The E wrote:Also, if you insist on this "there are aliens on that rock" nonsense: They would know the state of interplanetary travel in this solar system pretty well. So there's no harm in being a rock because the chances of someone getting a probe on an intercept are nil.
I don't. I'm not in the camp that thinks that 'Ouamuamua is an alien probe. I'm just taking the proposal to its logical extension to make a proof-by-absurd.
(the probe would find that it's a rock)
How do you detect artificiality? What sensors can you pack on a probe that can make an intercept that can give you a definitive answer one way or the other that doesn't leave people who insist on believing that it isn't a rock (which is what it is) wiggle room?
You can't prove that a rock is artificial compared to a naturally-occurring rock. A rock is a rock. There may be specific crystalline alignments and other marks that could point to its creation being a doubtful natural occurrence, but like they say in cosmology, "it's never aliens" and we'd do everything to try and come up with a natural explanation for the occurrence before we blamed aliens.
What I meant was that if the object wasn't actually a rock, but merely pretending to be so, a probe that landed on it might note that it isn't a rock. Its density would be all wrong, it might have far more iron and other ferromagnetic alloys than it should. It might be putting out detectable radiation at close range that can't otherwise be explained.
(this rock was hiding in the way that all space travelling rocks do)
How would you know how significant this rock would be to the people looking at it?
That's the question, isn't it. If you're an alien intellegence trying to get more info on us, do you take this risk?