Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
References
Fermi L (1954) Atoms in the Family (Chicago: University of Chicago Press)
Segré E (1970) Enrico Fermi: Physicist (Chicago: University of Chicago Press)
Poundstone W (1988) Labyrinths of Reason (London: Penguin)
Rapoport A (1967) Escape from paradox. Scientific American 217 (1) 50–6
Williamson T (1994) Vagueness (London: Routledge)
Gardner M (1969) The Unexpected Hanging and Other Mathematical Diversions (New York: Simon and Schuster)
Mermin N D (1990) Boojums all the Way Through (Cambridge: CUP)
Gribbin J (1996) Schrædinger’s Kittens (London: Phoenix Press)
Einstein A, Podolsky B and Rosen N (1935) Can a quantum-mechanical description of physical reality be considered complete? Physical Review 41 777–80
Harrison E (1987) Darkness at Night (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press)
Jones E M (1985) Where is everybody? An account of Fermi’s question. Preprint LA-10311-MS. (Los Alamos, NM: Los Alamos National Laboratory). A more easily located version of this reference appeared in the August 1985 issue of Physics Today pp 11–3.)
Drake F and Sobel D (1991) Is Anyone Out There? (London: Simon and Schuster)
Lytkin V, Finney B and Alepko L (1995) Tsiolkovsky, Russian cosmism and extraterrestrial intelligence. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 36 369–76
Viewing D (1975) Directly interacting extra-terrestrial technological communities. J. Brit. Interplanetary Soc. 28 735–44
Hart M H (1975) An explanation for the absence of extraterrestrials on Earth. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 16 128–35
Douglas (1977) The absence of extraterrestrials on Earth. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 18 157–8
Tipler F J (1980) Extraterrestrial intelligent beings do not exist. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 21 267–81
Brin G D (1983) The “great silence”: the controversy concerning extraterrestrial intelligent life. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 24 283–309
Brin G D (1985) Just how dangerous is the Galaxy? Analog 105 (7) 80–95
Zuckerman B and Hart M H (eds) (1995) Extraterrestrials — Where Are They? (Cambridge: CUP)
Aczel A (1998) Probability 1: Why There Must be Intelligent Life in the Universe (New York: Harcourt Brace)
Smolin L (1997) The Life of the Cosmos (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson)
Gould S J (1985) seti and the wisdom of Casey Stengel. In The Flamingo’s Smile (London: Penguin)
Reinganum M R (1986-7) Is time travel impossible? A financial proof. J. of Portfolio Management 13(1) 10–2
Tipler F J (1994) The Physics of Immortality: Modern Cosmology, God and the Resurrection of the Dead (New York: Anchor)
McPhee J (1973) The Curve of Binding Energy (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Lanoutte W et al (1994) Genius in the Shadows (Chicago: University of Chicago Press)
Hall M D and Connors W A (2000) Captain Edward J. Ruppelt: Summer of the Saucers (Albuquerque, NM: Rose Press)
Sheaffer R (1995) An examination of claims that extraterrestrial visitors to Earth are being observed. In Zuckerman B and Hart M H (eds) Extraterrestrials: Where Are They? (Cambridge: CUP)
Story R (1976) The Space Gods Revealed: A Close Look at the Theories of Erich von Däniken (New York: Barnes and Noble)
Freitas R A Jr and Valdes F (1980) A search for natural or artificial objects located at the Earth-Moon libration points Icarus 42 442–7. Also see Freitas R A Jr (1983) If they are here, where are they? Observational and search considerations. Icarus 55 337–43
Lawton A T and Newton S J (1974) Long delayed echoes: the search for a solution. Spaceflight 6 181–7
Lunan D (1974) Man and the Stars (London: Souvenir Press)
Sheehan W (1996) The Planet Mars: A History of Observation and Discovery (Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press)
Hoagland R C (1987) The Monuments of Mars (Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books)
Hancock G, Bauval R and Grigsby J (1998) The Mars Mystery (London: Michael Joseph)
Gardner M (1985) The great stone face and other nonmysteries. Skeptical Inquirer 9 (4)
Papagiannis M D (1978) Are we all alone, or could they be in the asteroid belt? Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 19 236–51
