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were they real.was they really here.
just askin

2007-06-14 08:48:09 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

12 answers

Mork came from Ork.

2007-06-14 08:53:32 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

No planet in the solar system could possibly have a technological civilization, we know enough about our solar system to say that much with something close to certainty.

Alpha Centauri is about the only star within 20 light years that has a REALLY good chance of having an Earthlike world (right age, metal content etc.). So if there are any aliens snooping around Earth I'd bet they come from a planet in that system.

Interestingly enough, that means we're probably the first intelligent life they've found. Which might explain why they've apparently contented themselves with anal probing the occassional trucker all these years. We're the first intelligent species other than themselves they've met and they're probably fascinated by having an alien civilization to study but still haven't decided how or whether they should make their existence known to us.

That's assuming they don't have FTL of course, in which case the possibilities are endless.

2007-06-14 10:02:42 · answer #2 · answered by Somes J 5 · 2 1

My name is Igon, I came from the planet Nemesis to observe the evolution of life on Earth. I arrived in 4004 BC, by your time reckoning. The planet Nemsis revolves around the sun once in 365 days and is 93 million miles from the sun, the same as Earth. It is 180 degrees removed from the Earth which puts it on the other side of the sun, year round, which explains why it hasn't been seen by Earth astronomers. I am not quite humanoid and I am what you call an insect, a cockroach by your labeling. We don't want to take over your planet because we already have. We are in every dark corner of every kitchen and mop in the world. Go ahead, make your insect sprays and your aerosol bombs, but you'll never get rid of all of us, more than likely, your hydrogen bombs will get rid of you....we are here to stay. I wonder what's in the Frig? Is that the pizza guy at the front door?

2007-06-14 09:59:11 · answer #3 · answered by MAD MOMMA 3 · 4 0

"The Fermi paradox is the apparent contradiction between high estimates of the probability of the existence of extraterrestrial civilizations and the lack of evidence for or contact with such civilizations.

According to some observers, the extreme age of the universe and its vast number of stars suggest that extraterrestrial life should be common. Discussing this proposition with colleagues over lunch in 1950, the physicist Enrico Fermi is said to have asked: "Where are they?" Fermi questioned why, if a multitude of advanced extraterrestrial civilizations exist in the Milky Way galaxy, evidence such as probes, spacecraft, or radio transmissions has not been found. The simple question "Where are they?" (alternatively, "Where is everybody?") is possibly apocryphal, but Fermi is widely credited with simplifying the problem of the probability of extraterrestrial life. Wider examination of the implications of the topic began with Michael Hart in 1975, and it is sometimes referred to as the Fermi-Hart paradox.

There have been attempts to resolve the Fermi Paradox by locating evidence of extraterrestrial civilizations, along with proposals that such life could exist without human knowledge. Counterarguments suggest that intelligent extraterrestrial life does not exist or occurs so rarely that humans will never make contact with it.

A great deal of effort has gone into developing scientific theories and possible models of extraterrestrial life and the Fermi paradox has become a theoretical reference point in much of this work. The problem has spawned numerous scholarly works addressing it directly, while various questions that relate to it have been addressed in fields as diverse as astronomy, biology, ecology and philosophy. The emerging field of astrobiology has brought an interdisciplinary approach to the Fermi paradox and the question of extraterrestrial life."--wikipedia

To the objective (or open minded ) person there are several possibliities:

1. Earth is unique-- Earth is the only planet capable of supporting life as we know it.
2. Earth is not unique in that there is life elsewhere but there are no other advanced civilizations in the universe.
3. Earthlike planets are extremely rare therefore any advanced civilizations are to far away for us to contact.
3. Earthlike planets are not rare, there are many civilizations out there but they are so far ahead of us technologically that they do not wish to be contacted.
4. Earthlike planets are not rare, there are many civilizations out there but their form of life may be so different than ours that communication may be impossible.
5. The Zoo hypothesis--we are being deliberately isolated by some advanced race wishing to protect us or cultivate us technologically.
6. We have been contacted but our governments feel that the general public is not "ready" for such a discovery and the aliens have respected that viewpoint.
7. They are already amoung us but we cannot see them (deliberate hiding or so differnet that our eyes can't see them)and our government doesn't know.

you can probably add to this list.

Zacharia Citchin says the Annunaki or Nephlim come from Nibiru or planet X which is a theoretical planet that is past the Kiuper belt. It has a 3600 year elliptical orbit. At its closest point to the Sun it is around Neptune.

2007-06-14 10:47:48 · answer #4 · answered by Deslok of Gammalon 4 · 1 1

If and when we meet extra-terrestrial life, it will probably be us going to them, not the other way around.

There's no conclusive or falsifiable evidence that aliens have come to Earth. I am sure they exist, given the countless worlds that exist, but the better the odds are that they exist, the poorer the odds are that they chose to visit Earth. That is, if they are even capable of interstellar travel.

We know a few extrasolar planets, but they have no "normal" names, nor do we know what they look like. One that comes to mind is the supposedly Earth-like Gliese 581c, orbiting the red dwarf star Gliese 581, a little more than 20 light years from here. However, there is no evidence that anything lives there, much less that anything from 581c has come here.

2007-06-14 09:11:16 · answer #5 · answered by Bullet Magnet 4 · 1 1

There is a planet in the solar system which Is known as the posh planet I think aliens live in that planet no one had ever gone to that planet

2015-10-05 00:59:08 · answer #6 · answered by krishnaa 1 · 0 0

they come the biggest black hole

2016-06-23 05:31:39 · answer #7 · answered by Fatima 1 · 1 0

The Mems came to Earth 1 million years before Christ. By the drawings on the cave walls it is assumed that they came in saucer shaped vehicles. They came from just outside our galaxy from an unknown planet, but apparently cave dwellers referred to them as Mems, so that is what they are known as.

Apparently they came and taught the cave dwelling people of the Himalayas how to kill large reptiles, cook their meat and impregnate the females of their species. It is theorized that one night one of the Mems impregnated one of the women in the cave dwelling society and the men of that group attacked, killing all the Mems and completely destroying their ships.

This woman gave birth to a half Mem half man creature that was considered retarded and so the cave dwellers kept the retarded one hidden until he became so large that they could no longer contain him and he overcame the tribe, eating the men and impregnating the women. This went on until the Dinosaurs arose and killed off the cave dwellers. It is not known whether the half Mem half man creatures survived but some people report even now as having seen strange creatures in the night that eat human flesh and live in caves.

2007-06-14 10:30:47 · answer #8 · answered by Stu 3 · 1 1

Aliens could possibly be real. If there is another planet that does support life it is probably very far away, light years away probably. But their might not necessarily be aliens, it might just be organisms, how Earth started off. It also might covered in water, so humans or anthing similar to humans won't be able to develop.
Aliens might have been on Earth but I don't know if anyone has ever seen them. It is unlikely, but I guess it's just how you think of it, some people believe that aliens were on Earth and they saw them or they believe people who claim they have seen them, while others don't believe in aliens. It just depends if you believe them or not.

2007-06-14 09:06:24 · answer #9 · answered by cassandra n 2 · 2 2

Thus far, there is no conclusive evidence that we've been visited by beings from any other planet. Personally, I don't think we have. The evidence would have come out by now.

There are plenty of fraudulent photographs and lots of delusional tales and wishful thinking, but there's no real evidence.

2007-06-14 08:54:13 · answer #10 · answered by Bramblyspam 7 · 0 1

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