voyage across the centuries...

186
00:14:26,265 --> 00:14:27,857
...to another world.

187
00:14:36,008 --> 00:14:37,908
Champollion, as an adult...

188
00:14:38,110 --> 00:14:41,978
...had worked out a brilliant
decipherment of the hieroglyphics.

189
00:14:42,181 --> 00:14:46,117
A word, incidentally,
that means "sacred carvings."

190
00:14:48,587 --> 00:14:51,021
Now Champollion was making
a pilgrimage...

191
00:14:51,223 --> 00:14:55,990
...to the scene of ancient mysteries
he had been the first to understand.

192
00:15:24,623 --> 00:15:26,113
Champollion wrote:

193
00:15:26,325 --> 00:15:31,160
"The evening of the 16th,
we finally arrived at Dendera.

194
00:15:38,070 --> 00:15:41,403
We were only an hour away
from the temples.

195
00:15:44,576 --> 00:15:46,840
Could we resist the temptation?

196
00:15:47,046 --> 00:15:50,379
I ask the coldest of you mortals!

197
00:15:53,953 --> 00:15:57,787
To dine and leave immediately
were the orders of the moment.

198
00:16:04,530 --> 00:16:09,126
Alone and without guides,
we crossed the fields.

199
00:16:12,738 --> 00:16:16,435
Presuming that the temples were
in a straight line from our boat...

200
00:16:16,642 --> 00:16:20,408
...we walked thus for an hour and
a half without finding anything.

201
00:16:20,612 --> 00:16:23,638
We discovered a man who put us
on the correct route...

202
00:16:23,849 --> 00:16:27,182
...and ended up walking with us
with good graces.

203
00:16:33,659 --> 00:16:37,254
The temple appeared to us at last.

204
00:16:47,740 --> 00:16:51,437
I shall not try to describe
the impression which the porches...

205
00:16:51,643 --> 00:16:54,476
...and above all,
the portico made on us.

206
00:16:57,049 --> 00:16:59,609
We stayed there two hours
in ecstasy...

207
00:16:59,818 --> 00:17:02,981
...running through the huge rooms
and trying to read...

208
00:17:03,188 --> 00:17:06,248
...the exterior inscriptions
in the moonlight."

209
00:17:12,865 --> 00:17:15,629
It was with no small rapture
that Champollion...

210
00:17:15,834 --> 00:17:20,328
...entered the secret places of
the temple and scanned the words...

211
00:17:20,539 --> 00:17:23,838
...that had waited patiently
through half a million nights...

212
00:17:24,043 --> 00:17:25,567
...for a reader.

213
00:17:29,048 --> 00:17:31,846
To his brother, Champollion
wrote of his joy...

214
00:17:32,051 --> 00:17:36,044
...in confirming that he could
understand the writing on these walls.

215
00:17:37,756 --> 00:17:39,621
"I am now proud," he said...

216
00:17:39,825 --> 00:17:43,090
"...that having followed
the course of the Nile...

217
00:17:43,295 --> 00:17:47,629
...I have the right to announce there
is nothing to modify in our letter...

218
00:17:47,833 --> 00:17:50,199
...on the alphabet of hieroglyphics.

219
00:17:58,877 --> 00:18:00,708
Our alphabet is good.

220
00:18:00,913 --> 00:18:04,314
It is applicable with the same
success, first of all...

221
00:18:04,516 --> 00:18:06,848
...in Egyptian monuments of
the Roman epoch...

222
00:18:07,052 --> 00:18:08,952
...and, which is more interesting...

223
00:18:09,154 --> 00:18:13,181
...to the inscriptions on all
temples, palaces and tombs...

224
00:18:13,392 --> 00:18:15,587
...of the Pharaonic epoch."

225
00:18:20,799 --> 00:18:25,736
Champollion was overwhelmed by
the grandeur which surrounded him.

226
00:18:26,538 --> 00:18:28,096
"It is the union," he said...

227
00:18:28,307 --> 00:18:32,573
"...of grace and majesty
in the highest degree.

228
00:18:32,778 --> 00:18:34,871
We in Europe are only dwafts.

229
00:18:35,080 --> 00:18:39,107
No nation, ancient or modern, has
conceived the art of architecture...

230
00:18:39,318 --> 00:18:43,152
...on such a sublime, great
and imposing style...

231
00:18:43,355 --> 00:18:45,050
...as the ancient Egyptians.

232
00:18:45,257 --> 00:18:49,887
They ordered everything to be done
for people who are 100 feet high."

233
00:18:57,202 --> 00:19:01,070
This is the great temple of Karnak...

234
00:19:01,273 --> 00:19:02,672
...in upper Egypt...

235
00:19:02,875 --> 00:19:07,437
...continuously constructed over
a period of more than 2,000 years...

236
00:19:07,646 --> 00:19:09,773
...until the time of Ptolemy.

237
00:19:09,982 --> 00:19:12,450
It was here Champollion wrote:

238
00:19:12,651 --> 00:19:17,554
"That all the Pharaonic magnificence
appeared to me."

239
00:19:17,756 --> 00:19:19,917
What he had seen elsewhere, he said...

240
00:19:20,125 --> 00:19:21,922
..."Seemed to me, miserable...

241
00:19:22,127 --> 00:19:26,530
...compared with the colossal
conceptions around me."

242
00:19:49,521 --> 00:19:52,388
On these walls and columns
at Karnak...

243
00:19:52,591 --> 00:19:54,889
...at Dendera and everywhere else
in Egypt...

244
00:19:55,093 --> 00:19:58,460
...Champollion found that
he could read inscriptions...

245
00:19:58,664 --> 00:20:02,191
...that his decipherment of a few
years earlier had been correct.

246
00:20:02,401 --> 00:20:04,733
But how had he figured it out?

247
00:20:07,739 --> 00:20:11,573
Many had tried and failed
to read the hieroglyphics.

248
00:20:11,777 --> 00:20:16,612
A group of scholars thought they were
a picture code full of metaphors...

249
00:20:16,815 --> 00:20:21,616
...mostly about eyeballs,
wavy lines and animals.

250
00:20:21,820 --> 00:20:26,621
Birds, especially birds,
lots of birds.

251
00:20:29,461 --> 00:20:34,398
Some deduced that the Egyptians
had been colonists from China.

252
00:20:34,800 --> 00:20:37,860
There were those who deduced it
the other way around.

253
00:20:42,207 --> 00:20:46,769
There's one who, from one look at the
Rosetta Stone, deduced its meaning.

254
00:20:46,979 --> 00:20:49,641
He said that the quickness
of his decipherment...

255
00:20:49,848 --> 00:20:53,340
...enabled him "to avoid
the systematic errors...

256
00:20:53,552 --> 00:20:57,215
...which invariably arise
from prolonged reflection."

257
00:20:57,422 --> 00:21:01,518
You get better results, he's saying,
if you don't think about it too much.

258
00:21:01,727 --> 00:21:05,925
As in the search for
extraterrestrial intelligence today...

259
00:21:06,131 --> 00:21:09,259
...the unbridled speculation
by amateurs...