Stephenson D G (1978) Extraterrestrial cultures within the Solar System? Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 19 277–81
Freitas R A Jr (1983) The search for extraterrestrial artifacts (seta) J. Brit. Interplanetary Soc. 36 501–6. See also Freitas R A Jr (1985) There is no Fermi paradox. Icarus 62 518–20
Yokoo H and Oshima T (1979) Is bacteriophage phi X174 dna a message from an extraterrestrial intelligence? Icarus 38 148–53
Nakamura H (1986) SV40 DNA: a message from Epsilon Eridani? Acta Astronautica 13 573–8
Arrhenius S A (1908) Worlds in the Making (New York: Harper and Row)
Crick F H C and Orgel L E (1973) Directed panspermia. Icarus 19 341–6. A fuller account is given in Crick F H C (1981) Life Itself (New York: Simon and Schuster)
Ball J A (1973) The zoo hypothesis. Icarus 19 347–9
Deardorf J W (1986) Possible extraterrestrial strategy for Earth. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 27 94–101; Deardorf J W (1987) Examination of the embargo hypothesis as an explanation for the Great Silence. J. Brit. Interplanetary Soc. 40 373–9
Carey S S (1997) A Beginner’s Guide to Scientific Method (Stamford, CT: Wadsworth)
Fogg M J (1987) Temporal aspects of the interaction among the first galactic civilizations: the “interdict hypothesis.” Icarus 69 370–84
Fogg M J (1988) Extraterrestrial intelligence and the interdict hypothesis. Analog 108 (10) 62–72
Asimov I (1981) Extraterrestrial Civilizations (London: Pan)
Newman W I and Sagan C (1981) Galactic civilizations: population dynamics and interstellar diffusion. Icarus 46 293–327
Baxter S (2000) The planetarium hypothesis: a resolution of the Fermi paradox. J. Brit. Interplanetary Soc. 54 210–6
Deutsch D (1998) The Fabric of Reality (London: Penguin). See also Tipler F J (1994) The Physics of Immortality (New York: Anchor)
Smolin L (1997) The Life of the Cosmos (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson)
Harrison E (1995) The natural selection of universes. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 36 193–203
The Voyager Project Page is at http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov
The JPL site is at http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/index.cfm
Webb S (1999) Measuring the Universe (London: Springer UK)
French A P (1968) Special Relativity (San Francisco: Norton)
Bernal J D (1969) The World, The Flesh and the Devil (Indiana: Indiana University Press). This is reprint of an earlier edition.
Bova B (ed) (1973) The Science Fiction Hall of Fame vol 2A (New York: Doubleday)
Anderson P (2000) Tau Zero (London: Orion). This is a re-issue of a classic book in the sf Collector’s Edition.
Hemry J G (2000) Interstellar navigation or getting where you want to go and back again (in one piece). Analog 121 (11) 30–7
Mallove E F and Matloff G L (1989) The Starflight Handbook (Wiley: New York)
Crawford I A (1995) Interstellar travel: a review. In Zuckerman B and Hart M H (eds) Extraterrestrials: Where Are They? (Cambridge: CUP)
Bussard R W (1960) Galactic matter and interstellar flight. Astronautica Acta 6 179–94
Dyson F J (1982) Interstellar propulsion systems. In Zuckerman B and Hart M H (eds) Extraterrestrials: Where Are They? (Cambridge: CUP)
Forward R L (1984) Roundtrip interstellar travel using laser-pushed lightsails. J. of Spacecraft and Rockets 21 187–95
Ulam S M (1976) Adventures of a Mathematician (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press)
Ulam S M (1958) On the possibility of extracting energy from gravitational systems by navigating space vehicles. Report LA-2219-MS. (Los Alamos, NM: Los Alamos National Laboratory). See also Dyson F J (1963) Gravitational machines. In Interstellar Communication ed. A G W Cameron (New York: Benjamin)
Forward R L (1990) The negative matter space drive. Analog 110 (9) 59–71
Alcubierre M (1994) The warp drive: hyper-fast travel within general relativity. Classical and Quantum Gravity 11 L73–7
Krasnikov S V (2000) A traversible wormhole. Phys. Rev. D 62 084028
Van Den Broeck C (1999) A “warp drive” with more reasonable total energy requirements. Classical and Quantum Gravity 16 3973–9
Lamoreaux S K (1997) Demonstration of the Casimir force in the 0.6 to 6 μm range. Physical Review Letters 78 5–8
