Could human civilization spread across the whole galaxy Roey Tzezana

Translator: Jessica Ruby
Reviewer: Brian Greene

Could human civilization eventually spread
across the whole Milky Way galaxy?

Could we move beyond
our small blue planet

to establish colonies in the multitude
of star systems out there?

This question’s a pretty daunting one.

There are around 300 billion stars
in the galaxy,

which is about 160,000 light-years across.

So far we’ve sent a single spacecraft
outside our solar system,

trudging along at 0.006% of
the speed of light.

At that rate, it would take over
2.5 billion years

just to get from one end of the galaxy
to the other.

And then there’s the question
of human survival.

The gulf between stars is simply enormous.

We couldn’t live sustainably
on most planets,

and we require a lot of resources
to stay alive.

And yet, decades ago, scholars found
that it’s theoretically possible

to not just spread human civilization
across the galaxy,

but to do so quite quickly,

without breaking any known
laws of physics.

Their idea is based on the work
of a mathematician named John von Neumann,

who designed on paper machines
that could self-replicate

and create new generations of themselves.

These would later come to be known
as von Neumann machines.

In the context of space exploration,

von Neumann machines could be
built on Earth

and launched into space.

There, the self-sufficient machines
would land on distant planets.

They would then mine the available
resources and harvest energy,

build replicas of themselves,

launch those to the nearest planets,

and continue the cycle.

The result is the creation
of millions of probes

spreading outwards into the universe
like a drop of ink in a fishbowl.

Scholars crunched the numbers and found
that a single von Neumann machine

traveling at 5% of the speed of light

should be able to replicate throughout
our galaxy in 4 million years or less.

That may sound like a long time,

but when you consider that our universe
is 14 billion years old,

on a cosmic scale, it’s incredibly fast -

the equivalent of about 2.5 hours
in an entire year.

Creating von Neumann machines
would require a few technologies

we don’t have yet,

including advanced
artificial intelligence,

miniaturization,

and better propulsion systems.

If we wanted to use them to spread actual
humans throughout the galaxy,

we would need
yet another technological leap -

the ability to artificially
grow biological organisms and bodies

using raw elements
and genetic information.

Regardless, if in the last billion years

an alien civilization
created such a machine

and set it multiplying its way toward us,

our galaxy would be
swarming with them by now.

So then where are all these machines?

Some astronomers, like Carl Sagan,

say that intelligent aliens wouldn’t
build self-replicating machines at all.

They might hurtle out of control,

scavenging planets to their cores
in order to keep replicating.

Others take the machines absence as proof

that intelligent alien civilizations
don’t exist,

or that they go extinct before they can
develop the necessary technologies.

But all this hasn’t stopped people from
imagining what it would be like

if they were out there.

Science fiction author David Brin

writes about a universe in which
many different von Neumann machines exist

and proliferate simultaneously.

Some are designed
to greet young civilizations,

others to locate and destroy them
before they become a threat.

In fact, in Brin’s story “Lungfish,”

some von Neumann machines are keeping
a close watch over the Earth right now,

waiting for us to reach a certain level
of sophistication

before they make their move.

For now, all we have is curiosity
and theory.

But the next time
you look at the night sky,

consider that billions of
self-replicating machines

could be advancing between stars
in our galaxy right now.

If they exist, one of them will eventually
land on Earth,

or maybe, just maybe,
they’re already here.

译者:Jessica Ruby
审稿人:Brian Greene

人类文明最终会蔓延
到整个银河系吗?

我们能否超越
我们的蓝色小星球

,在
众多恒星系统中建立殖民地?

这个问题是一个相当令人生畏的问题。 银河系

中约有 3000 亿
颗恒星

,直径约为 160,000 光年。

到目前为止,我们已经在太阳系外发射了一艘宇宙飞船

以 0.006%
的光速跋涉。

按照这个速度,

从银河系的一端到另一端需要超过 25 亿年的时间

然后
是人类生存的问题。

恒星之间的鸿沟简直是巨大的。

我们无法
在大多数星球上可持续地生活

,我们需要大量资源
才能生存。

然而,几十年前,学者们
发现理论上

不仅可以将人类文明传播
到整个银河系,

而且可以非常迅速地做到这一点,

而不会违反任何已知
的物理定律。

他们的想法是基于
一位名叫约翰·冯·诺依曼的数学家的工作,

他设计
了可以自我复制

并创造新一代的造纸机。

这些后来被
称为冯诺依曼机器。

在太空探索的背景下,

冯诺依曼机器可以
建造在地球上

并发射到太空。

在那里,自给自足的机器
将降落在遥远的行星上。

然后他们将挖掘可用
资源并收获能量,

建造自己的复制品,将它们

发射到最近的行星,

并继续循环。

结果是产生
了数百万个探测器

,它们
像鱼缸里的一滴墨水一样向外扩散到宇宙中。

学者们分析了这些数字,
发现一台

以 5% 光速运行的冯诺依曼机器

应该能够
在 400 万年或更短的时间内在整个银河系中复制。

这听起来可能很长,

但考虑到我们的宇宙已有
140 亿年的历史,

在宇宙尺度上,它的速度非常快

——相当于一年大约 2.5
小时。

制造冯诺依曼机器
需要一些

我们还没有的技术,

包括先进的
人工智能、

小型化

和更好的推进系统。

如果我们想用它们将真实的人类传播到
整个银河系,

我们还需要
另一个技术飞跃——

利用原始元素
和遗传信息人工培育生物有机体和身体的能力。

无论如何,如果在过去的十亿年里,

一个外星文明
创造了这样一台机器,

并让它成倍地向我们靠近,那么

我们的银河系现在就会
蜂拥而至。

那么所有这些机器在哪里呢?

一些天文学家,比如卡尔萨根,

说聪明的外星人根本不会
制造自我复制的机器。

它们可能会失去控制,将

行星清除到它们的核心
以继续复制。

其他人则将机器的缺失作为

外星智慧文明
不存在的证据,

或者它们在
开发出必要的技术之前就灭绝了。

但这一切并没有阻止人们
想象

如果他们在那里会是什么样子。

科幻小说作家大卫布林

写了一个宇宙,其中
许多不同的冯诺依曼机器

同时存在和增殖。

有些是
为了迎接年轻的文明,

有些是为了
在它们成为威胁之前找到并摧毁它们。

事实上,在布林的故事“肺鱼”中,

一些冯诺依曼机器现在正在
密切关注地球,

等待我们达到一定
的复杂程度,

然后再采取行动。

目前,我们所拥有的只是好奇心
和理论。

但是下次当
你看夜空时,

想想现在有数十亿台
自我复制的机器

可能
正在我们银河系的恒星之间前进。

如果它们存在,它们中的一个最终将
降落在地球上,

或者也许,只是也许,
它们已经在这里了。