God's final argument, or how I saved the world.
Aliens are just that.
Introduction:
There are some things astronomers prefer not to publicize. Not because they hide them – they just don't think about them.
That's what happens when you look at photos of supernova explosions, not through the lens of textbooks, but with your own eyes…
Chapter 1: My discovery. Well, like mine, allowed to me.
Zabolotsky's Question and Answer, or Zabolotsky's Question. ( Fermi analogy)
If globular star clusters, according to astronomers, are one of the most uncomfortable places for life, much less intelligent life and here's the thing, there is no interstellar gas in globular star clusters and astronomers admit they don't know why this is so.
Now we look at the place where we live and we find out that, according to the same astronomers, the neighborhood of the solar system is a pretty dusty place, lots of interstellar gas. Well, you can look at the Milky Way, the naked eye can see giant dense areas of cold clouds of gas, they are, according to scientists
in the disk of our galaxy about 5 thousand to 1 million solar masses.
So, globular star clusters no life, no dust (gas), look out the window, there is life, and intelligent, look in the sky dust (gas) is very much. Conclusion, dust, interstellar gas is a trace, a by-product, a marker accompanying intelligent life. The cosmos is not silent, it is shouting, often in matte about intelligent life.
Once again, briefly.
Globular star clusters no life, no dust (gas), the neighborhood of the solar system, for example, a volume of 1000 light years, there is intelligent life, there is dust (gas).
We can see with the naked eye traces of intelligent life in the Milky Way (our galaxy) with telescopes in the Magellanic clouds, in the disks of other galaxies, and in some galaxies visible from the edge
interstellar gas is expanding downward upward in the photo (or rather both sides of the galaxy disk edge)
so the disk of the galaxy is said to be teeming with intelligent life.
It should be noted that there is no dust even in some dwarf galaxies, for example, the satellite of our galaxy dwarf galaxy Leo-I, or Leo A is almost devoid of interstellar medium, the stellar body is visible, but there is no interstellar gas. And at the same time we see dwarf galaxies with masses of interstellar gas. And astronomers admit that they don't know why this is so. And the explanation is that intelligent life hasn't had time to get to a dwarf galaxy with no interstellar gas. The distances are great.