Haisch B, Rueda A and Puthoff H E (1994) Beyond E=mc 2. The Sciences 34 (6) 26–31. See also Puthoff H E (1996) seti, the velocity of light limitation, and the Alcubierre warp drive: an integrating overview. Physics Essays 9 156
Cox L J (1976) An explanation for the absence of extraterrestrials on Earth. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 17 201–8
Jones E M (1975) Colonization of the Galaxy. Icarus 28 421–2; and Jones E M (1981) Discrete calculations of interstellar migration and settlement. Icarus 46 328–36
Jones E M (1995) Estimates of expansion timescales. In Zuckerman B and Hart M H (eds) Extraterrestrials: Where Are They? (Cambridge: CUP)
Newman W I and Sagan C (1981) Galactic civilizations: population dynamics and interstellar diffusion. Icarus 46 293–327
Crawford I A (2000) Where are they? Scientific American 283 (7) 28–33
Landis G A (1998) The Fermi paradox: an approach based on percolation theory J. Brit. Interplanetary Soc. 51 163–6
Stauffer D (1985) Introduction to Percolation Theory (London: Taylor and Francis)
Bracewell R N (1960) Communication from superior galactic communities. Nature 186 670–1
Rood R T and Trefil J S (1981) Are We Alone? (New York: Charles Scribner’s)
Dyson F J (1960) Search for artificial sources of infrared radiation. Science 131 1667
Cernan E and Davis D (1999) The Last Man on the Moon (New York: St Martin’s Press)
Zuckerman B (1985) Stellar evolution: motivation for mass interstellar migration. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 26 56–9
Clarke A C (1956) The City and the Stars (New York: New American Library)
Jugaku J and Nishimura S E (1991) A search for Dyson spheres around late-type stars in the iras catalog. In Heidemann J and Klein M J (eds) Bioastronomy: The Search for Extraterrestrial Life (Lectures Notes in Physics) 390 (Berlin: Springer)
Mauersberger R et al. (1996) seti at the spin-flip line frequency of positronium. Astronomy and Astrophysics 306 141–4
Whitmire D P and Wright D P (1980) Nuclear waste spectrum as evidence of technological extraterrestrial civilizations. Icarus 42 149–56
Sullivan W (1964) We Are Not Alone (London: Pelican)
Bahcall J N and Davis R (2000) The evolution of neutrino astronomy. CERN Courier 40 (6) 17–21
Cocconi G and Morrison P (1959) Searching for interstellar communications. Nature 184 844–6
Kardashev N S (1979) Optimal wavelength region for communication with extraterrestrial intelligence —λ=1.5 mm. Nature 278 28–30
Mauersberger R et al (1996) seti at the spin-flip line frequency of positronium. Astronomy & Astrophysics 306 141–4
Kuiper T B H and Morris M (1977) Searching for extraterrestrial civilizations. Science 196 616–21
The Big Ear site is at http://www.bigear.org/wow.htm
Schwartz R N and Townes C H (1961) Interstellar and interplanetary communication by optical masers. Nature 190 205–8
Betz A (1986) A directed search for extraterrestrial laser signals. Acta Astronautica 13 623–9
For information on optical seti visit http://www.coseti.org/
The seti Institute is at http://www.seti-inst.edu/
For information on Project beta visit http://seti.planetary.org/
For information on Project Argus visit http://seti1.setileague.org/homepg.html
LePage A J (2000) Where they could hide. Scientific American 283 (7) 30–1
Cohen N and Hohlfeld R (2001) A newer, smarter SETI strategy. Sky and Telescope 101 (4) 50–1. See also Hohlfeld R and Cohen C (2000) Optimum SETI search strategy based on properties of a flux-limited catalogue. SETI beyond Ozma (Mountain View, CA: SETI Press)
Drake F D and Sagan C (1973) Interstellar radio communication and the frequency selection problem. Nature 245 257–8
Gott J R (1995) Cosmological SETI frequency standards. In Zuckerman B and Hart M H (eds) Extraterrestrials: Where Are They? (Cambridge: CUP)
The SETI@home site is at http://www.SetiAtHome.ssl.berkeley.edu/
Lazio T J W, Tarter J and Backus P R (2002) Megachannel extraterrestrial assay candidates: no transmissions from intrinsically steady sources. Astronomical Journal 124 (1) to be published
For information on Encounter 2001 visit http://www.encounter2001.com
Wigner E (1960) The unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics in the natural sciences. Communications in Pure and Applied Mathematics 13 (1).