260
00:21:09,468 --> 00:21:12,995
...served to frighten many
professionals right out of the field.

261
00:21:23,582 --> 00:21:25,379
Champollion was not frightened.

262
00:21:25,584 --> 00:21:28,212
He was also not distracted
by the idea...

263
00:21:28,420 --> 00:21:31,150
...of hieroglyphs as
pictorial metaphors.

264
00:21:31,356 --> 00:21:32,914
Instead...

265
00:21:33,125 --> 00:21:37,789
...using the insights of a brilliant
English physicist, Thomas Young...

266
00:21:37,996 --> 00:21:40,089
...he proceeded something like this:

267
00:21:40,699 --> 00:21:45,033
This is an exact replica
of the Rosetta Stone.

268
00:21:45,237 --> 00:21:48,172
The original had been found
in the year 1799...

269
00:21:48,373 --> 00:21:51,137
...by a French soldier working
on the fortifications...

270
00:21:51,343 --> 00:21:54,278
...of the Nile delta town of Rashid...

271
00:21:54,479 --> 00:21:58,643
...which the Europeans, in their
persistence not to learn Arabic...

272
00:21:58,850 --> 00:22:00,283
...called "Rosetta."

273
00:22:00,485 --> 00:22:05,252
It had been part of an ancient temple
which had been torn down.

274
00:22:05,524 --> 00:22:08,687
If we look at it,
we see that it clearly...

275
00:22:08,894 --> 00:22:12,694
...represents the same text
in three different languages.

276
00:22:13,265 --> 00:22:16,234
Up at the top,
ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics.

277
00:22:16,435 --> 00:22:18,995
In the middle, a kind of cursive...

278
00:22:19,204 --> 00:22:21,695
...and later hieroglyphic
called "Demotic."

279
00:22:21,907 --> 00:22:26,071
And down at the bottom,
the key to the enterprise: Greek.

280
00:22:26,445 --> 00:22:30,381
Champollion could read ancient Greek,
he was a superb linguist...

281
00:22:30,582 --> 00:22:34,609
...and discovered that this stone
had been inscribed...

282
00:22:34,820 --> 00:22:36,651
...to commemorate the coronation...

283
00:22:36,855 --> 00:22:40,052
...of King Ptolemy V
Epiphanes...

284
00:22:40,258 --> 00:22:44,752
...in the spring of the year 196 B.C.

285
00:22:45,230 --> 00:22:50,133
As expected, the Greek text includes
many references to King Ptolemy.

286
00:22:50,335 --> 00:22:51,893
Here you can see it.

287
00:22:52,104 --> 00:22:56,438
"Ptolemaeus."

288
00:22:57,642 --> 00:23:01,635
In roughly the same positions
but in the hieroglyphic text...

289
00:23:02,214 --> 00:23:07,083
...are these ovals or "cartouches"
as they are called.

290
00:23:07,285 --> 00:23:10,812
And if this cartouche really
means "Ptolemy"...

291
00:23:11,022 --> 00:23:15,959
...the individual hieroglyphs are not
likely to be pictograms or metaphors.

292
00:23:16,161 --> 00:23:20,120
Much more likely, they're letters
or at least syllables.

293
00:23:20,332 --> 00:23:22,766
Champollion had the presence
of mind...

294
00:23:22,968 --> 00:23:26,199
...to count up the number
of Greek words...

295
00:23:26,405 --> 00:23:29,568
...and the number of
individual hieroglyphics...

296
00:23:29,775 --> 00:23:32,039
...in what are presumably
equivalent texts.

297
00:23:32,244 --> 00:23:36,510
He found that the number of
individual hieroglyphs...

298
00:23:36,715 --> 00:23:39,912
...is much larger than the number
of Greek words...

299
00:23:40,118 --> 00:23:44,054
...again implying that the hieroglyphs
are mainly letters and syllables.

300
00:23:44,256 --> 00:23:48,886
But which hieroglyphs correspond
to which letters?

301
00:23:49,094 --> 00:23:53,326
Fortunately, Champollion had available
a kind of second Rosetta Stone...

302
00:23:53,532 --> 00:23:57,491
...an obelisk which had been excavated
at the temple of Philae...

303
00:23:57,702 --> 00:24:01,331
...and which had inscribed upon it...

304
00:24:01,540 --> 00:24:05,909
...cartouches representing
the hieroglyphic equivalent...

305
00:24:06,111 --> 00:24:10,013
...of another Greek name: Cleopatra.

306
00:24:10,782 --> 00:24:15,014
So here we have
the Cleopatra cartouche.

307
00:24:15,220 --> 00:24:18,587
And here, the Ptolemaeus cartouche.

308
00:24:18,790 --> 00:24:22,317
Here, we've turned it around,
changing left to right...

309
00:24:22,527 --> 00:24:26,463
...to right to left, and spread the
hieroglyphs out so we see them all.

310
00:24:26,832 --> 00:24:31,166
Now, immediately we notice that
there are some similarities.

311
00:24:31,369 --> 00:24:34,736
This first hieroglyph in Ptolemy
is a kind of square.

312
00:24:34,940 --> 00:24:38,467
The fifth hieroglyph in Cleopatra
is a square.

313
00:24:38,977 --> 00:24:42,105
But "Cleopatra"...

314
00:24:42,314 --> 00:24:44,748
Both of them seem to represent a "p."

315
00:24:44,950 --> 00:24:48,579
So Ptolemy and Cleopatra...

316
00:24:48,787 --> 00:24:51,187
...both give us
the same interpretation:

317
00:24:51,389 --> 00:24:54,017
A square is a "p."

318
00:24:54,326 --> 00:24:57,261
Likewise, the fourth hieroglyph...

319
00:24:57,462 --> 00:24:59,987
...in Ptolemy is a lion.

320
00:25:00,198 --> 00:25:02,564
"P-t-o-I."

321
00:25:02,767 --> 00:25:07,431
Likewise, the second hieroglyph
in Cleopatra is an "I."

322
00:25:08,240 --> 00:25:12,267
So again it's consistent.
The pattern is emerging.

323
00:25:12,477 --> 00:25:16,174
Likewise, this rope or
hangman's noose...

324
00:25:16,381 --> 00:25:19,145
..."Ptolemy." It's an "o."

325
00:25:19,351 --> 00:25:22,013
"Cleopatra." It's an "o."

326
00:25:22,220 --> 00:25:26,418
And in this way, Champollion
was able to assign...

327
00:25:27,425 --> 00:25:32,362
...letters for each of
the hieroglyphs we see here.

328
00:25:33,999 --> 00:25:35,967
"Ptolemaeus."

329
00:25:36,301 --> 00:25:38,496
And, likewise...

330
00:25:38,703 --> 00:25:42,434
..."Cleopatra."

331
00:25:42,641 --> 00:25:45,769
The eagle is an "a."

332
00:25:46,478 --> 00:25:49,106
Notice there are two different
symbols for "t."

333
00:25:49,314 --> 00:25:52,044
But in English, the same sort
of thing, "f" and "ph."

334
00:25:52,951 --> 00:25:55,476
Champollion discovered that
the hieroglyphics...

