Explaining SETI 100
Lisa wrote to us about
an interview with Brian McConnell, the author of a new SETI book, who talks about how the search has touched many different scientific disciplines, and has spawned improvements in astronomy, computing, and wireless communications.
Famous Calvin and Hobbes quote: (Score:1)
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:2)
We aliens from fr5xg27hYarrhtzzz.
We send messages by post account anonymous coward on slashdot interspace message port.
Nobody replys to us.
Perhaps humans think we be inferior life form.
Our friends from 31337 system have same problem.
Re:"Ancient Astronauts" (Score:2)
Re:busy saying nothing (Score:2)
Also, about the changing of the conditions: you have to remember that we are talking about an entire planet here, over millions of years. As long as the conditions aren't overly esoteric, it is a good bet they existed somewhere on the planet sometime in the past. If it's too hot in an area, let the continent move farther north, or let an earthquake expose some minerals not normally found on the Earth's surface, or have the area form on the top of a mountain with lower pressure, or the bottom of the ocean under great pressure.
From what I can tell, the sience was there all along, everybody just failed to notice it.
Of course this is all IMHO.
Down that path lies madness. On the other hand, the road to hell is paved with melting snowballs.
Re:Forget the time lag (Score:2)
What if someone 100 light years was to pick up a transmission that left earth 100 years ago? What would it be...not "First Post", but probably some very weak radio program - if even that (though I feel bad for them when Erkel gets there).
Besides if we do find a signal, it gives us a target to go visit when we do get to interstellar travel.
A review of "Beyond Contact" (Score:2)
Danny.
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:5)
Poor justification (Score:1)
You can't justify SETI by its technological spinoffs; it's like justifying the entire US space programme by Teflon(r) or the whole of Particle Physics by the WWW.
In all these cases it is likely that the same amount of money invested in more directed research would have produced more and better tangible results (in the short term, anyway..).
In my opinion, pure scientific research should be justified only on its own merits. (And, incidentally, I think that SETI is a complete waste of money and clock cycles - spend the money on building warp drives, and your CPU time on "curing cancer". :-) )
Re:Help me understand... (Score:1)
Re:Poor justification (Score:1)
Contact - favorite SETI book (Score:2)
A SETI IPO? (Score:2)
(*)The University of Colorado holds the week-long World Affairs Symposium each spring in Boulder. It assembles a couple hundred scientists, artists, policy makers and philosophers into 200 publicly open dicussion panels and workshops over the week.
SETI as "open source" science (Score:3)
SETI has been an orphan of official goverment research funding. Investigators would cop a few hours here and there on radio telescopes. It finally garnered a few tenths of a percent of the NASA budget at one time, but was perodically the butt of "mad-science" jokes in Congress and finally terminated. However, it is as strong as ever from private individual funding, typically from computer entrepenuers such as Hewlitt and Paul Allen. University chip R&D project prototype new chip designs for SETI's insatiable signal processing needs.
SETI has also spawned the worlds largest hyper-computer and public-donated computing resource. At last count there about 2.4 million SETI@home screen savers out there, diligently searching for spectral peaks in small chunks of radio recordings.
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:1)
No, what's in the bible is stories which were handed down as oral tradition for centuries before being written down. That's hardly evidence. Now the discovery of a layer of radioactive dust under the present-day location of Sodom and Gomorrah, or a crater at the center of the site might be evidence, but just being in the Bible doesn't make it evidence.
Re:Sagan Spinning In His Grave? (Score:1)
The difference is that the blank tape could have been easily caused by aliens, but any hidden message in the digits of pi could only have been placed there by God or at least something with very powerful control over our universe. This really was the whole point of the book, although I admit it would be a little harder to get across to the average movie-goer. Sometimes the big thoughts are hard to explain, I guess.
Re:nice title... (Score:1)
motto: "Gne's Not English"
A good SETI Book (Score:1)
My favorite bit of the interview: (Score:3)
McConnell: One of the things I discuss in my book is how it is easier to undress and petrify hot young actresses than most people imagine. All that is required is a scientifically proven magical petrification ray and a giant aibo. But what we cannot do is undress and petrify hot young daughters of famous open source programmers. If there is another technological civilization nearby, it will be possible to communicate using equations, images, and algorithms. And one of the things we'd like them to communicate is a method for creating a naked and petrified Heidi Wall. I discuss this at length in my book.
I don't know about any of you, but that's a book I'm going to have to purchase. Also, I'm going to start donating my cycles to SETI today.
--Shoeboy
Re:Help me understand... (Score:5)
As a society, we must spend our money on many different issues, trying to address many different problems. You rely on the taxpayers to bicker it out amongst each other (directly or through their representatives) how to spend the money, and how much they're willing to pay.
Personally, I think the "feed the hungry" banner is flown a little too often (yikes, here come the flames). Many countries are hit by famine not because they don't have enough food, but because of wars, because of corrupt politicians, whatever. It doesn't do any good to send a barge of food to a third-world country if the dictator siezes it upon arrival and shares it with his supporters.
