
Brian cox ‘wouldn't be surprised‘ if there are aliens on mars
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Prof. Cox made the remarks during an appearance on the The Chris Moyles Show on Radio X this morning. A listener asked him: “Are there any bonkers alien conspiracy theories that you think
actually might be plausible?” The University of Manchester-affiliated physicist replied: “That’s a good question … so we’re looking for aliens on the surface of Mars now, as we speak.” Prof.
Cox continued: “There's a rover called Perseverance, which is on an ancient river delta — in what we know is an ancient lake. “It's drilling down as we speak now to take samples
to try and find evidence that life existed there. “Because there was water and all the things that we think are necessary for life.” “So, I wouldn't be surprised if there are aliens
below the surface of Mars, right — Martian microbes.” The physicist went on to explain how, during a visit to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California last month, he was able to see
where they are building the Europa Clipper. This craft, he explained, is “going to launch to Jupiter’s moon Europa. “That’s a frozen moon about the same size as our Moon, but it’s ice — the
whole surface is ice and below the surface there’s water, salt water, more than in all the oceans of the Earth combined. “So, that’s a candidate for life and so we send in a spacecraft to
look for life.” READ MORE: CHINA LASHES OUT AT NASA AFTER CLAIM XI WANTS TO TAKE OVER THE MOON Prof Cox continued: “It's not bonkers to suggest that life may have begun somewhere else
other than Earth … we're looking for it in the solar system.” “But what is really a worrying observation to me, actually, is that we've looked a bit for radio signals, and we look
out for signs of anything out there in our galaxy, intelligence, and we don't see anything at all.” Astronomers, he explained, have dubbed this absence “The Great Silence”. “It's
kind of an ominous name because it seems there's so many planets — 20 billion potentially Earth-like planets in the Milky Way — and you think there's loads of room, there's
loads of time so there should be things out there. “But we don't see anything, and the explanation, probably, if indeed that's true, is biology.” Prof Cox concluded: “If you look
at the history of life on Earth, it took nearly 4 billion years from the first cell to a civilization, which is us — that's a third of the age of the universe. “The best guess is that
we’re so incredibly fortunate to be here.” “[If] you say: ‘I want a planet to support an unbroken chain of life, through all this violence in the universe, for four billion years, in order
to get to something like you and me.’ “I think it’s just really unlikely. And then that is terrifying and also kind of uplifting in a way, isn’t it?” Listen to The Chris Moyles Show on Radio
X, weekdays from 6:30am–10am and Saturdays 8am–11am.