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November 19, 1997: Space Exploration - Dr. Michio Kaku
Published 2 years, 3 months ago
Description
Art Bell sits down with theoretical physicist Dr. Michio Kaku of the City University of New York for a wide-ranging conversation about the frontiers of science and the future of space exploration. The discussion begins with NASA's announcement that astronomers have observed a black hole dragging space and time around itself, confirming a 1918 prediction from Einstein's general relativity. Dr. Kaku explains gravity not as a force but as the bending of space itself, using vivid analogies of marbles rolling in funnels and ants walking on crumpled paper.
The conversation turns to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, where Dr. Kaku argues that SETI's approach of scanning single frequencies is fundamentally flawed. He suggests advanced civilizations would use spread spectrum technology to communicate, smearing signals across all frequencies, meaning the galaxy could be full of conversations we simply cannot detect. He introduces the Kardashev scale of civilization types and explains why the transition from Type 0 to Type 1 is the most dangerous period for any civilization, estimating only one in ten makes it through.
Dr. Kaku also discusses the future of propulsion technology, from ramjet fusion engines to the theoretical possibility of monopole-based travel through galactic magnetic fields. He addresses the greenhouse effect, El Nino, and the looming depletion of fossil fuels, advocating for a transition to solar hydrogen energy.
The conversation turns to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, where Dr. Kaku argues that SETI's approach of scanning single frequencies is fundamentally flawed. He suggests advanced civilizations would use spread spectrum technology to communicate, smearing signals across all frequencies, meaning the galaxy could be full of conversations we simply cannot detect. He introduces the Kardashev scale of civilization types and explains why the transition from Type 0 to Type 1 is the most dangerous period for any civilization, estimating only one in ten makes it through.
Dr. Kaku also discusses the future of propulsion technology, from ramjet fusion engines to the theoretical possibility of monopole-based travel through galactic magnetic fields. He addresses the greenhouse effect, El Nino, and the looming depletion of fossil fuels, advocating for a transition to solar hydrogen energy.