Budiansky S (1998) If a Lion Could Talk (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson)
Hersh R (1997) What is Mathematics Really? (Oxford: OUP); and Dehaene S (1997) The Number Sense: How the Mind Creates Mathematics (Oxford: OUP)
Chaitin G J (1997) The Limits of Mathematics (Berlin: Springer)
Minsky M (1985) Communication with alien intelligence. In Extraterrestrials: Science and Alien Intelligence E Regis (ed) (Cambridge: CUP)
Freudenthal H (1960) Design of a Language for Cosmic Intercourse (Amsterdam: North Holland)
Caves C M and Drummond P D (1994) Quantum limits on bosonic communication rates. Rev. Mod. Phys. 66 481–537
Lachman M, Newman M E J and Moore C (1999) The physical limits of communication, or why any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from noise. http://www.santafe.edu/sfi/publications/wpabstract/199907054
D’Imperio M E (1978) The Voynich Manuscript — An Elegant Enigma (Laguna Hills, CA: Aegean Park Press)
Bester A (2000) The Stars My Destination (London: Orion). This is a reissue of the 1956 novel.
Clarke A C (1953) Childhood’s End (New York: Del Rey)
Tegmark M and Wheeler J A (2001) 100 years of the quantum. Scientific American 284 (2) 68–75
Everett H (1957) “Relative state” formulation of quantum mechanics. Reviews of Modern Physics 29 454–62
Turco R P et al (1983) Nuclear winter: global consequences of multiple nuclear explo sions. Science 222 1283–97
Miller Jr W M (1997) A Canticle for Liebowitz (New York: Bantam). This is a re-issue of the original 1959 novel.
Drexler K E (1986) Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology (New York: Doubleday)
Freitas R A Jr (2000) Some limits to global ecophagy by biovorous nanoreplicators, with public policy recommendations. (Available from http://www.foresight.org/NanoRev/Ecophagy.html).
See Matthews R (1999) A black hole ate my planet. New Scientist 28 August pp 24–7
Jaffe R C et al (2000) Review of speculative “disaster scenarios” at RHIC. Rev. Mod. Phys. 72 1125–40
Hut P and Rees M J (1983) How stable is our vacuum? Nature 302 508–9
Bird D J (1995) Detection of a cosmic ray with a measured energy well beyond the expected spectral cutoff due to cosmic microwave radiation. Astrophysical J. 441 144–51
Gott III J R (1993) Implications of the Copernican principle for our future prospects. Nature 363 315–319. For a simplified account see: Gott III J R (1997) A grim reckoning. New Scientist 15 November pp 36–9
Buch P, Mackay A L and Goodman S N (1994) Future prospects discussed. Nature 358 106–8
Leslie J (1996) The End of the World (London: Routledge)
Vinge V (1993) VISION-21 Symposium (NASA Lewis Research Center)
Moravec H (1988) Mind Children (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press)
Seale J R (1984) Minds, Brain and Programs (Cambridge, MA; Harvard University Press); Penrose R (1989) The Emperor’s New Mind (Oxford: OUP)
Knuth D E (1984) The T E Xbook (Reading, MA: Addison Wesley)
Asimov I (1969) Nightfall and Other Stories (New York: Doubleday)
Hart M H (1995) Atmospheric evolution, the Drake equation and DNA: sparse life in an infinite universe. In Zuckerman B and Hart M H (eds) Extraterrestrials: Where Are They? (Cambridge: CUP)
Wesson P S (1990) Cosmology, extraterrestrial intelligence, and a resolution of the Fermi-Hart paradox. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 31 161–70
Ward P D and Brownlee D (1999) Rare Earth (New York: Copernicus)
Feinberg G and Shapiro R (1980) Life Beyond Earth (New York: Morrow)
Asimov I (ed) (1971) Where Do We Go From Here? (New York: Doubleday)