Yes, even the so-called wealthy nations have hungry people living in poverty. But at some level, that's not my fault, and I shouldn't have money taken away from me to fund their food. Before you talk to me about being out of touch, I lived off state-provided money for about 7 years of my childhood. I know what it's like to get foodstamps and government cheese. I also know what it's like to pull yourself out of that gutter, and I know plenty of people who never did. We need a system that feeds those that really need it, without making it so easy for people to milk the system that they stop trying to get off of it. That's a delicate balance, and a problem that won't go away just by throwing money at it.
Why dedicate any money to funding the arts? Why dedicate any money to researching cures for AIDS (after all, it's fairly easy to avoid catching the disease, isn't it [tongue in cheek here, folks])? Why go to the moon?
Millions of reasons. Here's one for you. Because if we hadn't gone to the moon, if we weren't building rockets and space stations, what would I have had to dream about as a kid? What would have inspired me to learn enough math and get good enough at it to get scholarships to college?
We need money to keep people alive, yes. But we also need to keep their dreams alive. IF (and this is a huge IF)...IF we ever find anything out there, it will be the biggest thing to happen to our society EVER. Considering how cheap it is to continue this research, we would be terribly remiss in stopping it.
Our own signals??? (Score:1)
Would they be able to receive our own signals (TV, Radio and such) and interpret them as an inteligent signal comming from our solar system? Would they think this could be some sort of interference instead? What do our waves have that makes them an "inteligent" form of transmission?
Thanks and no flames, please.
Re:Our own signals??? (Score:2)
SETI@home offers some other statistics asked after here. Their FAQ [berkeley.edu] circles the issue a bit, but finally admits in essence that SETI@home is unable to detect Earth-level technology even on the closest stars. (And there's no guarantee beyond-Earth civilizations still use radio-frequencies - in fact odds are against it). Their latest "Science Newsletter" [berkeley.edu] just happens to discuss the separation of intelligent signals from noise as well, but leaves pretty hazy impression.
Other wisdom gleamed from the SETI@home web-site includes the notion that the projects budget so-far has been $500.000, and they're capable of detecting signals tenth of the strength of best other SETI projects - which scan wider frequencies and typically concentrate on the likely locations, though.
SETI odds (Score:2)
Personally, I'm all for SETI. As long as it's zero success rate proscribes it's receiving massive funding. I know that when scientists have to scrounge, have to be imaginitive, they are often doing their best work. Should Aricebo be used for SETI? Occasionaly, but there is plenty of other science to do as well.
Re:Contact - not my favorite (Score:2)
Re:Sagan Spinning In His Grave? (Score:2)
Sagan's normal arguements on faith were two pronged a) disprove an interventionist god, b) apply the Principle of Parsimony (Occam's Razor) to refute the need for God. I thought the movie paralleled this M.O.
Re:SETI odds (Score:2)
Re:Would we know it if we saw it? (Score:2)
The main gap in the argument is the assumption that the travelers do, in fact, colonize other planets. Given the technology to maintain a self-contained habitat for generations, building a few more out of a few stray asteroids is more efficient, and closer to the lifestyle to which the travelers have become accustomed, than colonizing a planet.
/.
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:1)
Sagan Spinning In His Grave (Score:2)
The underlying theme of the whole book is Faith (with a capital F), particularly faith in religion. How do you prove the existence of God to a scientist? Ellie is unable to accept the existence of God since she is a scientist and there is no "proof" (remember the pendulum experiment where she challenges her friend to step a bit closer to the huge swinging pendulum to see if his God would protect him?). Then she returns from her voyage and is ironically unable to provide any proof of their existence and everyone will just have to accept her testimony on "faith". Ellie continued to search for "signals" and ultimately found "proof" in the immutable fabric of the universe...in the digits of pi she ultimately finds another signal to decode, but this is a signal from God, not from other beings.
The signal in Pi was left out of the movie completely and totally ruined it for me. YMMV of course.
SuperID
Free Database Hosting [freesql.org]
Re:SETI odds (Score:1)
Our galaxy is 100,000 light years (l.y.) across. Even if there are several million potential civilizations in this galaxy (according to Drake), once you randomly distribute them across 100,000 l.y. of space and some ten to fifteen billion years of time, you end up with a few dozen existing "at the same time" but separated by hideously immense distances. The chances of any two being close enough to communicate via radio are utterly slim.
And that about wraps it up. All your UFOs are belong to Hollywood.
Re:"Ancient Astronauts" (Score:1)
Re:SETI odds (Score:1)
Re:Help me understand... (Score:1)
But that's not why SETI is a futile waste of time. SETI is futile because we are deliberately ignorant beings. Hell, my president can't even communicate with me. If I can't figure out what he has to say, how can I communicate with someone who probably has a completely different sense array? Even if searching for ETs is futile, the process is probably good for us. As the guy who sent himself up 16,000 feet in a lawnchair with 42 weather balloons said, "A man can't just sit around."
