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Arecibo Observatory Facing Massive Budget Cuts
Posted by
CowboyNeal
on Sat Jul 05, 2008 12:28 PM
from the keeping-the-lights-lit dept.
from the keeping-the-lights-lit dept.
SirLurksAlot writes "Many supporters of the SETI@home project have recently received a message informing them of impending budget cuts for the Arecibo Observatory and asking them to show their support for the project by writing to Congress. The letter also informs supporters that there are currently two bills (Senate bill 2862 sponsored by Senator Hillary Clinton, and a similar House bill, H.R. 3737), which are intended to secure funding for the project. According to The Planetary Society, the current plan for the Arecibo Observatory involves cutting funding by more than 60% from $10.4 million to just $4 million by 2011."
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What? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I support funding Aricebo for use to search for NEO's, but I don't want my tax money going to SETI. I'm sorry, but as cool as it would be to either confirm the 'WOW' signal or find a signal from an ET, it shouldn't be a priority for using tax dollars.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Are you saying that it isn't worthwhile, or that it should be done by the private sector? Because I just don't see how it could exist without government funding given there is no realistic potential for a monetary return on investment.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Because I just don't see how it could exist without government funding given there is no realistic potential for a monetary return on investment.
Philanthropy. There are whole organizations pouring money into Africa. What's their expected return?
Re:What? (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I agree. I read a while back that SETI went through their entire spectrum twice and hasn't found anything yet.
I've also read how over the years, despite the fact that we have begun broadcasting more signals over the years, the Earth has gotten "quieter" in that our signals are more focused and don't travel as far. Even if there was intelligent alien life out there, and even if they broadcast radio signals, it seems unlikely they'd broadcast them far enough for us to pick them up.
I don't want tax dollars g
Re:What? (Score:5, Informative)
The seti receiver is separately and primarily privately funded and operates in a tag-a-long mode so the seti operations don't interfere with other more traditional operations at Arecebo. When there is an observation going on the seti receiver just takes in what-ever the main telescope is looking at slightly off axis; very rarely is the telescope pointed at an object for a specifically seti observation. Additionaly the kinds of signals that Seti finds interesting are generally signals that when shown to be naturaly caused give astronomers decades of research material!
I remember when Pulsars were designated LGMs for litlle Green Men.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What? (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
Profitability of the war in Iraq (Score:4, Interesting)
Meanwhile, the Iraq War has cost the average taxpayer about $12,000 each over the last five years.
If we assume a baseline 100M taxpayers, and an Iraq war cost of 100B a year, then, we're really talking only about $1000 a year on average. Notice, though, that 90% of the taxes in the USA are paid by people making over $250,000 a year, so really, we average stiffs are probably not even paying for the war at all.
Now, let's say that the Iraqis come through and increase their oil production to first 3m bbls/day, and then to 5m / bbls a day, and the benefits of this production increase result in additional 50 billion a year in profits to American companies, PLUS, a reduction in gasoline costs. We can calculate the ultimate profitability of the war based upon a reduction in the price of gasoline per person, knowing that in the USA the per capita consumption of gasoline is about 10 barrels per person per year. Source [statemaster.com], and thus, about 30 barrels per taxpayer per year. So we say at 30 x 45 gets us about 1200 gallons of gas per year per taxpayer. We can thus calculate that if the war in Iraq is victorious, AND, nets a global price reduction of about a $1 / gallon, then, each taxpayer would come out ahead about $200 per year, even if the cost of continuing the war is born indefinitely. If, on the other hand, the USA wins the war and a stable semi-US-friendly government emerges and thus we can withdraw the troops, and Iraq still pumps enough to lower the price of gasoline by a $1 a gallon, then the war would basically pay for itself in about 5 years, and then after that, it would be pure profit for the USA. Hey, imperialism can be profitable, which is why countries do it!
Parent
Mod parent and grandparent down... (Score:4, Insightful)
SETI@home is at the present time entirely funded by donations. Any time SETI@home uses at Arecibo is piggybacked on searching for pulsars or mapping the Galaxy in the 21cm line.
