
EXCLUSIVE Do aliens exist? British astronaut Tim Peake thinks there IS 'complex, intelligent life' beyond Earth - and says we're 'close' to finding it
If aliens exist, surely Tim Peake is one of a select group of humans who have been the closest to them.
The British astronaut spent six months in space between 2015 and 2016, living and working on the International Space Station (ISS), 250 miles above Earth.
Although he didn't have any extraterrestrial encounters while up there, Major Peake said he thinks aliens most likely do exist.
Speaking exclusively to MailOnline, the 53-year-old, from Chichester in Sussex, said Earth is 'actually a pretty small place', relatively speaking.
'When you look at just our own Milky Way galaxy with 200 billion stars, that's one of a number of hundreds of billions of galaxies that we can see,' he told MailOnline.
'So the chances are that there is complex, intelligent life elsewhere in the universe.'
In April, scientists revealed that a faraway planet called K2-18b has large quantities of chemicals in its atmosphere that are suggestive of living organisms.
Although the findings are to be confirmed, Major Peake said we are likely close to finding the definitive proof that aliens do exist.
'We know that the universe is abundant with water, it's abundant with the seeds of life,' the British spaceman told MailOnline.
'We've discovered so many thousands of exoplanets in our neighbourhood which are orbiting stars, many of which have very good signs of potential habitability with liquid oceans for example.
'Within the next five to 10 years, using the James Webb Space Telescope for example, we could even get to the situation where scientists feel confident enough to be able to say that they found signs of biological life on another planet.'
'It might be small bacteria, it might be algae, giving off some signs of biological processes.
'But that's the kind of thing that we're getting close to be able to say for sure.'
During his time on the ISS between December 2015 and June 2016, Major Peake completed the first British spacewalk, took part in 250 research experiments, and even managed to remotely run the London Marathon.
On January 15, 2016, he participated in the first spacewalk outside the ISS by a British astronaut with the dazzling blue of the Earth beneath him.
The historic event lasted nearly five hours, although it was cut short when American colleague Tim Kopra had water building up in his helmet.
During his time on the ISS, he became the first person to complete a spacewalk while sporting a Union flag on his shoulder. Pictured, prior to his spacewalk, January 14, 2016
Nearly a decade later, Major Peake reflects on the experience as 'very surreal' and difficult to put into words'.
'The feeling is a mixture of appreciating how remote and isolated our planet is,' he told MailOnline.
'I hesitate to use the word fragile because actually the planet's pretty robust – it's survived 4 billion years; it's got another 4 billion to go before the sun will cause its demise.
'But what you appreciate from space is not necessarily its fragility but its remoteness and the level of isolation against this vast black backdrop of the universe.
'And it strikes you that that is home – that's the only planet we've got to live on.
'On the one hand it makes you feel fairly small and insignificant but on the other hand it does make you appreciate that we are incredibly special.'
Major Peake spoke to MailOnline ahead of this summer's Goodwood Festival of Speed near his native Chichester where he's ambassador of the Future Lab exhibition showcasing the technologies of tomorrow.
He's already given the biggest indication yet that he's about to make a spectacular return into orbit after nearly a decade back on Earth.
Last year, he was confirmed as 'strategic advisor' for a mission led by US firm Axiom Space to send an all-UK team into space for the first time.
The trip will certainly require a seasoned astronaut to act as 'commander' akin to the captain on a ship – with Major Peake the most obvious contender.
Although he couldn't confirm whether he would indeed be commander of the mission, he said going to space is still 'always of interest'.
'I'm an astronaut who's fit and able to fly to space and command a mission,' he told MailOnline. 'So absolutely I'm willing and ready to command the mission and fly to space.'
Meet the astronauts tipped to fly into space as part of the all-UK mission with Tim Peake
Three Britons – including the world's first ever 'parastronaut' – are among the European Space Agency's first new cohort of astronauts in almost 15 years.
In November 2022, John McFall, Rosemary Coogan and Meganne Christian were named in a class of 17 men and women chosen from a whopping 22,523 applicants.
They will be hoping to follow in the footsteps of current British astronaut Tim Peake, who spent six months on the International Space Station (ISS) almost a decade ago.
Here's a closer look at the three adventurers, who may be joined by Major Peake himself on a trip to the ISS.
John McFall
Britain's John McFall was named as the world's first 'parastronaut' in November 2022
John McFall, 44, is a British father-of-three, surgical trainee and Paralympic medallist.
Originally from Frimley in Surrey, Mr McFall had his right leg amputated following a motorcycle accident in Thailand in 2000.
He was fitted with a prosthesis and is now working with the European Space Agency (ESA) to investigate how such a disability could affect a stint in space.
He won a bronze medal at the 2008 Paralympic Games in Beijing among other honours, before retiring to take up his medical studies at Cardiff University.
He has put his medical career on hold to work with ESA and follow his 'passion for science and life'.
Rosemary Coogan
Rosemary Coogan, 33, is an astrophysicist originally from Belfast in Northern Ireland.
She attended school in Brighton and gained two master's degrees from the University of Durham.
One of these focused on physics, mathematics, computer programming and astronomy, and the other on gamma-ray emission from black holes.
Coogan moved to the University of Sussex as a doctoral researcher, studying galaxy evolution and the activity of active galactic nuclei.
From a young age, she spent several weeks a year away from home onboard military training vessels and land bases as a Cadet Petty Officer with the Sea Cadets from 2002 to 2009.
Meganne Christian
Meganne Christian, 37, is a materials scientist graduate from the University of New South Wales in Sydney.
She was born in Pembury in Kent but moved to Australia at a young age and attended Illawarra Grammar School in Wollongong.
She said she was inspired to become an astronaut when one visited her school.
The materials scientist has worked at the National Research Council of Italy in Bologna and as a researcher at Concordia Station in Antarctica, one of the most remote places on Earth.
According to ESA, Meganne received several national awards for outstanding research in the field of engineering and industrial chemistry.

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