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We're at a tipping point in human history,
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a species poised between gaining the stars
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and losing the planet we call home.
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Even in just the past few years,
we've greatly expanded
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our knowledge of how Earth fits
within the context of our Universe.
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NASA's Kepler mission has discovered
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thousands of potential planets
around other stars,
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indicating that Earth is but one
of billions of planets in our galaxy.
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Kepler is a space telescope
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that measures the subtle dimming of stars
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as planets pass in front of them,
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blocking just a little bit
of that light from reaching us.
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Kepler's data reveals planets' sizes,
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as well as their distance
from their parent star.
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Together, this helps us understand
whether these planets are small and rocky,
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like the terrestrial planets
in our own Solar System,
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and also how much light they receive
from their parent sun.
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In turn, this provides clues as to whether
these planets that we discover
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might be habitable or not.
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Unfortunately, at the same time
as we're discovering this treasure trove
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of potentially habitable worlds,
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our own planet is sagging
under the weight of humanity.
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2014 was the hottest year on record.
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Glaciers and sea ice that have
been with us for millenia
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are now disappearing
in a matter of decades.
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These planetary scale
environmental changes
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that we have set in motion
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are rapidly outpacing our ability
to alter their course.
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But I'm not a climate scientist,
I'm an astronomer.
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I study planetary habitability
as influenced by stars
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with the hopes of finding
the places in the Universe
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where we might discover
life beyond our own planet.
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You could say that I look for
choice alien real estate.
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Now, as somebody who is deeply embedded
in the search for life in the Universe,
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I can tell you that the more
you look for planets like Earth,
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the more you appreciate
our own planet itself.
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Each one of these new worlds
invites a comparison
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between the newly discovered planet
and the planets we know best:
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those of our own Solar System.
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Consider our neighbor, Mars.
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Mars is small and rocky,
and though it's a bit far from the Sun,
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it might be considered
a potentially habitable world
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if found by a mission like Kepler.
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Indeed, it's possible that Mars
was habitable in the past,
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and in part, this is why
we study Mars so much.
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Our rovers, like Curiosity,
crawl across its surface,
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scratching for clues as to the origins
of life as we know it.
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Orbiters like the MAVEN mission
sample the Martian atmosphere,
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trying to understand how Mars
might have lost its past habitability.
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Private spaceflight companies now offer
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not just a short trip to near space,
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but the tantalizing possibility
of living our lives on Mars.
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But those these Martian vistas
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resemble the deserts
of our own home world,
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places that are tied in our imagination
to ideas about pioneering and frontiers,
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compared to Earth,
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Mars is a pretty terrible place to live.
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Consider the extent to which
we have not colonized
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the deserts of our own planet,
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places that are lush
by comparison with Mars.
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Even in the driest,
highest places on Earth,
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the air is sweet and thick with oxygen
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exhaled from thousands of miles away
by our rain forests.
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I worry. I worry that this excitement
about colonizing Mars and other planets
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carries with it a long, dark shadow:
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the implication and belief by some
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that Mars will be there to save us
from the self-inflicted destruction
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of the only truly habitable planet
we know of, the Earth.
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As much as I love
interplanetary exploration,
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I deeply disagree with this idea.
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There are many excellent reasons
to go to Mars,
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but for anyone to tell you that Mars
will be there to back up humanity
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is like the captain of the Titanic
telling you that the real party
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is happening later on the lifeboats.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Thank you.
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But the goals of interplanetary exploration
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and planetary preservation
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are not opposed to one another.
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No, they're in fact two sides
of the same goal:
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to understand, preserve,
and improve life into the future.
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The extreme environments
of our own world are alien vistas.
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They're just closer to home.
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If we can understand how to create
and maintain habitable spaces
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out of hostile, inhospitable
spaces here on Earth,
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perhaps we can meet the needs
of both preserving our own environment
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and moving beyond it.
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I leave you with a final
thought experiment:
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Fermi's Paradox.
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Many years ago, the physicist Enrico Fermi
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asked that, given the fact
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that our Universe has been around
for a very long time
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and we expect that there
are many planets within it,
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we should have found evidence
for alien life by now.
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So where are they?
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Well, one possible solution
to Fermi's Paradox
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is that, as civilizations become
technologically advanced enough
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to consider living amongst the stars,
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they lose sight of how important it is
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to safeguard the home worlds that fostered
that advancement to begin with.
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It is hubris to believe
that interplanetary colonization alone
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will save us from ourselves,
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but planetary preservation
and interplanetary exploration
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can work together.
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If we truly believe in our ability
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to bend the hostile environments of Mars
for human habitation,
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then we should be able to surmount
the far easier task of preserving
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the habitability of the Earth.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)