335
00:25:55,687 --> 00:25:57,780
...were a simple substitution cipher.

336
00:25:57,989 --> 00:26:00,549
Now, there's other stuff in here.

337
00:26:00,759 --> 00:26:03,319
All the rest of this:
What's that about?

338
00:26:03,528 --> 00:26:05,553
Well, he was later able to find out...

339
00:26:05,764 --> 00:26:08,494
...this is a symbol called
the "ankh" which means "life."

340
00:26:08,700 --> 00:26:12,295
There's a "pt." That's an "ah."
It makes "Ptah"...

341
00:26:12,504 --> 00:26:13,801
...name of a god.

342
00:26:14,005 --> 00:26:16,030
And the whole cartouche read:

343
00:26:16,241 --> 00:26:19,142
"Ptolemy, ever living...

344
00:26:19,344 --> 00:26:21,904
...beloved of the god, Ptah."

345
00:26:22,113 --> 00:26:24,911
And the end of the "Cleopatra"
is a short form...

346
00:26:25,116 --> 00:26:27,584
...meaning "Daughter of Isis."

347
00:26:28,787 --> 00:26:32,223
So it turns out that Champollion's
opponents were not wholly wrong.

348
00:26:32,424 --> 00:26:36,292
Some of the hieroglyphs, for example,
the symbol "ankh"...

349
00:26:36,494 --> 00:26:40,328
...which means life, are ideograms
or pictograms.

350
00:26:40,532 --> 00:26:42,966
But the key to the enterprise...

351
00:26:43,168 --> 00:26:46,331
...Champollion's success, rested
on his realization...

352
00:26:46,538 --> 00:26:51,168
...that the hieroglyphs were
essentially letters and syllables.

353
00:26:51,376 --> 00:26:53,901
In retrospect, it sounds almost easy.

354
00:26:54,112 --> 00:26:58,674
But it took people hundreds of years
before they figured it out.

355
00:27:00,085 --> 00:27:04,988
Champollion walked these halls and
casually read the inscriptions...

356
00:27:05,190 --> 00:27:07,158
...which had mystified everybody else.

357
00:27:07,359 --> 00:27:11,455
Answering the question he had
posed as a child to Fourier:

358
00:27:11,663 --> 00:27:13,631
"What do they mean? "

359
00:27:14,265 --> 00:27:16,756
What a joy it must have
been for him...

360
00:27:16,968 --> 00:27:21,905
...to open this one-way communications
channel with another civilization...

361
00:27:22,173 --> 00:27:26,974
...to permit a culture which
had been mute for millennia...

362
00:27:27,178 --> 00:27:31,444
...to speak of its history,
magic, medicine...

363
00:27:31,650 --> 00:27:35,211
...religion, politics, philosophy.

364
00:27:48,867 --> 00:27:51,335
Today, we also are seeking messages...

365
00:27:51,536 --> 00:27:54,300
...from an ancient and
exotic civilization.

366
00:27:54,506 --> 00:27:56,565
A civilization hidden from us...

367
00:27:57,876 --> 00:28:01,277
...not in time, but in space.

368
00:28:02,547 --> 00:28:07,007
Today, we are searching for
a message from the stars.

369
00:28:07,218 --> 00:28:11,518
We have not found it so far.
We have, as yet, no Champollion.

370
00:28:11,723 --> 00:28:13,122
But we are just beginning.

371
00:28:13,324 --> 00:28:18,227
Perhaps those who will decipher the
first interstellar communications...

372
00:28:18,430 --> 00:28:23,333
...are alive at this moment,
somewhere on the planet Earth.

373
00:28:27,405 --> 00:28:30,738
Extraterrestrial beings will
have a different biology...

374
00:28:30,942 --> 00:28:33,809
...a different culture,
a different language.

375
00:28:34,012 --> 00:28:36,879
How could we possibly understand
their messages?

376
00:28:37,082 --> 00:28:40,950
Is there in any sense
a cosmic Rosetta Stone?

377
00:28:43,221 --> 00:28:44,483
I believe there is.

378
00:28:44,689 --> 00:28:49,183
All the technical civilizations in
the cosmos, no matter how different...

379
00:28:49,394 --> 00:28:51,658
...must have one language in common:

380
00:28:51,863 --> 00:28:54,923
The language called "science."

381
00:28:57,035 --> 00:29:00,971
The laws of nature are
everywhere the same.

382
00:29:03,908 --> 00:29:08,709
Every chemical element has
a specific signature in the spectrum.

383
00:29:08,913 --> 00:29:12,906
So there are identical patterns in the
light of a candle flame on Earth...

384
00:29:13,118 --> 00:29:16,019
...and in the light of
a distant galaxy.

385
00:29:18,389 --> 00:29:20,721
The spectra show not only...

386
00:29:20,925 --> 00:29:23,985
...that the same chemical elements
exist throughout space...

387
00:29:24,195 --> 00:29:28,325
...but also that the same
laws of quantum mechanics...

388
00:29:28,533 --> 00:29:30,194
...govern atoms everywhere.

389
00:29:30,401 --> 00:29:32,392
Beings growing up on any world...

390
00:29:32,604 --> 00:29:36,165
...must come to grips with
the identical laws of nature.

391
00:29:38,943 --> 00:29:43,880
Galaxies billions of light-years
distant evolve a spiral form.

392
00:29:44,149 --> 00:29:45,844
So does our own Milky Way.

393
00:29:46,050 --> 00:29:49,713
The same gravitational forces
are at work.

394
00:29:50,555 --> 00:29:51,920
And on planets also:

395
00:29:52,123 --> 00:29:56,253
There are spiral storm
systems on Jupiter.

396
00:29:58,163 --> 00:30:01,360
The same patterns are common on Earth.

397
00:30:03,334 --> 00:30:06,929
The intelligent beings on every
world will, sooner or later...

398
00:30:07,138 --> 00:30:09,504
...understand the laws of nature.

399
00:30:09,707 --> 00:30:12,073
Someday, perhaps soon...

400
00:30:12,277 --> 00:30:16,475
...a message from the depths of space
may arrive on our small world.

401
00:30:16,681 --> 00:30:18,615
If we wish to understand it...

402
00:30:18,817 --> 00:30:22,480
...we first have to understand
science.

403
00:30:29,694 --> 00:30:33,323
We do not expect an advanced
technical civilization...

404
00:30:33,531 --> 00:30:36,295
...on any other planet
of our solar system.

405
00:30:39,137 --> 00:30:43,597
If they were only a little behind us,
10,000 years, say...

406
00:30:43,808 --> 00:30:46,834
...they would have no advanced
technology at all.

407
00:30:49,547 --> 00:30:51,344
If they're a little ahead of us...

408
00:30:51,549 --> 00:30:55,110
...we who are already exploring
the solar system...

409
00:30:55,320 --> 00:30:57,311
...then they should be here by now.

410
00:30:58,289 --> 00:31:00,450
To communicate with other
civilizations...

411
00:31:00,658 --> 00:31:03,684
...our technology must reach across
not merely...

412
00:31:03,895 --> 00:31:06,329
...interplanetary distances...

