Serbian Astronomical Journal (Jan 2008)

Neocatastrophism and the milky way astrobiological landscape

  • Vukotić B.,
  • Ćirković M.M.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2298/SAJ0876071V
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2008, no. 176
pp. 71 – 79

Abstract

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The number and distribution of habitable planets in the Milky Way is one of the foremost problems of contemporary astrobiological research. We investigate the effects of applying general neocatastrophic paradigm to the evolution of the Galactic Habitable Zone. In this paper, we investigate the limits of simple, 1-dimensional astrobiological models, and consider the role of regulation mechanisms in shapening the 'astrobiological landscape'. We show that the transition from predominantly gradualist to predominantly (neo)catastrophist history of our Galaxy leads to the build-up of large-scale correlations between habitable sites, offering possible keys to such important problems as Carter's 'anthropic' argument and Fermi's paradox. In addition, we consider the possibilities for extending the present class of models into spatially realistic 3-dimensional case via probabilistic cellular automata.

Keywords