So, where are all the Aliens then?
In the summer of 1950, American physicist Enrico Fermi was having a casual conversation with fellow physicists Edward Teller, Herbert York, and Emil Konopinski when they began to discuss the nature of existence and Aliens. With such an expanse of space, suns and planets, the thought that we were alone in the cosmos seemed impossible. While debating the numbers and the data, Fermi threw out the paradox that has bewildered theoretical thought since – ‘So, where are all the Aliens then?’