413
00:31:06,531 --> 00:31:09,329
...but interstellar distances.

414
00:31:13,605 --> 00:31:15,903
Ideally, the method
should be inexpensive.

415
00:31:16,107 --> 00:31:21,044
A huge amount of information could
be sent and received at little cost.

416
00:31:23,448 --> 00:31:24,415
It should be fast...

417
00:31:24,616 --> 00:31:28,484
...so an interstellar dialogue
is eventually possible.

418
00:31:29,454 --> 00:31:30,614
It ought to be obvious...

419
00:31:30,822 --> 00:31:34,724
...so that any technical civilization,
no matter its evolutionary path...

420
00:31:34,926 --> 00:31:37,087
...will discover it early.

421
00:31:39,163 --> 00:31:41,927
Surprisingly, there is such a method.

422
00:31:42,133 --> 00:31:45,068
It's called radio astronomy.

423
00:31:47,972 --> 00:31:51,772
This is the largest
radio/radar telescope...

424
00:31:51,976 --> 00:31:56,037
...on the planet Earth,
the Arecibo Observatory.

425
00:31:58,850 --> 00:32:03,014
It's located in a remote valley
on the island of Puerto Rico.

426
00:32:05,924 --> 00:32:09,724
It sends and receives radio signals.

427
00:32:10,028 --> 00:32:12,223
But it's so large and powerful...

428
00:32:12,430 --> 00:32:15,263
...it can communicate with
an identical radio telescope...

429
00:32:15,466 --> 00:32:18,560
...15,000 light-years away...

430
00:32:18,770 --> 00:32:22,763
...halfway to the center
of the Milky Way galaxy.

431
00:32:25,777 --> 00:32:30,214
The Arecibo Observatory has been
used, although sparingly...

432
00:32:30,415 --> 00:32:33,646
...to search for signals
from civilizations in space...

433
00:32:33,851 --> 00:32:35,842
...and, just once...

434
00:32:36,054 --> 00:32:39,990
...to broadcast a message
to a distant star cluster...

435
00:32:40,191 --> 00:32:43,058
...called "M13."

436
00:32:47,532 --> 00:32:50,194
But is there anyone out there
to talk to?

437
00:32:53,738 --> 00:32:57,799
With 400 billion stars in
the Milky Way galaxy alone...

438
00:32:58,009 --> 00:33:01,570
...could ours be the only one
with an inhabited planet?

439
00:33:04,315 --> 00:33:05,839
How much more likely it is...

440
00:33:06,050 --> 00:33:10,919
...that the galaxy is throbbing and
humming with advanced societies.

441
00:33:11,122 --> 00:33:14,649
Perhaps near one of those
pinpoints of light in our night sky...

442
00:33:14,859 --> 00:33:17,191
...someone quite different from us...

443
00:33:17,395 --> 00:33:20,728
...is glancing idly at
the star we call the sun...

444
00:33:20,932 --> 00:33:23,594
...and entertaining,
just for a moment...

445
00:33:23,801 --> 00:33:26,736
...an outrageous speculation.

446
00:33:37,081 --> 00:33:40,642
There are an enormous number
of stars.

447
00:33:42,253 --> 00:33:45,689
Only some of them will have
planets suitable for life.

448
00:33:47,425 --> 00:33:51,259
On only some of those worlds
will intelligence arise.

449
00:33:52,463 --> 00:33:55,660
And perhaps a few of those
civilizations will avoid...

450
00:33:55,867 --> 00:34:00,600
...the trap jointly set by their
technology and their passions.

451
00:34:03,474 --> 00:34:08,002
If there are many civilizations,
one of them should be rather close by.

452
00:34:09,213 --> 00:34:11,374
If there are few civilizations...

453
00:34:11,582 --> 00:34:15,279
...then even the nearest
may be very far away.

454
00:34:24,495 --> 00:34:29,194
This is one of the great questions:
How many advanced civilizations...

455
00:34:29,400 --> 00:34:33,393
...capable at least of radio astronomy
are there in the Milky Way galaxy?

456
00:34:33,638 --> 00:34:38,575
Let's call the number of such
civilizations by capital letter "N."

457
00:34:38,976 --> 00:34:41,501
It's a number.
It depends on many things.

458
00:34:41,712 --> 00:34:44,272
It depends on the number
of stars in the Milky Way.

459
00:34:44,482 --> 00:34:47,212
Let's call that N sub-star.

460
00:34:47,418 --> 00:34:49,716
The fraction of stars
that have planets...

461
00:34:49,921 --> 00:34:52,321
...is called f sub-p.

462
00:34:52,824 --> 00:34:56,055
The average number of planets
in a given solar system...

463
00:34:56,260 --> 00:34:58,524
...ecologically suitable for life...

464
00:34:59,097 --> 00:35:01,691
...is called n sub-e.

465
00:35:01,899 --> 00:35:05,892
The fraction of suitable planets
in which life actually arises...

466
00:35:06,104 --> 00:35:07,935
...is called f sub-I.

467
00:35:08,139 --> 00:35:10,403
The fraction of inhabited planets...

468
00:35:10,608 --> 00:35:12,701
...on which intelligence emerges...

469
00:35:12,910 --> 00:35:14,878
...is called f sub-i.

470
00:35:15,847 --> 00:35:20,375
On the fraction of those planets in
which the intelligent beings evolve...

471
00:35:20,585 --> 00:35:23,679
...a technical, communicative
civilization...

472
00:35:23,888 --> 00:35:25,287
...call that f sub-c.

473
00:35:25,723 --> 00:35:30,092
Finally, it depends on the fraction
of a planet's lifetime...

474
00:35:30,294 --> 00:35:33,889
...that's graced by
a technical civilization.

475
00:35:34,098 --> 00:35:35,656
Call that f sub-L.

476
00:35:38,269 --> 00:35:41,329
If we multiply all these
numbers together...

477
00:35:41,539 --> 00:35:45,066
...we've estimated N,
the number of civilizations.

478
00:35:45,610 --> 00:35:48,704
This equation, due mainly to
Frank Drake of Cornell...

479
00:35:48,913 --> 00:35:50,574
...is only a sentence.

480
00:35:50,781 --> 00:35:53,409
The verb is "equals."

481
00:35:53,618 --> 00:35:57,952
So let's try to go through
the program of this equation.

482
00:35:58,156 --> 00:36:00,750
By carefully counting
the number of stars...

483
00:36:00,958 --> 00:36:03,825
...in small but representative regions
of the sky...

484
00:36:04,028 --> 00:36:07,725
...we find that the total number
of stars in the Milky Way...

485
00:36:07,932 --> 00:36:12,835
...is about 400 billion.

486
00:36:13,037 --> 00:36:14,834
That's a lot of stars.

487
00:36:15,039 --> 00:36:16,370
What about planets?

488
00:36:16,574 --> 00:36:19,941
Well, in studies of double stars...

489
00:36:20,144 --> 00:36:24,444
...and investigations of
the motions of nearby stars...

490
00:36:24,649 --> 00:36:26,446
...and in many theoretical studies...

491
00:36:26,651 --> 00:36:31,247
...we get a strong hint that many...