Or are you suggesting that because Arecibo spends any effort on a project you dislike it should be shut down?
Parent
Re:What? (Score:5, Insightful)
Anything that tracks NEOs gives you a return on your tax dollar in that it keeps you aware of any catastrophic threats.
Parent
Re:What? (Score:5, Interesting)
As an honest question, what useful things has Aricebo produced?
How about a Nobel prize? (Amongst a bunch of other excellent bits of radio astronomy, aeronomy, and planetary science).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_B1913+16 [wikipedia.org]
Parent
It has produced massively distributed computing (Score:5, Informative)
Much of basic research does not always produce immediately tangible results. SETI + Aricebo have produced massive distributed computing which is widely used now by many EXTREMELY worthwhile projects (protein folding, cancer research, etc). This is a basic tool now, and I'd say that's pretty valuable and productive.
Just because it isn't directly dumping 200 MPG cars into your lap, or producing a magic fat dissolving drug, doesn't mean that it isn't helping you somehow.
Parent
Re:What? (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, we probably couldn't shoot down an incoming meteoroid, but given enough warning time, we could at least begin an evacuation of the impact zone. Additionally, knowing that a sudden, shock explosion was due to a natural occurrence rather than a terrorist or "rogue state" could help prevent WWII being touched off...
Parent
Perspective (Score:5, Interesting)
Well - kinda (Score:5, Insightful)
The F-22 does stuff TO people, Aricebo does stuff FOR people.
Parent
DANG IT! (Score:3, Funny)
"Many supporters of the SETI@home project have recently received a message..."
And my heart leapt into my throat!
The rest of the article was REALLY a big let-down after that, let me tell you.
Or better yet, don't write Congress (Score:5, Interesting)
We've already had one near-miss, when Hillary Clinton tried to force some budget language funding Arecibo in the weeks before the Puerto Rico primary. She didn't earmark new funding, she just added a mandate that existing funding go there. Oddly enough, the legislation didn't mention which other ground-based program would be cut to free up the funds...
Re:Or better yet, don't write Congress (Score:4, Insightful)
They've actually moved a large fraction of Arecibo's time over to survey efforts: "We'll do the same piece of sky, but with a flux limit 3 times deeper!" Sorry, but there are too many programs with the potential for transformative new discoveries to keep a major observatory open purely for incremental science.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
There is no compelling science case for Arecibo that can't be pursued with other telescopes, especially since the frontier of radio astronomy has mostly moved from sensitivity (requiring big apertures) to resolution (requiring long-baseline arrays), or to shorter mm/submm wavelengths that Arecibo can't handle.
Sorry, but that is not true. Radio astronomy needs improvement in a wide variety of areas in order to tackle the tremendously wide variety of science that is done at radio bands. Examples include sensitivity, field-of-view, dynamic range, image fidelity, resolution, and wavelength coverage. But sensitivity is one of the most important. That is why the SKA is on the table to be the world's next generation decameter/centimeter wave radio telescope. The most important thing it provides is sensitivity (i.e
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Spitzer: Transitional disks. ULIRGs. Exoplanet secondary transits. Star formation, period. Direct imaging of free-floating planetary-mass objects.
See? It's not that hard, even if you don't stray too far outside your (or your colleagues') field of specialization. There really are a lot of important (and sexy) science cases floating around, they just don't really require Arecibo.
"Scientific hedonism" (Score:3, Insightful)
In times of recession the lawmakers get allergic to basic research, which they think is a kind of scientific hedonism. The thought pattern here seems to be that science is a shabby garden run by elitist weirdos. You water this garden with money and then you can pick the new drugs, weapons and consumer electronics growing on its trees. The lawmakers attempt to tidy up this garden in order to improve the yield of goodies by cutting down the trees that don't bear fruit. This can only be harmful in the end, because they don't have a faintest idea about gardening...
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Seti@home was started for several reasons
the SETI project was interesting and computationally amenable to distributed processing
Originally the SETI@home was intended more as a proof of concept rather than the finally goal and it popular success surprised even the SETI team.
boinc was a restructuring of the 1st gen SETI@home software and is designed to be much more modular and versatile framework t