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:1)
The Aztecs invented the vacation!
Our forefathers took drugs!
Men and women are the same sex!
Your brain is not the boss!
Yes, Everything You Know Is Wrong!
-Firesign Theater, "Everything You Know Is Wrong!"
I feel like the RCA dog (Score:2)
An excellent novel (if a wee bit cycical) dealing with some of the problems of our search for sentient life is His Master's Voice [std.com] by Stanislaw Lem. He proposes the problem of how to interpret a purposeful signal once we find it. The scientists in the book are attempting to decipher a neutrino stream that they accidently detect coming to us in a repeating pattern for a fixed amount of time. The answers are not entirely satisfying. Do we really have the capacity to think outside our little box?
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:2)
http://matt.waggoner.com/ (see how many Firesign references you can find)
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:2)
Major Problem Seti Faces (Score:2)
I believe the big thing thats standing in SETIs way is that the signal to noise ratio of transmissions from other planets (or even those we are sending out) is so low that their signals can't be separated from normal stellar noise at the interstellar distances we are talking about.
This is not an original thought though, does anyone have a good link?
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:1)
=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\
Re:The problem: No carrier (Score:1)
The whole SETI project thus far has had to assume two things.
We have not looked for a signal less powerful or direct than this, because it would be expensive and difficult. SETI is having to travel the cheap and easy path.
Its all white noise... Spread-spectrum is great for communication between two parties who already know each other is there, and know what form the communcation will be in, but it is not useful for signalling.
The real quandry in SETI is this:
On Earth, we have decided that it is cheaper and easier to look for signals from alien civilizations that it is to send out our own beacon. What if everyone else makes the same decision? The sky may be full of ears, but no mouths!
Re:SETI books (Score:1)
Re:Sagan Spinning In His Grave (Score:1)
The builder of the universe, space and time... wow :)
This is why organised religions piss me off; peace, love and joy, happy singing and dancing? bah, more like Master Engineer :)
The problem: No carrier (Score:2)
More modern systems with weak or no carriers, like spread-spectrum systems, devote only a few percent of their signal energy to synchronization information. So they're far more energy-efficient. But they look like noise unless you know what you're looking for. (This is why modern modems sound like a white-noise hiss. Early modems, up to 300 baud, had audible audio tones. The same thing is true of radio modulation.) That's a problem. Finding a spread-spectrum signal when you know nothing about the transmission system is very tough.
But it's not impossible. Any transmission system must have some fraction of its energy, even if it is quite small, devoted to synchronization. And to get through noise, there has to be some redundancy. That's what to look for.
I think SETI should be looking at the nearer stars, picking up stuff that sounds like white noise, and crunching real hard, looking for sync patterns and redundancy.
Re:The problem: No carrier (Score:2)
The drunk was looking at the ground near a street light. "What are you looking for?", a passerby asked. "I dropped my wallet down the street from here"? "So why aren't you looking down there?" "The light's better here."
What's wrong with this picture?
SETI has already eliminated the possibility that anybody anywhere near (tens of light years) is aiming a continuous carrier at us. We have to start looking for the hard stuff.
Supposedly, Earth's own RF output could be detected for a few light years. We need to be looking for similar situations.
Re:"Ancient Astronauts" (Score:2)
1) We're the first form of life an alien race has ever found, and they are interested in studying us; alien antropologists. And want to remain hidden away perhaps for centuries.
2) They know more about the universe than us and are able to travel at near or greater than the speed of light. Warp drive, subspace, jumpgates, instant transmission, transporters, something undiscovered by us as of today.
Re:nice title... (Score:1)
Didn't you know we're working towards opensourcing the English language?
-f
Re:Help me understand... (Score:3)
Also, Teflon saves me about 15 minutes a day in ease of cleaning my dishes. Figure, my time is worth $50/hour, so that's $4562.5/year, or (considering 40 working years) $182500/lifetime. If I worked during the time that Teflon saves me, and i invested all the money when i make it, and then at the end of my life i donated that money to charity, then i would be donating a few million dollars. Multiply that by the percent of people who use teflon dishes, and you have a good donation.
-f
Re:SETI books (Score:1)
I wore that copy out in my elementary school library.
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:1)
However...
The one thing that still intrigues me is the Dogon people of Cameroon (?) Gabon (?) Totally Other Place In Africa who Know Too Much about Sirius. Ever heard of them? I am just curious if any of these sites have a cultuaral explanation for Dogon astronomy: observation...or simple coincidence? Not arguing...just curious. Gracias.
Re:Help me understand... (Score:1)
God forbid anyone render any form of constructive encouragement or critcism.
Re:"Ancient Astronauts" (Score:1)
Don't you mean where are there base?