492
00:36:31,455 --> 00:36:33,423
...perhaps even most stars...

493
00:36:33,624 --> 00:36:35,216
...are accompanied by planets.

494
00:36:35,426 --> 00:36:37,656
So let's take f sub-p...

495
00:36:37,862 --> 00:36:42,526
...the fraction of stars that
have planets as a quarter.

496
00:36:43,401 --> 00:36:46,598
Then, the total number of
planetary systems in the galaxy...

497
00:36:46,804 --> 00:36:49,796
...is 400 billion times a quarter...

498
00:36:50,007 --> 00:36:52,066
...or 100 billion.

499
00:36:52,276 --> 00:36:56,269
We'll write down our running totals
in red.

500
00:36:56,881 --> 00:36:59,008
Now if each system were
to have, say...

501
00:36:59,217 --> 00:37:03,313
...ten planets as ours does, there
would be 100 billion times ten...

502
00:37:03,521 --> 00:37:05,819
...or a trillion worlds in the galaxy.

503
00:37:06,023 --> 00:37:10,483
A vast arena for the cosmic drama.

504
00:37:10,928 --> 00:37:12,657
In our own solar system...

505
00:37:12,863 --> 00:37:16,230
...there are several bodies that
might be suitable for life...

506
00:37:16,434 --> 00:37:17,594
...life of some sort.

507
00:37:17,802 --> 00:37:19,565
There's the Earth, of course...

508
00:37:19,770 --> 00:37:24,207
...but there are possibilities for
Mars, for Titan, perhaps for Jupiter.

509
00:37:24,408 --> 00:37:28,936
If other systems are similar, there
may be many suitable worlds per system.

510
00:37:29,146 --> 00:37:31,478
But to be conservative,
let's choose...

511
00:37:31,682 --> 00:37:34,048
...n sub-e equal two.

512
00:37:34,252 --> 00:37:36,413
Two worlds suitable for life
per system.

513
00:37:36,721 --> 00:37:38,985
The planets that are
suitable for life...

514
00:37:39,190 --> 00:37:42,387
...would be 100 billion times
two, or 200 billion.

515
00:37:42,860 --> 00:37:44,327
Now what about life?

516
00:37:44,528 --> 00:37:46,553
Under very general
cosmic conditions...

517
00:37:46,764 --> 00:37:51,633
...the molecules of life are readily
made and spontaneously self-assemble.

518
00:37:51,836 --> 00:37:55,272
It's conceivable there might be
some impediment, like some...

519
00:37:55,473 --> 00:37:58,203
...difficulty in the origin of
the genetic code, say.

520
00:37:58,409 --> 00:38:02,038
Although that's very unlikely, given
billions of years for evolution.

521
00:38:02,246 --> 00:38:06,580
On the Earth, life arose very fast
after the planet was formed.

522
00:38:06,784 --> 00:38:09,309
So let's choose f sub-I...

523
00:38:09,520 --> 00:38:14,082
...the fraction of suitable worlds in
which life does arise, as a half.

524
00:38:14,458 --> 00:38:18,952
The number of planets in the Milky Way
in which life has arisen once...

525
00:38:19,297 --> 00:38:22,425
...is 100 billion times
two, times a half.

526
00:38:22,633 --> 00:38:24,100
Or again, 100 billion.

527
00:38:26,871 --> 00:38:31,240
100 billion inhabited worlds.

528
00:38:31,909 --> 00:38:35,436
Now the estimates get tougher.

529
00:38:35,880 --> 00:38:38,906
Many individually unlikely events
had to occur for...

530
00:38:39,116 --> 00:38:42,279
...our species and our technology
to emerge.

531
00:38:42,520 --> 00:38:45,512
On the other hand, there might
be many different roads...

532
00:38:45,723 --> 00:38:47,486
...to high technology.

533
00:38:47,692 --> 00:38:49,592
Some scientists think that...

534
00:38:49,794 --> 00:38:53,696
...the path from trilobites to radio
telescopes, or the equivalent...

535
00:38:53,898 --> 00:38:56,423
...goes like a shot
in all planetary systems.

536
00:38:56,634 --> 00:38:58,534
Other scientists disagree.

537
00:38:58,736 --> 00:39:02,331
Let's take some middle ground
and choose f sub-i...

538
00:39:03,040 --> 00:39:04,507
...as a tenth...

539
00:39:04,709 --> 00:39:08,304
...and f sub-c as also a tenth.

540
00:39:08,512 --> 00:39:11,379
Meaning that only one percent,
a tenth times a tenth...

541
00:39:11,582 --> 00:39:15,143
...of inhabited planets eventually
produce a technical civilization.

542
00:39:16,053 --> 00:39:19,545
If we were to multiply
all these factors together...

543
00:39:19,757 --> 00:39:23,318
...we would find 100 billion
times a tenth times a tenth.

544
00:39:23,527 --> 00:39:27,588
Or one billion planets...

545
00:39:28,399 --> 00:39:32,859
...on which civilizations
have arisen at least once.

546
00:39:33,904 --> 00:39:37,863
Now what percentage of
the lifetime of a planet...

547
00:39:38,075 --> 00:39:41,044
...is marked by a technical
civilization?

548
00:39:41,278 --> 00:39:44,611
Earth has harbored a civilization
capable of radio astronomy...

549
00:39:44,815 --> 00:39:47,375
...only for a few decades,
the last few...

550
00:39:47,585 --> 00:39:50,418
...out of a lifetime of
a few billion years.

551
00:39:50,621 --> 00:39:53,181
It's hardly out of the question
that we might...

552
00:39:53,391 --> 00:39:55,359
...destroy ourselves tomorrow.

553
00:39:55,559 --> 00:39:59,996
If that's a typical case,
then f sub-L...

554
00:40:00,197 --> 00:40:04,395
...would be a few decades divided
by a few billion years...

555
00:40:04,602 --> 00:40:08,538
...or one hundred millionth...

556
00:40:08,739 --> 00:40:10,707
...a very small number.

557
00:40:11,409 --> 00:40:14,503
And then, N would be a billion
times a hundred millionth.

558
00:40:14,712 --> 00:40:19,649
Or N may be just...

559
00:40:19,884 --> 00:40:21,715
...ten civilizations.

560
00:40:21,919 --> 00:40:24,979
A tiny smattering, a pitiful few...

561
00:40:25,189 --> 00:40:28,215
...technological civilizations
in the galaxy.

562
00:40:29,393 --> 00:40:31,554
But civilizations then...

563
00:40:31,762 --> 00:40:35,254
...might take billions of years
of tortuous evolution to arise...

564
00:40:35,466 --> 00:40:38,594
...and then snuff themselves out
in an instant of...

565
00:40:38,803 --> 00:40:40,737
...unforgivable neglect.

566
00:40:40,938 --> 00:40:42,428
If this is a typical case...

567
00:40:42,640 --> 00:40:44,403
...there may be few others...

568
00:40:44,608 --> 00:40:47,543
...maybe nobody else at all
for us to talk to.

