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"This is a planetary emergency evacuation.
Please remain calm,
and board your space shuttles."
Even though humanity might not have to
leave the Earth in your lifetime,
we should start preparing early on.
Not only could it take centuries
to set up the relocation program,
it would take generations to move
to a potential new home.
That, right there, is Proxima Centauri b,
or just Proxima b.
It's the closest potentially
habitable planet out there.
Its temperatures are in the bearable range,
and it could have just the right
breathable atmosphere.
We only have to get there.
When astronomers started finding planets
outside our Solar System, or exoplanets,
we realized that there are
many worlds out there.
That meant that Earth
doesn't have to be our home forever.
And that we don't have to die with our planet
when the Sun engulfs it
some 5 billion years from now.
Now that we've found over 4,100 exoplanets,
we've learned something rather disappointing.
Not all exoplanets are good for humans to live on.
Most of the worlds we've encountered
are either ice giants like Neptune,
or gas giants like Jupiter and Saturn.
Only 161 of those planets
are terrestrial, like Earth.
And when it comes to sustaining human life,
being terrestrial isn't quite enough.
Proxima b is very promising.
It orbits a red dwarf star called Proxima Centauri
in a system with three stars in it.
Proxima Centauri is small.
It only has between 7.5% and 50% of our Sun's mass.
That's a good thing.
Because the red dwarf Proxima Centauri
is so much smaller than our yellow dwarf Sun,
it burns at a lower temperature.
It takes stars like Proxima Centauri
much longer to burn through all of their hydrogen supply.
Because of that, Proxima Centauri
has a lifetime of trillions of years,
while our Sun has a 10-billion-year expiration term.
That alone makes Proxima b
a good candidate for relocation.
That and the fact that its orbit
lies in Proxima Centauri's habitable zone.
That means there's the potential for liquid water
and comfortable surface temperatures.
If we're lucky, Proxima b would
have an atmosphere that we could breathe.
If it does, the surface temperatures
would be in the range of 30°C (86°F).
I don't know about you, but
I'd move there right now.
I just need to warn you that
there are a few problems.
A trip to Proxima b would be long
and very dangerous.
Proxima b might be the closest
habitable exoplanet we've got, but
that doesn't mean it's close.
The red dwarf star, Proxima Centauri,
is about 4.3 light-years away.
That means that if you could travel at the speed of light,
it would take you 4.3 years to get there.
Nothing we've built so far can reach that kind of speed.
Realistically, a trip to Proxima Centauri in a space shuttle
would take 165,000 years, give or take.
That's right, some of the colonists
would be born in transit.
Some of them would never see the Earth.
Some of them would never see Proxima b.
They'd just live their lives aboard the spaceship
and die in space.
According to some calculations,
98 people would be just enough.
Their descendants would arrive at Proxima b with
enough genetic diversity
to populate the entire planet.
And that's accounting for possible cases of infertility,
inbreeding and sudden deaths.
In those calculations, the crew would be traveling
on something faster than a space shuttle.
Their mission to Proxima b
would take only 6,300 years.
But don't be surprised.
Technology is constantly improving.
Right now, a scientific and technological
program called Breakthrough Initiatives
is looking at how we can get in the neighborhood
of Proxima Centauri within one generation.
Their Project Starshot is working on
an ultra-light, unmanned probe
that would reach the star system in just 20 years.
Now I definitely need to sign up.
But, again, Proxima b is really far away.
It's so far that we can't even see if it has an atmosphere.
It might just happen that
we would arrive at a frozen planet
with surface temperatures of -40°C (-40°F).
And even if it has an atmosphere,
it might not be the right one.
We might still enjoy warm temperatures, but
we'd be doing that in space suits with oxygen tanks.
Or, Proxima b could be tidally locked to Proxima Centauri,
meaning one of the planet's sides would
always face its star,
and the other side would be plunged into darkness.
Space flight itself could bring some unpleasant surprises.
Spending an entire lifetime
in a zero-gravity environment
would lead the crew members to lose
muscle and bone density.
They'd be constantly exposed to space radiation.
Their microbiomes, immune systems and
physiology would all be different from ours.
They wouldn't be the same
kind of humans as we are.
They would change their values and culture.
They might forget all the farming techniques
we'd teach them to sustain themselves
in space and on their new planet.
They might change their mind
about the mission altogether
and just turn their spaceship in a different direction.
Who knows — they might even come back to Earth
and take revenge for all those years
they were forced to spend in space.
If that happens, I'll be asking for a refund.
Sending anyone on a mission like this is a huge risk.
We'd need to design and build a vehicle,
choose the space travelers very carefully,
supply them with all the food and water,
and make sure they could become self-sustaining.
We'd have to design new propulsion,
navigation, hibernation and
life support systems.
And we have no way of knowing
if Proxima b is actually habitable.
Now I don't really feel like going there. Do you?
Maybe a better idea would be
to build a megastructure
somewhere closer to the Solar System.
But that's a story for another What If.