Mayr E (1995) A critique of the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. Bioastronomy News 7 (3)
Carter B (1974) Large number coincidences and the anthropic principle in cosmology. In Confrontation of Cosmological Theories with Observation ed. M S Longair (Dordrecht: Reidel)
Barrow J D and Tipler F J (1986) The Anthropic Cosmological Principle (Oxford: OUP)
Livio M (1999) How rare are extraterrestrial civilizations, and when did they emerge? Astrophysical J. 511 429–31
Taylor S R (1998) Destiny or Chance (Cambridge: CUP)
For news on extrasolar planets visit http://www.obspm.fr/encycl/encycl.html
Fischer D A et al. (2002) A second planet orbiting 47 Ursae Majoris. Astrophysical J. 564 1028–34
McBreen B and Hanlon L (1999) Gamma-ray bursts and the origin of chondrules and planets. Astronomy & Astrophysics 351 759–65
Dole S H (1964) Habitable Planets for Man (New York: Blaisdell)
Dole S H and Asimov I (1964) Planets for Man (New York: Random House)
Hart H M (1978) The evolution of the atmosphere of the Earth. Icarus 33 23–39; Hart H M (1979) Habitable zones about main sequence stars. Icarus 37 351–7
Kasting J F, Reynolds R T and Whitmire D P (1992) Habitable zones around main sequence stars. Icarus 101 108–28
Gonzalez G, Brownlee D and Ward P D (2001) Refuges for life in a hostile universe. Scientific American 285(4) 60–7
Morbidelli A, Chambers J, Lunine J I, Petit J M, Robert F, Valsecchi G B and Cyr K E (2000) Source regions and timescales for the delivery of water on Earth. Meteoritics and Planetary Science 35 1309–20
Cramer J G (1986) The pump of evolution. Analog 106(1) 124–7
Annis J (1999) An astrophysical explanation of the great silence. J. Brit. Interplanetary Soc. 52 19
Asimov I (ed) (1972) The Hugo Winners, Volumes 1 and 2 (New York: Doubleday)
Harland W B and Rudwick M J S (1964) The great infra-Cambrian glaciation. Scientific American 211 (sn2) 28–36
Hoffman P F and Schrag D P (2000) Snowball Earth. Scientific American 282 (1) 68–75
Hoffman P F, Kaufman A J, Halverson G P and Schrag D P (1998) A Neoproterozoic Snowball Earth. Science 281 1342–6
Kirschvink J L (1992) Late proterozoic low-latitude global glaciation: the Snowball Earth. In The Proterozoic Biosphere ed. J W Schopf and C Klein (Cambridge: CUP)
Raup D (1990) Extinction: Bad Genes or Bad Luck? (New York: Newton)
Gould S J (1986) Wonderful Life (New York: Norton)
Alvarez L et al (1980) Extra-terrestrial cause for the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction. Science 208 1094–108
Enever J G (1966) Giant meteor impact. Analog 77 (3) 62–84
Alvarez Q (1997) T-Rex and the Crater of Doom (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press)
Leakey R and Lewin R (1995) The Sixth Extinction (New York: Doubleday)
Walker J, Hays P and Kasting J (1981) A negative feedback mechanism for the longterm stabilization of the Earth’s surface temperature. J. Geophys. Res. 86 9776–82
Comins N F (1993) What if the Moon Didn’t Exist? (New York: Harper Collins)
Woese C R, Kandler O and Wheelis M L (1990) Towards a natural system of organisms: proposal for the domains Archaea, Bacteria, and Eucarya. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 87 4576–9
Kauffman S (1995) At Home in the Universe (London: Viking)
Hartl D L and Jones E W (1998) Genetics: Principles and Analysis (New York: Jones and Bartlett)
Watson J D et al (1997) Molecular Biology of the Gene (4th edn) (Reading, MA: Benjamin/Cummings)
Sorrell H W (1997) Interstellar grains as amino acid factories and the origin of life. Astrophysics and Space Science 253 27–41
