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by aruggirello
4234 days ago
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Voyager's won't reach the nearest star before 40,000 years, but, dunno, are any of the two actually aimed at any neighbouring star?
I mean, come one, having a Voyager pass by some anonymous star at 170 light years of distance in 1,2 million years, and never come closer than 2650 AU to the star, what's the chance of actually detecting it by ET - even if an advanced civilisation is (will be) watching from one of its planets. It's tiny and, by the time it arrives, even the radioactivity levels will have dwindled to nothing. The only things that would make it stand out is it's speed, and the fact it's made of metal. They would need a very advanced radar, capable of detecting tiny masses of metal at enormous distances. Then, to investigate it, they would basically have to go grab it - but would you justify hunting for any chuck of metal transiting by the Oort cloud - what if it were just a piece of debris from an asteroid?! |
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