VLA? (Score:2)
It's very cool place to visit, BTW. I would say something like "visit it if you're in the area", but it's the ONLY thing the area - if you're actually in the area, chances are you're already going there. :-)
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SETI assumptions (Score:2)
1. SETI has searched almost exclusively in the frequency channel around 1.42 gigahertz, which corresponds to the emission line of hydrogen, the most common element in the universe. The idea is that if extraterrestrials had to pick some frequency to attract our attention, this would be a natural choice.
ISSUE: Although this may be a reasonable assumption it is not necessarily true. Perhaps the extraterrestrials would chose another frequency for reasons not know to us. In addition, the shift in frequency caused by the expansion of the Universe rules out the possibility of receiving signals from other Galaxies.
2. SETI assumes that intelligent civilizations would have the power to send wide-beam signals into space.
ISSUE: The further a message has to travel, the more power it requires. In addition the wider the beam is, the more energy is required to send it at the same relative power. These power requirements are orders of magnitude greater than we are capable of and it does not necessarily follow that other civilizations would be capable of producing such power.
3. SETI assumes that other civilizations would send continuous messages into space.
ISSUE: To date, Earth has only sent out a limited number of messages. These were tightly beamed messages to specific stars in the Galaxy. Earth lacks the power to send wide-beam messages. It is a big assumption to think that other intelligent life would behave differently than we do. Perhaps they spend most of their time listening as well.
4. SETI assumes that intelligent civilizations are long lived.
ISSUE: The reason the night skies are not completely filled with stars is that stars have limited lifetimes. During the 5 billion years since the formation of earth, we've had the capability of sending narrow beam signals to other stars for perhaps 50 or so years. Based on our consumption of natural resources, it remains to be seen if we will continue to have this capability for thousands of years.
My main issue is that these assumptions are glossed over. SETI needs to be forthcoming about its assumptions and how they may effect the probability of success. They need to do this so that in 10 years if donations start drying up, they'll have some credibility and be able to explain the lack of results in terms of their assumptions.
Re:Would we know it if we saw it? (Score:1)
we haven't filled the Galaxy yet and there's no reason to assume that other life forms like us would necessarily be significantly more advanced than we are.
You're thinking on too small a time scale. Remember, the galaxy is about 12 billion years old. We are about 2-300,000 years old. We've only had technology for about 4-10,000 years, advanced technology only a few hundred, and space travel for 40 years. That's nothing! The odds of two species evolving at precisely the same time is vanishingly small, given the time scale.
I guarantee that in the next 1000-5000 years, we will launch multi-generational space ships to colonize other planets. Then those people will colonize others, and so on, geometrically. In only a few million years, humans will populate the entire galaxy, even if we only have sublight travel!
Let's say it take an average of 2 million years for a species like us to fill the galaxy. The galaxy is 6000 times older than that! If species like us are relatively common, it should have happened by now. Keep in mind that once a planet is filled with a particular species, it's unlikely than any other species would ever evolve on that planet. Once the galaxy is full, that's it.
The reason I specified a galaxy rather than the universe is that the distances between galaxies are so immense, that it's unlikely that we would ever populate other galaxes at sub-light speeds. It's just too long of a trip, even for the most intrepid explorers.
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Re:Would we know it if we saw it? (Score:1)
That's a reasonable point, but it still only holds off the inevitable. What would make people want to colonize another world, other than adventure? Probably for more room, because of overpopulation. How long will it take for the solar system to become crowded enough for people to want a whole new world.
Also, colonizing an asteroid is not the same as living on a whole new world. It's possible we might get the technology to create whole new planets out of stray matter (or blasting off a chunk of jupiter or something), but I have a feeling it will be a lot easier to move to other planets.
I think there are always going to be those people who just want to just create a whole new world. Heck, I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of them are religious cults wanting to start a whole new civilization. That's how the pilgrims got started!
But still the point remains: if intelligent life were common, then it seems likely that one would have arisin in 12 billion years that had a trait that they like to travel and populate other places.
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Re:Would we know it if we saw it? (Score:1)
Ultimately I think there are just so many scenarios that allow for intelligent life to exist in our galaxy without our having discovered them as of yet.
True, but the point is that it only takes 1 space travelling civilization with an expansion desire to dominate the galaxy. If self-aware intelligent life is relatively common, then it would be likely that we would see at least 1 in multiple billion years that meets that simple requirement. It seems unlikely that if the galaxy were teeming with intelligence that every single one of them would be "homebodies" or would have some show-stopping problem.
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Re:Your thinking is wrong... (Score:1)
What happens of only 1 in a billion ships survives radiation storms or from being coated in dark-matter dust or whatever para-scientific jibber jabber stuff may or may not be out there.
Well, you can play "what if" games all day long. Given our current state of knowledge, we don't know of any reason why a species wouldn't propagate through interstellar space. Given the amount of time it takes to populate a galaxy, and the amount of time that we've had for it to happen, then you have to conclude that we've never had aliens able to do it.