Thomas P J, Chyba C F and McKay C P (eds) (1997) Comets and the Origin and Evolution of Life (New York: Springer)
Hart M H (1980) N is very small. In Strategies for the Search for Life in the Universe (Boston: Reidel) pp 19–25
Clark S (2000) Life On Other Worlds And How To Find It (London: Springer/Praxis)
Jakosky B (1998) The Search for Life On Other Planets (Cambridge: CUP)
Smith J M and Szathmáary E (1999) The Origins of Life (Oxford: OUP)
de Duve C (1995) Vital Dust (New York: Basic Books)
Cassen P, Reynolds R T and Peale S J (1979) Is there liquid water on Europa? Geophysical Research Letters 6 731–4
Kovach R L and Chyba C F (2001) Seismic detectability of a subsurface ocean on Europa. Icarus 150 279–87
Fortes A D (2000) Exobiological implications of a possible ammonia-water ocean inside Titan. Icarus 146 444–52
Knoll A H and Carroll S (1999) Early animal evolution: emerging views from comparative biology and geology. Science 284 2129–37
Boesch C and Boesch H (1984) Mental map in wild chimpanzees: an analysis of hammer transports for nut cracking. Primates 25 160–70
Boesch C and Boesch H (1990) Tool use and tool making in wild chimpanzees. Filia Primatologica 54 86–99
Visalberghi E and Trinca L (1989) Tool use in capuchin monkeys: distinguishing between performing and understanding. Primates 30 511–21
Chevalier-Skolnikoff S and Liska J (1993) Tool use by wild and captive elephants. Animal Behavior 46 209–19
Calvin W H (1996) How Brains Think (New York: Basic Books)
Gibson K R and Ingold T (eds) (1993) Tools, Language and Cognition in Human Evolution (Cambridge: CUP)
Griffin D R Animal Minds (Chicago: Chicago University Press)
Ovchinnikov I V et al (2000) Molecular analysis of Neanderthal dna from the northern Caucasus. Nature 404 490–3
Höoss M (2000) Ancient dna: Neanderthal population genetics. Nature 404 453–4
Tattersall I (2000) Once we were not alone. Scientific American 282 (1) 56–62
Tattersall I (1998) Becoming Human (Oxford: OUP)
Schick K D and Toth N (1993) Making Silent Stones Speak: Human Evolution and the Dawn of Technology (New York: Simon and Schuster)
Leakey R (1994) The Origin of Humankind (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson)
Kohn M (1999) As We Know It (London: Granta)
Sieveking A (1979) The Cave Artists (London: Thames and Hudson)
Quiring R et al (1994) Homology of the eyeless gene of Drosophila to the small eye in mice and aniridia in humans. Science 265 785–9
Halder G et al (1995) Induction of ectopic eyes by targeted expression of the eyeless gene in Drosophila. Science 267 1788–92
Rogers L J (1997) Minds of their Own (Boulder, CA: Westview)
Olson E C (1988) N and the rise of cognitive intelligence on Earth. Quarterly J. Royal Astronomical Soc. 29 503–9
Pinker S (1994) The Language Instinct (London: Allen Lane)
Lai C S L et al (2001) A forkhead-domain gene is mutated in a severe speech and language disorder. Nature 413 519–23
Asimov I (1984) Asimov’s New Guide to Science (New York: Basic Books)
Lines M E (1986) A Number For Your Thoughts (Bristol: Adam Hilger)
Gould S J (1996) Life’s Grandeur (London: Cape)
Monod J (1971) Chance and Necessity (London: Collins)
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2002 Praxis Publishing Ltd.
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
(2002). References. In: If the Universe is Teeming with Aliens... Where is Everybody?. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/0-387-21739-8_8
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/0-387-21739-8_8
Publisher Name: Springer, New York, NY
Print ISBN: 978-0-387-95501-8
Online ISBN: 978-0-387-21739-0
eBook Packages: Springer Book Archive