The Aliens Are Coming!

The Extraordinary Science Behind Our Search for Life in the Universe

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Pub Date Nov 01 2016 | Archive Date Sep 20 2016
Experiment, The | The Experiment

Description

Actor and bestselling science writer Ben Miller takes readers to the cutting edge of one of the greatest questions of all: Is there life beyond Earth?
 
For millennia, we have looked up at the stars and wondered whether we are alone in the universe, but in the last few years—as our probes begin to escape the solar system, and our telescopes reveal thousands of Earthlike planets—scientists have taken huge leaps toward an answer. “Forget science fiction,” author Ben Miller writes. “We are living through one of the most extraordinary revolutions in the history of science: the emergent belief of a generation of physicists, biologists, and chemists that we are not alone.”
 
The Aliens Are Coming! is a refreshingly clear, hugely entertaining guide to the search for alien life. Miller looks everywhere for insight, from the Big Bang’s sea of energy that somehow became living matter, to the equations that tell us Earth is not so rare, to the clues bacteria hold to how life started. And he makes the case that our growing understanding of life itself will help us predict whether it exists elsewhere, what it might look like, and when we might find it.
 
Actor and bestselling science writer Ben Miller takes readers to the cutting edge of one of the greatest questions of all: Is there life beyond Earth?
 
For millennia, we have looked up at the stars...

Advance Praise

“[Miller] celebrates the human fascination with the search for extraterrestrial life and grounds it with equally fascinating science. . . . Pop science readers will have fun with this energetic look at the hunt for alien life.”Publishers Weekly, starred review​

“An eclectic and entertaining story, weaving together space exploration, the evolution of life on Earth, the Drake Equation and Egyptian hieroglyphs. That’s nontrivial, as we say in physics, but Ben Miller manages it!” —Brian Cox, author of Why Does E=mc2?

“A witty and informative romp through our search for little green men that says as much about human ingenuity as it does about the aliens we seek.”—Dara O’Briain, comedian

“[Miller] celebrates the human fascination with the search for extraterrestrial life and grounds it with equally fascinating science. . . . Pop science readers will have fun with this energetic look...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781615193653
PRICE $15.95 (USD)

Average rating from 16 members


Featured Reviews

Totally enjoyable romp through the history and possible future of our search for neighbors in the wide, wide skies. The cover doesn't quite convey its seriousness, and the research that clearly went into this. Plus, it's fun to read. And what on Earth does the platypus have to do with extraterrestrials? That's all part of the puzzle. Definitely worth a look.

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The long lost Farscape is still my favorite science fiction series. It's not just the humor, but the existence of a wider variety of alien life. There are lots of aliens who are not hominids. There's Maia, the leviathan, there's that fabulous praying mantis like diagnosan doctor, there's the Hinerians who are amphibians, and the crustacean Pilot. Sure, most species were hominids, because after all it was relatively low-budget, but they at least made an effort to break form.

If only science fiction writers read The Aliens Are Coming by Ben Miller. I thought I was clever and discerning by objecting to all the bipeds and hominids, but he points out all the other variations in possible alien beings that might make even perception difficult, let alone communication. What if they are not carbon-based? What if they are incorporeal, a gaseous creature? What is they operate in a faster time frame than we do, making them imperceptible to us and vice versa? Our ability to search for and identify intelligent life can be limited by our assumptions, so we should look for intelligent life without uncertainty about how it will present itself.

Before I begin this review I must confess my bias. I volunteered my computer's idle time to the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI) since I first learned I could back in 1999 or 2000. I would leave my computer on, with SETI running and proudly pasted by certificates on the wall at work, even if some of my colleagues rolled their eyes. I am fairly certain that there is intelligent life elsewhere in the universe. I am also pretty certain that we have not met any yet.

The Aliens Are Coming is an insouciant, enjoyable and downright funny science book. Ben Miller is not just a science geek, he's also an actor, a comedian and is thus able to make physics and cosmology amusing. This is a fabulous book for someone who wants an introduction to the science of the search for life and to the ideas that are driving that search, the physics that are the foundation on which many of those ideas lie.

You can't help but enjoy this book. It cracks me up at times, for example, when talking about dark matter, he wrote, "Whatever dark matter is, it's definitely the boss of you." Yup.

Much of The Aliens Are Coming may be surprising in its focus on life on Earth, but it's what we know about life here that informs our ideas of life out there. For example, we used to think there were far more narrow limits for the kinds of environments in which we can find life. Now, having found life at the deep bottom of the sea and in the deadly heat of Yellowstone, we know there are forms of weird life, of extremophiles, that can take the heat or the lack of light.

Because of what we know about evolution on Earth, we can make some assumptions about evolution elsewhere. Because we know about gravity, chemistry, biology, language and so on, we can make solid guesses about what kind of planets we need to look for to find life.

This is solid science in The Aliens Are Coming, even some math, but it's explained clearly and logically so that it is not difficult to follow. If you're a physics/astronomy enthusiast, some of the time spent in explanation may set your mind wandering, but this is a foundation-building book–one that lays the groundwork for a solid and science-based understanding of the search for life in the universe - and a powerful antidote to the UFO/Roswell/alien abduction kind of mythology.

I liked The Aliens Are Coming a lot. It's smart, witty and fun. It does not oversimplify or talk down to readers. It does start with the assumption that readers are new to much of the science and walks through the assumptions researchers are making so readers understand that SETI, for example, is not some weirdos waiting for E.T. but serious science searching for signals that may reveal there is someone somewhere out there. And like us, they may be listening.

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Scientific and entertaining look at the possibility of alien life

I enjoyed this book. Author Ben Miller makes use of his physics and comedy backgrounds to tell a thoroughly entertaining story about the universe. Miller explains the science behind our current universe and about the evolution of life. He uses these to describe how and where alien life might develop and how we could possibly make contact with it. This isn’t a fluff discussion about UFOs and little green men; it is a serious discussion of science but told in a clear and at times humorous way. Even the footnotes are worth reading. I recommend this book for anyone interested in science.

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Overall, I thought this was a terrific read. Science explored with a wry sense of humor, along the lines of Mary Roach. Miller had me laughing out loud more than once. My only two complaints are the myriad and lengthy footnotes, and the sections where he delves into formulas that had me time traveling back to high school algebra class.
His approach to the possibility of life on other planets is a novel one (no pun intended), and it has me viewing the night sky in a whole different light.

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A wonderful, funny, exciting guide to SETI and the search for alien life amongst the stairs. The books takes on a journey from the humble beginnings, where a group of scientists had to beg for telescope time, to our current interest in finding alien life. As more discoveries show that there are indeed many habitable earth like planets in the galaxy, the search for alien life has become more than just a maverick hobby.

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I enjoyed this book a lot, and fans of Mary Roach will too. It is slightly more technical than her work, but is the same blend of accessible, interesting science and humor. This is definitely a book anyone curious about the real science of extraterrestrial life would enjoy.

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