One of the world’s foremost experts in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) believes that with the help of the James Webb Space Telescope, humans are closer to discovering life outside our planet than ever before.
Lisa Kaltenegger, who directs the Carl Sagan Institute at Cornell, told The Telegraph this week that because the Webb Telescope is designed to detect biosignatures — the scientific word for “signs of life,” including organism-produced methane gas — we may well find ETs very soon.
erested in the four planets surrounding Trappist-1, a red dwarf planet located just 40 light-years away that’s suspected to contain water and, potentially, life. Discovered in 2017, the Trappist-1 system appears to have several planets in the so-called “habitable zone” where they could host liquid water — and by Kaltnegger’s reckoning, it’s likely where we’ll find life.
“We have a chance to find the gases on these worlds,” she told the British website. “And to figure out if there’s biosignatures on them within the next, let’s say, five to 10 years.”
When asked about some of the more bombastic believers in ETs, the Austrian-born astronomer was diplomatic in her condemnation.
“I think people are very, very smart,” she said, “and actually do start to doubt these things when it’s just a little too convenient.”
All the same, Kaltnegger considers congressional whistleblower David Grusch, whose outlandish claims about the government having retrofitted “non-human vehicles” and recovering alien carcasses greatly irritated the SETI community, to be a “snake oil” salesman — though she admits that it would be “so much easier” if his claims were true.