To tell you the truth, this just sort of backs up my gut feeling that self-aware life is hugely, insanely improbable. It just doesn't seem like it to us, because we obviously didn't sense the passage of time before we came along to think about the fact that we're here. I think there is probably quite a bit of "life" in the galaxy, but self-aware life is most-likely improbable.
But who knows? Maybe the very first alien race populated the galaxy, decided to move to the black hole in the core, and then blasts any ships that try and move between solar systems so that overpopulation doesn't happen again.
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Let's face it, we're alone in the galaxy (Score:2)
It's actually pretty easy to prove. The galaxy is what, 12 billion years old? Once a civilization creates space travel, it doesn't take that long (relatively speaking) to fill up the galaxy with life, even at sub-light speeds. I forget the exact amount of time, but the fill rate is geometric. X time to travel to the next star, X time to establish industry, and then send 10 more "seeds" to the next one. It only takes a few million years to fill the Galaxy.
Since we're alone on Earth, we're alone in the galaxy.
And is it all that surprising? I would imagine that lower forms of life might be relatively common, but I think it's probably likely that self-aware life is unbelievably unlikely. It only seems likely to us because it happened to us.
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Re:Let's face it, we're alone in the galaxy (Score:2)
Humans have the ability to fill our solar system with life, but we don't bother.
Humans do not currently have that ability, but in any case, I'm talking galaxy, not solar system. There's not much all the expansion capability in the solar system, but there are (probably) going to be planets in other solar systems that are habitable. There is no question that humans will eventually (1000 years? 10,000 years?) will build multi-generational ships to colonize other solar systems, assuming we don't discover some way to go super-lightspeed.
Why do you feel it must be that a race that can expand will expand?
It doesn't matter what one particular race does or doesn't do. If intelligent life is common, then there should exist one that likes expansion. It only takes one.
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Re:Your thinking is wrong... (Score:2)
What if they don't WANT to be noticed.
Who is "they"? Either self-aware life is common, or it isn't. Human's have existed for a very, very, very short period of time. If self-aware life is common, they we would have had one a long time ago that colonized the whole galaxy. Like I said before, it doesn't take that long compared to 12 billion years of history. Do the math, don't give me this fuzzy "I just know" stuff.
and even we are on the verge of faster than light travel through gravity warping,
We're not on the "verge" of jack. We don't even have any decent theories that say it's possible, much less practical, much less on the "verge".
We are NOT alone, don't want to go into details, but we are definitely NOT alone, and haven't been for a very long time.
You're thinking emotionally, not rationally. Again, do the math. Figure out how long it takes to fill the galaxy if you have a race that wants to travel, even at sub-light speeds. It's a blip in the history of the galaxy. It only takes one race.
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Re:Would we know it if we saw it? (Score:2)
They could exist on planes or as forms of matter that we don't even imagine.
So what? Sure it's possible, but the only form of life that we know is possible is our own. The point is that it only takes one race developing intelligence and space travel to fill the galaxy in a relatively short time. Since that hasn't happened, it must be the fact that life like ours is extremely unlikely.
Sure, it might be the case that there are other forms of intelligence that are occur much more frequently, but don't tend to fill up the galaxy. Possible, but it doesn't seem very likely.
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nice title... (Score:1)
*shrug*
YMMV
E.
Seti Search issues (Score:3)
heck, if they have anything like a trek subspace transmitter, radio would be obsolete. Obsolete as Napoleon's Semaphore system. A good place to look is the Dead Media Project, as discussed and linked in this slash article [slashdot.org]. Technologies go obsolete all of the time, so why not radio, tv, etc.
Then there is the matter of interstellar politics. Let's face it, if the local area just had the equivalent of Attila the Hun go rampaging through, it might be a good idea if no body visited. and it would be understandable if no body was transmitting.
And then again, maybe we *are* the first ones, at least for practical purposes, in our section of galaxy
And so on. There are many possible scenarios.
Check out the Vinny the Vampire [eplugz.com] comic strip
Re:Your thinking is wrong... (Score:1)
What's the selection ratio for sperm to reach egg?
What makes spaceships more likely to reach their targets.
I've got to admit I agree with your conclusion (no aliens), but I don't agree with how you got there.
And I'm a mathematician, before you ask, so don't tell me to do the maths. I have plenty of other maths that I would use to dismiss the hypothesis.
FP.
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Re:SETI assumptions (Score:1)
Let's hope a moderator graces you with something positive to cheer you up. How can you bear to live without the hope of speaking to little green men?
FP.
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Interesting (Score:1)
I never knew what SETI was, this book is a must read for everyone, even for the non-space inclined. My kudos to the author.
Re:"Ancient Astronauts" (Score:1)
Different aliens could have been turning up every 5000 years or so without us realizing. Nobody would have written it down
Or perhaps they werethe ones who kickstarted modern society. Alternatively, if aliens have been here all along, where are they now?