569
00:40:51,882 --> 00:40:53,713
But consider the alternative:

570
00:40:53,918 --> 00:40:58,184
That occasionally civilizations
learn to live with high technology...

571
00:40:58,389 --> 00:41:01,984
...and survive for geological or
stellar evolutionary time scales.

572
00:41:02,193 --> 00:41:05,356
If only one percent
of civilizations can...

573
00:41:05,563 --> 00:41:08,555
...survive technological
adolescence...

574
00:41:08,966 --> 00:41:13,699
...then f sub-L would be
not 100 millionth...

575
00:41:13,904 --> 00:41:16,134
...but only a hundredth.

576
00:41:16,340 --> 00:41:21,277
And then the number of civilizations
would be a billion times a hundredth.

577
00:41:21,545 --> 00:41:24,810
The civilizations in the galaxy
would be measured...

578
00:41:25,015 --> 00:41:27,245
...in the millions.

579
00:41:28,786 --> 00:41:32,085
Millions of technical civilizations.

580
00:41:36,660 --> 00:41:40,528
So if civilizations do not
always destroy themselves...

581
00:41:40,731 --> 00:41:43,598
...shortly after discovering
radio astronomy...

582
00:41:43,801 --> 00:41:47,066
...then the sky may be
softly humming...

583
00:41:47,271 --> 00:41:49,535
...with messages from the stars...

584
00:41:49,740 --> 00:41:52,834
...with signals from civilizations
enormously older...

585
00:41:53,043 --> 00:41:55,341
...and wiser than we.

586
00:41:57,815 --> 00:42:01,182
If there are millions of civilizations
in the Milky Way...

587
00:42:01,385 --> 00:42:03,376
...each capable of radio astronomy...

588
00:42:03,587 --> 00:42:06,715
...how far away is the nearest one?

589
00:42:12,897 --> 00:42:16,025
If they're distributed randomly
through space...

590
00:42:16,500 --> 00:42:20,266
...then the nearest one will be
some 200 light-years away.

591
00:42:20,671 --> 00:42:22,400
But within 200 light-years...

592
00:42:22,606 --> 00:42:25,769
...there are hundreds
of thousands of stars.

593
00:42:25,976 --> 00:42:28,444
To find the needle in this haystack...

594
00:42:28,646 --> 00:42:32,275
...requires a dedicated
and systematic search.

595
00:42:35,986 --> 00:42:40,116
Many cosmic radio sources have nothing
to do with intelligent life.

596
00:42:40,324 --> 00:42:45,261
So how would we know that
we were receiving a message?

597
00:42:48,933 --> 00:42:53,461
The transmitting civilization can make
it very easy for us, if they wished.

598
00:42:53,671 --> 00:42:57,198
Imagine we're in the course
of a systematic search.

599
00:42:57,408 --> 00:43:01,344
Or in the midst of some more
conventional observations.

600
00:43:01,545 --> 00:43:03,445
And suppose one day...

601
00:43:03,647 --> 00:43:06,445
...we find a strong signal
slowly emerging.

602
00:43:06,650 --> 00:43:09,141
Not just some background hiss...

603
00:43:09,353 --> 00:43:13,915
...but a methodical series of pulses.

604
00:43:14,124 --> 00:43:16,524
(SIGNAL PINGS)

605
00:43:17,728 --> 00:43:20,822
The numbers one, two, three, five...

606
00:43:21,031 --> 00:43:24,296
...seven, eleven, thirteen.

607
00:43:24,501 --> 00:43:26,662
A signal made of prime numbers.

608
00:43:26,870 --> 00:43:30,966
Numbers divisible only
by one and themselves.

609
00:43:34,178 --> 00:43:38,547
There is no natural astrophysical
process that generates prime numbers.

610
00:43:38,749 --> 00:43:40,307
We would have to conclude...

611
00:43:40,517 --> 00:43:43,850
...that someone fond of
elementary mathematics...

612
00:43:44,054 --> 00:43:46,648
...was saying hello.

613
00:43:47,091 --> 00:43:49,616
(SIGNAL PINGS)

614
00:43:52,529 --> 00:43:56,158
This would be no more than a beacon
to attract our attention.

615
00:43:56,367 --> 00:43:58,767
The main message will be subtler...

616
00:43:58,969 --> 00:44:01,437
...more hidden, far richer.

617
00:44:01,639 --> 00:44:04,301
We may have to work hard to find it.

618
00:44:08,646 --> 00:44:12,707
But the beacon signal alone
would be profoundly significant.

619
00:44:12,916 --> 00:44:17,785
It would mean someone has learned to
survive technological adolescence...

620
00:44:17,988 --> 00:44:20,980
...that self-destruction
is not inevitable...

621
00:44:21,191 --> 00:44:24,592
...that we also may have a future.

622
00:44:29,433 --> 00:44:31,833
Such knowledge, it seems to me...

623
00:44:32,236 --> 00:44:35,069
...might be worth a great price.

624
00:44:38,609 --> 00:44:39,576
Very likely...

625
00:44:39,777 --> 00:44:42,337
...some new Champollion
would go on...

626
00:44:42,546 --> 00:44:46,710
...to decode the main message,
using our interstellar Rosetta Stone:

627
00:44:46,917 --> 00:44:50,182
The common language of science
and mathematics.

628
00:44:55,192 --> 00:44:58,423
Think of the glories of
an exotic civilization...

629
00:44:58,629 --> 00:45:00,893
...far more advanced than we...

630
00:45:01,098 --> 00:45:05,330
...collected by the great
radio telescopes of Earth.

631
00:45:05,536 --> 00:45:10,439
Perhaps they'd send a compilation of
the knowledge of a million worlds:

632
00:45:10,641 --> 00:45:13,633
The Encyclopedia Galactica.

633
00:45:17,748 --> 00:45:19,773
Receiving an interstellar message...

634
00:45:19,983 --> 00:45:22,611
...would be a major event
in human history...

635
00:45:22,820 --> 00:45:27,757
...and the beginning of the
deprovincialization of our planet.

636
00:45:34,131 --> 00:45:36,827
A serious and systematic
radio search...

637
00:45:37,034 --> 00:45:41,061
...for extraterrestrial
civilizations may come soon.

638
00:45:41,271 --> 00:45:44,434
Preliminary steps are being taken
both in the United States...

639
00:45:44,641 --> 00:45:46,802
...and in the Soviet Union.

640
00:45:48,545 --> 00:45:50,672
It's comparatively inexpensive.

641
00:45:50,881 --> 00:45:55,818
A search taking decades would cost
less than the budget overruns...

642
00:45:56,019 --> 00:46:00,353
...on a single modest weapons system
in a single year.

643
00:46:03,060 --> 00:46:06,518
Our technology is now
fully adequate...

644
00:46:06,730 --> 00:46:08,755
...for this great challenge.

645
00:46:08,966 --> 00:46:11,127
But no systematic search program...

646
00:46:11,335 --> 00:46:15,203
...has ever been approved
by any nation on Earth.

647
00:46:18,242 --> 00:46:20,870
When will we decide to search for...

648
00:46:21,078 --> 00:46:25,811
...what other civilizations there
may be in the vast cosmic ocean?

