Place Where NASA Could Find Aliens

Place Where NASA Could Find Aliens Clapway

What do dishwashers, music festivals and Iowa have in common? They are all places where you can’t find aliens. Well, maybe in Iowa you can, but according to Harvard, they have a specific place that NASA should be searching for life. Not surprisingly, it’s in space.

HARVARD SAYS ALIENS MAY EXIST IN THE MILKY WAY

A leading astronomer has said that aliens are living in giant star clusters on the edge of our Milky Way, and NASA should be able to find them. These groups called “globular clusters“, have been around nearly twice as long as the Sun and Earth. Considering that’s a pretty long time, this means that aliens found there could have evolved to be far more advanced than humans. This isn’t just microorganisms we’re talking about. Think more along the lines of the Earth dominating kind of alien. This bold claim has been made by Harvard professor Dr. Rosanne Di Stefano in her article about star clusters. Now, NASA just has to find a way to those star clusters in order to prove her right.

ANCIENT STARTS HOLD THE KEY TO LIFE

These ancient stars that may hold the key to extraterrestrial life exists in the “halo” region of the Milky Way. NASA doesn’t have the technology yet, but if they ever do get out there, they will find stars old as 10 billion years old. Think about it. The sun is 4.6 billion years old, which has allowed intelligent beings to evolve on Earth. Well, mostly intelligent (insert Donald Trump joke here). If we can get some kind of intelligent life going down here, just think what 10 billion years worth of evolution could do. Even the hardest skeptic has to admit, the possibility is there.

NASA NEEDS LIGHTSPEED

Once NASA invents lightspeed to get out to this area, it will be easy going. Apparently, the stars in this region are so close together that it would take just a month to travel between them. Picture a supergroup of rag-tag space explorers, star-jumping, time traveling and battling hostile aliens.I believe Steve Buscemi has already signed up for the mission. With a group of stars this close, it would certainly be easy to set up multiple civilizations out there. At the moment, only one planet has been identified. The 12.4 billion-year-old Methuselah is an exoplanet that shows some potential. Of course, nothing is known for sure, but if one were to search for aliens, a cluster such as this would be the best place to start.