Budget cuts? Change in scientific emphasis? Extinct? Cultural change caused them to adopt the Prime Directive? Lots of potential reasons.
You might say "UFOs" but then were is their base? There are no anomalous items in nearby space and certainly nothing on Earth.
They might have set up shop under the sea, oron some unremarkable asteroids. Admittedly they would have to be sure to keep radio noise very low to stop snooping. I think they just left.
The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:2)
All of them describe meetings with some sort of angel, or flying being. All of them talk about the chariots of the gods. The Nazca plains in Peru have long straight lines that could only have been used as a runway.
If aliens wanted to talk, I think they would have done. Obviously they still consider us to be too primitive
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:2)
But even if you can disprove most of the examples in the book, nobody has disproved all of them. There is a lot of evidence in The Bible that suggest that Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed by beings with advanced technology. South American religions also tell similar stories about their prophets being taken up into the air in their chariots, and being carried in the belly of a giant bird.
Re:Help me understand... (Score:2)
I hate this argument when it is used to counter any funding on any pure science. It is naive to beleive that spending any more money on the starving people is going to make much difference since most of the problem with the starving people of the world is POLITICAL and not a matter of funding. If the governments of the world cutinue to war with their people burn fields and bomb rail lines then their people will starve
Of course science funding could help people more than spending directly on foods by coming up with things that help distribution of food like refrigiration did. Or maybe enhance the quality of the food they can grow like golden rice. Or we could just spend the millions of dollars to ship food that will be hijacked by some guerilla army and get no real benifit from it.
Re:SETI books (Score:1)
That's an easy one. Assuming for the moment that there are aliens out there, they're posting to
42 flavors of alien, but... (Score:1)
Yoo hoo. Psst. Over here.
'course they are.
You aren't allowed on those channels, only the aliens are.
No, no, no. I'm not trying to start an
intergalactic war, but you biobags stole
Itchy and Scratchy from us !
That's right, we aliens content homesteaded the
Lascaux caves that wonderful summer of 8000 B.C.
All those wonderful bloody drawings are under
galactic copyright protection.
Were also looking for one of our runaway
children, Lvis, have you seen him ?
You earthings owe us alot of back royalties
and our lawyers are converging on your
position at the is very moment.
And another thing kids, will you turn it down !
You can here it half way across the galaxy
Consider the (open) source (Score:1)
Forget the time lag (Score:2)
I think the really big thing is not what the possibly existing ET have to say, but the mere knowledge that they do exist. Propably their reply is something like:
'First Post!'
'All your planet is belong to us'
'Goat secx'
Re:The problem: No carrier (Score:1)
Re:busy saying nothing (Score:1)
Guess what - the [odds] are stacked against [life]
Certainly against complex and intelligent life sending out radio signals in the correct time frame for us to receive them. We have an extraordinarily gentle planet that's given us a long time to get our cortexen convoluted, but we're never getting off of it. We'll always be the dominant species, but within the next couple of thousand years (tops) we'll be back to living a low tech sustainable agrarian lifestyle, not through tree hugger lobbying, but through bare necessity.
The good news is that we won't even have to wait for the next planet killer rock. The next ice age or supervolcano will knock us back far enough that we'll never recover, what with having already raped all the easily accessible fossil and mineral resources.
Of course, we could get off Earth and colonise other planets right now. It would take a New World Order and a diversion of all spare resources to building a fleet of colony ships and just punting them out there. OK, that's stupid and pointless and not economically justifiable, and the colonists would almost certainly be doomed. But there's a small, a tiny chance, and really, what's our alternative? The ISS? Don't make me laugh. I keep hearing that described as a "first step". I'm still waiting to hear what the second step is.
Re:Major Problem Seti Faces (Score:1)
1. Beacons
Some search projects are set up to look for deliberately transmitted beacons, i.e. signals designed to be received by faraway alien SETI systems. The signals can be constructed to be different enough from the noise that even a modestly powered transmitter can be seen across interstellar distances. One such designed signal is a pure sinusoid. There are good reasons to believe that nature cannot make a very pure sinusoidal signal, while it is easy to do with a radio transmitter. One nice thing about looking for beacons is that you can assume that the aliens have done the right things to make the signal easy to receive, and they may very well be sending it with "primitive" technology like radio instead of their own advanced "Q-rays".
2. Leakage radiation
Some SETI projects are more geared to eavesdropping on the aliens' local communication. This is a much harder prospect since the local stuff is not beamed in our direction or designed for us to understand. Personally, I think that intelligent alien civilizations will send their own traffic efficiently and not waste power. The upshot of this is that efficiently encoded information looks just like noise and we would not be able to distinguish these signals from the natural background. I'm not a big fan of leakage radiatiion searches, but others disagree with me.
The more technically minded out there might be able to get a little more insight from the reading the first chapter or so of my dissertation: http://seti.harvard.edu/grad/d-thes.html [harvard.edu].