649
00:46:31,522 --> 00:46:35,390
But whether there are only a few
advanced galactic civilizations...

650
00:46:35,592 --> 00:46:36,889
...or millions...

651
00:46:37,094 --> 00:46:41,292
...shouldn't some of them
have voyaged to Earth?

652
00:46:46,770 --> 00:46:51,139
On one hand, if even a small fraction
of technical civilizations...

653
00:46:51,341 --> 00:46:55,072
...learned to live with their
potential for self-destruction...

654
00:46:55,279 --> 00:46:58,442
...there should be enormous
numbers of them in the galaxy.

655
00:46:59,016 --> 00:47:03,510
On the other hand, despite claims
about UFOs and ancient astronauts...

656
00:47:03,720 --> 00:47:07,781
...there's no creditable evidence that
Earth has been visited, now or ever.

657
00:47:08,258 --> 00:47:10,488
But isn't this a contradiction?

658
00:47:10,694 --> 00:47:14,494
If the nearest civilization is,
say, 200 light-years away...

659
00:47:14,698 --> 00:47:18,099
...it'd take them only 200 years
to get from there to here...

660
00:47:18,302 --> 00:47:19,530
...at light speed.

661
00:47:19,736 --> 00:47:22,830
Even if they were traveling
1000 times slower than that...

662
00:47:23,040 --> 00:47:25,907
...aliens could've come here during...

663
00:47:26,109 --> 00:47:28,339
...the tenure of human beings
on Earth.

664
00:47:28,545 --> 00:47:30,410
So why aren't they here?

665
00:47:31,281 --> 00:47:34,114
There's many possible answers.
One is that...

666
00:47:34,318 --> 00:47:35,910
...maybe we're the first.

667
00:47:36,119 --> 00:47:38,986
Some technical civilization
has to be first...

668
00:47:39,189 --> 00:47:41,589
...to emerge in the history
of the galaxy.

669
00:47:41,792 --> 00:47:46,286
Or maybe all technical civilizations
promptly destroy themselves.

670
00:47:46,496 --> 00:47:48,862
That seems to me very unlikely.

671
00:47:49,066 --> 00:47:51,261
Maybe there's some problem
with space flight...

672
00:47:51,468 --> 00:47:53,993
...that we've been too dumb
to figure out.

673
00:47:54,204 --> 00:47:58,504
Or maybe they are here,
but in hiding...

674
00:47:58,709 --> 00:48:01,303
...because of an ethic of
non-interference...

675
00:48:01,511 --> 00:48:03,376
...with emerging civilizations.

676
00:48:03,580 --> 00:48:07,710
We might imagine them,
curious and dispassionate...

677
00:48:07,918 --> 00:48:11,354
...watching us to determine
whether this year again...

678
00:48:11,555 --> 00:48:13,580
...we manage to avoid
self-destruction.

679
00:48:14,458 --> 00:48:19,361
But there's another explanation which
is consistent with what we know.

680
00:48:19,596 --> 00:48:22,997
And that's that it's a big cosmos.

681
00:48:23,200 --> 00:48:27,796
If years ago, an advanced interstellar
spacefaring civilization emerged...

682
00:48:28,005 --> 00:48:30,974
...200 light-years away,
why would they come here?

683
00:48:31,341 --> 00:48:34,139
They'd have no reason to think
the Earth was special.

684
00:48:34,344 --> 00:48:39,008
There are no signs of technology,
not even our radio transmissions...

685
00:48:39,216 --> 00:48:41,912
...which have had time
to go 200 light-years.

686
00:48:42,119 --> 00:48:45,350
From their point of view,
all nearby planetary systems...

687
00:48:45,555 --> 00:48:48,991
...might seem equally attractive
for exploration.

688
00:48:52,496 --> 00:48:56,091
How would an interstellar
civilization set out to explore...

689
00:48:56,300 --> 00:48:58,928
...its neighboring star systems?

690
00:48:59,970 --> 00:49:02,234
It might establish staging posts...

691
00:49:02,439 --> 00:49:05,169
...colonies,
on planets of nearby stars.

692
00:49:05,375 --> 00:49:07,002
But this would take time.

693
00:49:07,210 --> 00:49:10,043
Time to find and modify
favorable planets.

694
00:49:10,247 --> 00:49:12,408
Time to build new spacecraft.

695
00:49:13,617 --> 00:49:17,576
Eventually, later generations
of explorers would set out...

696
00:49:17,788 --> 00:49:19,881
...wending their way
among the worlds...

697
00:49:20,090 --> 00:49:22,752
...creating an interstellar
nervous system...

698
00:49:22,960 --> 00:49:25,019
...binding up the stars.

699
00:49:25,729 --> 00:49:28,789
Perhaps they'd come upon another
expanding civilization...

700
00:49:28,999 --> 00:49:31,467
...and encounter beings
previously known...

701
00:49:31,668 --> 00:49:34,432
...only from their radio
transmissions.

702
00:49:34,638 --> 00:49:36,697
Star wars are unlikely.

703
00:49:36,907 --> 00:49:40,775
One civilization certainly would be
far more advanced than the other.

704
00:49:40,978 --> 00:49:43,276
It would be no contest.

705
00:49:46,316 --> 00:49:48,011
Perhaps they would cooperate...

706
00:49:48,218 --> 00:49:52,985
...exploring together a small province
of the Milky Way.

707
00:49:57,561 --> 00:50:01,019
But even nearby civilizations
could spend millions of years...

708
00:50:01,231 --> 00:50:03,290
...roving between the stars...

709
00:50:03,500 --> 00:50:08,437
...without ever stumbling upon
our obscure solar system.

710
00:50:09,773 --> 00:50:13,607
In a galaxy of 400 billion suns...

711
00:50:13,810 --> 00:50:17,507
...perhaps no one has found us
just yet.

712
00:50:19,316 --> 00:50:23,446
Advanced interstellar civilizations
would know about many worlds.

713
00:50:23,653 --> 00:50:26,315
Some inhabited, some barren.

714
00:50:26,523 --> 00:50:28,855
Perhaps they would share
their findings...

715
00:50:29,059 --> 00:50:32,153
...assembling some vast repository...

716
00:50:32,362 --> 00:50:35,331
...of the knowledge of
countless worlds.

717
00:50:35,532 --> 00:50:40,469
They might compile an
Encyclopedia Galactica.

718
00:50:42,105 --> 00:50:46,166
Suppose we could browse through
that encyclopedia.

719
00:50:52,082 --> 00:50:56,041
We would choose some nearby
province of the galaxy...

720
00:50:56,253 --> 00:50:58,915
...a region that's fairly
well-explored.

721
00:50:59,122 --> 00:51:03,718
And then slowly leaf through
the worlds.

722
00:51:24,614 --> 00:51:27,139
The young Champollion was inspired...

723
00:51:27,350 --> 00:51:30,842
...by reading Fourier's
description of Egypt.

724
00:51:31,054 --> 00:51:32,783
Imagine the impact on us...

725
00:51:32,989 --> 00:51:35,719
...if we could study
a rich compilation...

