Okay, yeah, I’m familiar with the argument. I’m not alone in being unconvinced, though. There’s a lot of exoplanets, including rocky ones around very old stars. Honestly, I felt assuming just a billion years of potential alien arrival was conservative.
There is also probability that milkyway had an active center in early days that kept things nice and sterile.
I don’t know enough about the radiation one of those galaxies produce to comment on whether it could be sterilising. A thick enough atmosphere can block pretty much anything, though.
Okay, yeah, I’m familiar with the argument. I’m not alone in being unconvinced, though. There’s a lot of exoplanets, including rocky ones around very old stars. Honestly, I felt assuming just a billion years of potential alien arrival was conservative.
Fairly unrelated to this discussion, but I’ll link it because it’s cool: there’s a detectable echo of radiation from our galaxy being more active just a couple centuries ago, at least momentarily.
I don’t know enough about the radiation one of those galaxies produce to comment on whether it could be sterilising. A thick enough atmosphere can block pretty much anything, though.