Darren
Fixed link (Score:1)
http://seti.harvard.edu/grad/d_thes.html [harvard.edu]
Listening (Score:1)
Besides, do we really want to get a bad interstellar reputation by shooting our mouths off before we've even checked to see who's already talking? Darren
All explained here... (Score:1)
The original:
http://totl.net/STI/
An immiator (wizzier graphics!):
http://www.wymsey.co.uk/sti/sti.htm
THL.
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busy saying nothing (Score:2)
"
Because the number of potential sites is so large (20 to 40 billion sun-like stars in our galaxy), this means the odds have to be stacked against the formation of life in a pretty big way for it not to develop elsewhere.
"
And?
Guess what - they are stacked against it.
When it comes to creating complex organic molecules by trying to recreate early atmospheric conditions, the scientists have done a fairly good job - and created dead stuff.
By focussing on creating more living stuff they've done a fairly good job of creating self-sustaining complex-molecule-building reactions, but nothing that matches even the simplest virus for complexity (Tobacco Mosaic, for example).
And that's from scientist that have had the ability to _direct_ their experiments ("let's increase the partial presure of Oxygen by 5%, and provide a transition metal surfaces for molecules to bind to catalytically." each new day. The dear suns and planets don't get that option. The planets can't slow down of they're too hot and need a farther orbit. They can't decide to melt their ice caps or condense their atmospheres to provide surface water.
Sheesh - where has the _science_ gone?
THL.
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Re:"Ancient Astronauts" (Score:2)
Crossing light-years and keeping a planet under observation doesn't require any new science. Just a lot of time and energy. A "cloaking device" requires new science. If we are going to posit the existence of a "cloaking device" why not just have them watching us through wormholes in the comfort of their own homes? Or maybe just sensing our "thought energy" across the light years? Or some other equally scientifically unsupported and unfalsifiable means? The question here isn't "could aliens logically be ancient gods." After all, we could be brains in vats owned by the aliens. The question here is "do we have any evidence of or reason to believe that aliens beings were ancient gods." Answer: No.
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"Ancient Astronauts" (Score:3)
For instance, ancient astronauts: The Earth is 4 billion years old. Recorded history is only 1 millionth that long. The chances of aliens showing up *just* when humans are starting to write things down is therefore pretty low. Alternatively, if aliens have been here all along, where are they now? You might say "UFOs" but then were is their base? There are no anomalous items in nearby space and certainly nothing on Earth.
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SETI books (Score:4)
Now this thing is out. Up or down?
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The real impact of finding proof of ET... (Score:1)
The social ramifications of such a discovery would change the world; even if no actual contact was made for generations.
That said, I think the SETI project has very little hope of actually identifying an alien intelligence. It is either arrogant or optimistic to think that an alien intelligence would be broadcasting on a wavelength we can detect with a signal we could comprehend.
To paraphrase Billy Bob Thornton from Armageddon "We can only watch about 1% of the sky and, begging your pardon sir, but it's a big-ass sky."
I should add that I *do* participate in the SETI@Home project, but that's mostly because I find their peer to peer computing model interesting and a group of my friends participate so the comarderie and "racing" aspect of it is entertaining. Maybe we'll identify an extraterrestrial intelligence with it, but I doubt it.
-Coach-
Perhaps they just know better... (Score:1)
Also possible that, as others have suggested, the alien intelligence finds us too primitive and not worth bothering with. Perhaps they've seen Pauly Shore and David Hasselhoff and decided that they'd go see what was happening on Mars instead.
Or, we could be as mysterious to them as they are to us. Perhaps we pass through the same space on a regular basis but neither party is capable of reliably detecting and identifying the other.
I suspect that the alien intelligence being bipedal and oxygen breathing is more a matter of Hollywood than reality.
-Coach-
Would we know it if we saw it? (Score:1)
Humans tend to assume that intelligent life is going to have spaceships and clothes. Maybe Earth is just a marble in some alien kid's collection?
If the universe truly began "all at once" and the conditions that created us are relatively new, its also possible that the same conditions created more beings of a similar type elsewhere in the universe - and at roughly the same time. Perhaps they're right now trying to find a replacement for their space shuttle and listening hard to see if anybody else is out there.
Just because only a few humans (of undetermined mental state) claim to have perceived alien life doesn't mean they aren't out there. David Spade has a succesful TV show -- that's as much evidence of alien intelligence as anything!
Chances are good that your dog is not really aware of fish...but that doesn't mean there aren't any fish. Maybe humans just aren't capable, currently, of perceiving and identifying extra-terrestrial intelligences?
-Coach-
Re:Would we know it if we saw it? (Score:1)
Life forms not as advanced as we are, no matter how old, may not have the capability of controlled space travel.
Life forms more advanced than we are might already be travelling and either they avoid us or we're not sufficiently advanced to reliably perceive them.