726
00:51:35,926 --> 00:51:38,224
...of not merely one world...

727
00:51:38,428 --> 00:51:40,191
...but billions.

728
00:52:16,933 --> 00:52:20,926
Just possibly, not too far
from our solar system...

729
00:52:21,138 --> 00:52:23,698
...we might find
a technical civilization...

730
00:52:23,907 --> 00:52:26,808
...only a little more
advanced than we.

731
00:52:27,010 --> 00:52:31,174
Let's look them up in
the Galactic Encyclopedia.

732
00:53:08,618 --> 00:53:12,281
What would a civilization
far more advanced than ours...

733
00:53:12,489 --> 00:53:13,956
...be up to?

734
00:53:17,594 --> 00:53:20,085
There may be engineering on a scale...

735
00:53:20,297 --> 00:53:23,266
...that dwafts our proudest
achievements.

736
00:53:23,466 --> 00:53:27,300
There may be cultures that disassemble
other planets in their system...

737
00:53:27,504 --> 00:53:30,905
...and reassemble them around
their world to make a ring...

738
00:53:31,274 --> 00:53:34,835
...or a shell with
their planet inside.

739
00:53:47,157 --> 00:53:52,094
Imagine the energy crisis of a really
advanced planetary civilization.

740
00:53:52,329 --> 00:53:54,160
They've used up all their fuels.

741
00:53:54,364 --> 00:53:56,491
They depend on solar power.

742
00:53:56,700 --> 00:54:00,329
But their growth is still severely
limited by the energy available.

743
00:54:00,537 --> 00:54:03,870
An enormous amount of energy
is generated by the local star.

744
00:54:04,074 --> 00:54:07,771
But most of the star's light
doesn't fall on their planet.

745
00:54:07,978 --> 00:54:11,072
So perhaps they would build a shell...

746
00:54:11,281 --> 00:54:13,146
...to surround their star...

747
00:54:13,350 --> 00:54:17,150
...and harvest every photon
of sunlight.

748
00:54:18,455 --> 00:54:21,390
Such beings, such civilizations...

749
00:54:21,591 --> 00:54:25,083
...would bear little resemblance
to anything we know.

750
00:54:51,421 --> 00:54:56,358
Perhaps someday there will be an entry
in the Encyclopedia Galactica...

751
00:54:56,626 --> 00:54:58,355
...for our planet.

752
00:54:58,561 --> 00:55:01,462
Or perhaps even now
there exists somewhere...

753
00:55:01,665 --> 00:55:05,965
...a planetary dossier, garnered
from our television broadcasts...

754
00:55:06,169 --> 00:55:08,967
...or from some discreet
survey mission.

755
00:55:09,172 --> 00:55:13,609
They may summon up the index of blue
worlds in our part of the Milky Way...

756
00:55:13,810 --> 00:55:16,574
...until they came to
the listing for Earth.

757
00:55:16,780 --> 00:55:19,340
What would they know about us?

758
00:55:24,721 --> 00:55:26,814
What would they think of us?

759
00:55:47,410 --> 00:55:50,937
We have always watched
the stars and mused...

760
00:55:51,147 --> 00:55:55,675
...about whether there are other
beings who think and wonder.

761
00:55:58,388 --> 00:56:00,720
In a cosmic setting vast and old...

762
00:56:00,924 --> 00:56:05,554
...beyond ordinary human
understanding, we are a little lonely.

763
00:56:10,433 --> 00:56:14,893
In the deepest sense, the search
for extraterrestrial intelligence...

764
00:56:15,105 --> 00:56:18,233
...is a search for who we are.

765
00:56:26,683 --> 00:56:28,480
Since Cosmos was released...

766
00:56:28,685 --> 00:56:31,882
...interest in UFOs has persisted.

767
00:56:32,088 --> 00:56:34,955
It seems to me that there
are fewer sightings of...

768
00:56:35,158 --> 00:56:37,718
...strange objects in the skies
these days...

769
00:56:37,927 --> 00:56:42,660
...and more stories of encounters
with alleged extraterrestrials...

770
00:56:42,866 --> 00:56:46,962
...like the account of Betty and Barney
Hill that we dramatized.

771
00:56:47,170 --> 00:56:50,628
There are still people who claim
to have been abducted by aliens...

772
00:56:50,840 --> 00:56:55,038
...or even sexually abused,
or even impregnated by them.

773
00:56:55,245 --> 00:57:00,182
Best-selling purportedly serious books
have been written about such claims.

774
00:57:00,450 --> 00:57:03,942
But the critical fact remains
that all we have still is...

775
00:57:04,154 --> 00:57:05,382
...just anecdote.

776
00:57:05,588 --> 00:57:08,079
There are no close-up photos,
no artifacts...

777
00:57:08,291 --> 00:57:10,282
...nothing that'd convince a skeptic.

778
00:57:10,894 --> 00:57:13,124
All there are is stories.

779
00:57:13,329 --> 00:57:17,425
And stories just aren't good enough
on a matter of this importance.

780
00:57:17,634 --> 00:57:20,159
I'm still waiting for hard evidence.

781
00:57:20,703 --> 00:57:25,367
The radio search for extraterrestrial
intelligence has been picking up.

782
00:57:25,575 --> 00:57:29,443
In Harvard, Massachusetts, a radio
telescope monitoring 8 million...

783
00:57:29,646 --> 00:57:31,341
...separate radio channels...

784
00:57:31,548 --> 00:57:34,483
...has been scanning the skies
for signals.

785
00:57:34,684 --> 00:57:38,245
This program, called META,
is supported entirely by...

786
00:57:38,455 --> 00:57:41,481
...the Pasadena, California-based
Planetary Society.

787
00:57:41,691 --> 00:57:44,285
Paid for by members' contributions.

788
00:57:44,494 --> 00:57:46,792
A similar planetary society search...

789
00:57:46,996 --> 00:57:51,160
...to examine the southern skies
and the center of the Milky Way...

790
00:57:51,367 --> 00:57:53,801
...is to be performed in Argentina.

791
00:57:54,003 --> 00:57:56,972
These searches are by far...

792
00:57:57,173 --> 00:57:59,869
...the most sophisticated
ever attempted.

793
00:58:00,076 --> 00:58:02,408
A much more sensitive program...

794
00:58:02,612 --> 00:58:06,070
...covering almost the entire
accessible radio spectrum...

795
00:58:06,282 --> 00:58:08,273
...is to be mustered by NASA.

796
00:58:09,486 --> 00:58:12,512
The search for extraterrestrial
intelligence is central...

797
00:58:12,722 --> 00:58:16,385
...to our understanding of the universe
and our view of ourselves.

798
00:58:16,593 --> 00:58:18,288
It's well worth doing.

799
00:58:18,495 --> 00:58:20,588
But the simple fact is that...

800
00:58:20,797 --> 00:58:25,063
...while we may consider
extraterrestrial intelligence likely...

801
00:58:25,268 --> 00:58:28,760
...there is as yet
no evidence at all...

802
00:58:28,972 --> 00:58:30,371
...that it exists.

803
00:58:30,707 --> 00:58:32,902
The search continues.

