Well, OK PI. Good points. OTOH... there's cancellation of the Higg's field...............![]()

...which in turn led to the cancellation of Star Trek.
Actually, lest I give the impression I have any idea of what you're talking about, I passed out shortly after reading this sentence, had to be revived with oxygen:
In particle physics, the Higgs mechanism is the process in which gauge bosons in a gauge theory can acquire non-vanishing masses through absorption of Nambu-Goldstone bosons arising in spontaneous symmetry breaking.

Nah, a mere four light years. Even if we can only ever get to 0.5C we'll be there in 8 years. Of course, there's the fact that there are probably no Earthlike planets orbiting Alpha Centauri despite theories suggesting it's more likely there, so really it'll just be a sightseeing tour. But still, it's nice to get out once in a while.
Also, given the number of stars and number of galaxies and theorized number of planets orbiting their stars in the Goldilocks zone, the odds that there isn't life out there as next to nothing as makes no odds.
...Also, given the number of stars and number of galaxies and theorized number of planets orbiting their stars in the Goldilocks zone, the odds that there isn't life out there as next to nothing as makes no odds.
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'nuff said.
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'nuff said.
There's a problem with that one, though: if you start examining all those stars, then throw out all the ones that for one reason or another couldn't support life—like it's a Super Nova, for instance—the number of likely candidates gets a whole lot shorter. And the nearest of those are very, very, very far away.
My only real answer is that I haven't got a clue![]()
(actually that answer describes much of my life)![]()
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...even if you eliminate the really big stars you're still left with a mind-bogglingly ridiculous number of candidates for planetary systems with the possibility of Earth-like planets orbiting within the Goldilocks zone...
We may never reach those planets or even be able to communicate with them, and even if we could see them and confirm life they'd probably be so far away that the light reaching us from them is probably reflecting things that happened so long ago that we can't even be sure that what we're looking at even exists anymore.
My only real answer is that I haven't got a clue![]()
(actually that answer describes much of my life)![]()
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