In order for your argument to be true there would have to be sufficient numbers of aliens who were sufficiently advanced to travel to and colonize other worlds, but not so advanced that they would evade our observation. Since that seems to be a much narrower band of probability it seems unfair to base the argument that we're alone on the evidence that nothing we can perceive has already colonized the rest of the galaxy.
I realize you only specified the galaxy, but it still seems shortsighted to assume that there aren't more simple, yet still sentient, beings out there somewhere. There might also be infinitely more complex beings out there somewhere. There might also be other "humans" out there somewhere who are simply not significantly more advanced than we are. There are dozens of scenarios where there is other intelligence in the world but assuming that any other intelligence would naturally expand, would have already done so sufficiently to reach us and would be perceptible to us puny humans seems like a reach to me.
Outside the galaxy it's a very big universe (Understatement alert!) and apparently expanding. Statistically speaking it seems practically guaranteed that there is intelligent life elsewhere in the universe, even if it is relatively scarce in our galaxy.
-Coach-
Re:Would we know it if we saw it? (Score:1)
True enough, however the galaxy hasn't been static for 12 billion years. It's possible that we didn't get started for the first 11 billion or so years because the conditions were not yet such to support the advancement of intelligent life up until that point.
Of course, it's also possible that the other life in our galaxy is so much MORE advanced than we are that we aren't able to perceive it -- or it deliberately avoids us.
Is it necessarily the case that other intelligent life would colonize worlds other than their own? Perhaps their size relative to their environment is such that their own world is many times larger than Earth and they are still exploring and colonizing other parts of their own world. Perhaps they don't reproduce at rates equivalent to humans or perhaps their lifespans are such that it isn't an issue.
Would we consider dogs to be intelligent life? I think if we discovered a race of wild poodles on Mars we'd consider that as intelligent life; but I don't think we could expect a race of poodles to be travelling in space. I suppose it's always possible that Earth poodles have just been so domesticated that their natural astrophysics skills have atrophied beyond discern.
Also we know nothing, obviously, of the use and availability of resources. In a world that is resource rich, or where the occupants sufficiently conserve/produce their own, there may not be as much motivation to colonize away from the home planet. There's also the possibility that an alien intelligence doesn't have the natural resources to create space travel machines.
Ultimately I think there are just so many scenarios that allow for intelligent life to exist in our galaxy without our having discovered them as of yet. We shouldn't assume that any intelligent life is going to be anything like us in biology, psychology or environment.
-Coach-
Re:Would we know it if we saw it? (Score:1)
Let me restate that I'm skeptical that SETI will ever locate any extraterrestrial intelligence, by the way.
-Coach-
Re:The "i" in ExplainIng was Abducted! (Score:1)
just like the conspiracy theorists who think that SETI@home is using your cycles for more than just the search for ET
i was angry:1 with:2 my:4 friend - i told:3 4 wrath:5, 4 5 did end.
Re:Our own signals??? (Score:1)
Your thinking is wrong... (Score:1)
Expansion (Score:1)
Re:Our own signals??? (Score:1)
Re:Help me understand... (Score:1)
Do we want to be like a guy who lives his entire life in small village, works on his farm (or nowadays, watches TV), sees nothing, meets nobody and eventually dies after a boring life? Or de want to actually accomplish something in the Universe and be like Marco Polo or Christopher Columbus even if it will be hard and many of our crew will die during the voyage? Do we want to discover something new, do we want to create something extraordinary?
For me, the answer is clear. I'd much rather be like Marco Polo than this guy in his little village even if it means a high chance that I will fail and/or die.
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:1)
Wrongo! In the 70's a group of twenty men escavated a nearly complete statue on Easter Island, moved it to a 4 foot high platform and lifted it onto that platform using nothing but rollers and levers. Lifting the multi-ton statue onto the platform only took a few hours.
ALL of the artifacts mentioned in the "Chariot's of the God's" have been easily explained using reasonable amounts of manpower, simple tools (ramps, levers, rollers, string, plumb-bobs, and rope), and a bit of common-sense.
People all over the world are fond of telling tall tales that make thier leaders, country, or whatever, more powerful and interesting.
Re:Help me understand... (Score:1)
Re:Poor justification (Score:1)
Re:The aliens have left the phones off the hook (Score:1)
Besides, in the current state of world affairs, if aliens visited us, they'd probably be the catalyst for a third world war.
SETI Ambiguity (Score:1)
Most astronomers don't appreciate Stonehenge conspiracy theories, and most Roswell believers don't appreciate the real science behind SETI.
In the end, you would have to educate the masses as to the unlikelihood of intergalactic travel, the slim chance of intelligent/civilized life and the odds that we're essentially attempting to talk to butterflies, or even that we are the butterflies, with no way of understanding and of little significance to any aliens.
But, alas, anal probes are so much more relatable. Call it a religion for some, but if you're attempting to win the respect of the Scientific Community, it's probably better not to cater to the fanaticism.