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Space Science

Cellular Phone Spectra and Earth's SETI Invisibility 51

astrobio writes: "How long will the Earth's technology be detectable to other worlds? From an article today by the Chairman of the SETI Institute: 'Not long, with shared transmission spectra. To transmit ever-increasing amounts of information, portions of the spectrum must be shared. This is only possible if signal strengths are reduced so that transmissions on the same frequency do not interfere with one another. The textbook example of this paradigm is the cellular phone system. This signal reduction means we are well on our way to becoming invisible.'"
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Cellular Phone Spectra and Earth's SETI Invisibility

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  • Good. (Score:4, Funny)

    by Violet Null ( 452694 ) on Monday July 29, 2002 @09:49AM (#3971176)
    Maybe now the three-eyed, ten-tongued aliens of Vega will be able to get some rest once we turn the noise down.

    Bad intergalactic neighbors, that's what we are.
  • by eclectric ( 528520 ) <bounce@junk.abels.us> on Monday July 29, 2002 @10:04AM (#3971260)
    SETI researchers have known this for a good while now. As we move from broadcast television and radio to digital formats, we will essentially be reducing and eventually completely shutting off runaway transmissions out into the cosmos. This is actually included in probability calculations in the success of SETI: you only have about 200 years in a given civilization in which to find them through their leftover radiation... after that time frame, there are certain signals (radio telescopes, for instance) that are detectable, but which don't travel in every direction.

    One of the goals/projects of SETI is to keep transmitting data that appears to be from intelligent creatures... Prime numbers in binary is one proposed method. A simple SOS is even possible... anything that would look nonrandom.

    • The examples of space going radiation given in the article are all point sources. The power per area for such sources should be exceedingly small for those sources within a relatively small distance. Perhaps we need to build directional antenae to make sure that we can be heard. Of course given the nature of directional antenae we should make sure that we build millions of them to make sure that they are pointing in the correct direction. (The down side of Fermi's dilema!)

      What we need is a screensaver that will turn a monitor into a directional antena. Then everybody can then turn their monitor towards the heavens when their computers are not at work and let the screen saver then broadcast a message. This would be much more effective and much cheaper. This way we can do the broadcasting for a change and let those free-loading, beer swilling aliens take a turn trying to decode noise from space for a change. Why should we do all the work?

  • Invisible? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Rhombus ( 104176 )
    Perhaps this is why we don't hear any radio transmissions from alien civilizations...by the time we thought to start listening, they've already refined their communications to the point where they're no longer detectable by us.

    Sounds like it could be the death knell for SETI...

    • Since, according to our current understanding, the Universe is between 10 and 15 billion years old, it also follows that the radius of the Universe (assuming it's spherical or circular) is between 10 and 15 billion light years. While some ET civilizations may no longer be detectable by us because of the change in transmissions, others will still be detectable. Why? Because they are far enough away that their transmissions have not yet reached us.

      Remember those transmissions occurred in the past. They take years (or even millions of years) to reach us. Looking at the stars is looking into a time machine. We are not seeing the stars as they are now, but as they were in the past.

      • Hmmm...I think the current universe models are wrong. I don't believe the universe ever had a beginning 'time' which would give it an age value.

        We don't understand gravity/time in relation to each other well enough, to label the universe within a paradigm we can understand, such as age.

        I believe time accelerates the closer you get toward the center of the universe, and gets slower as you move away from the center.

        I say this becuase time is measured by how particles move relative to eachother. If those particles accelerated/deccelerated relative to eachother, then time would never appear to change from the particles perspective. However, if you could determine the particles distance/velocity degridation from the center of the universe, then you would be able to tell the particles true age.

        But, the universe itself has no age, since the particles that make it up DO NOT move relative to each other over a given distance.

        Energetic particles leave the center of the universe and travel out. Over distance they lose momentum, and their unique quantum spin. The particle then becomes 'Dark', it cannot directly interact with the quantum universe anymore. But since it does occupy mass, it now begins to accrete back to the center of the universe to start the process all over again.

        This whole process in analogous to phase shifting in electric currents. Each cycle reaches an almost infinite value before it repeats.

      • Yes, but look at it another way, each civilization may live for millions of years, or they may live for a few hundred. Either way the time between them inventing radio and the time in which they become invisible (through radio reduction, or going to some subether technology or something. Is probably in the order of 100-200 years. What is our chances of listening to a particular civilization who is going through that transitional stage right now?? I bet if we could listen to them all at the same time, but currently, we havn't figured that out yet either.
  • by rpjs ( 126615 ) on Monday July 29, 2002 @10:34AM (#3971466)
    Because do we really want to let the universe know we're here? Contact with a more advanced civilisation might have unfortunate repercussions for us - look at the impact contact with the West had on so many indigenous cultures during the ages of exploration and imperialism.

    And that's just assuming the ETs are benevolent and simply can't help having the effect on us that we have on a newly contacted tribe in the Amazon. What if the ETs are paranoid about competitor intelligences arising and have a policy of wiping out any new civilisation that pops its head up over the electro-magnetic parapet? That's one of the more pessimistic explanations for the Fermi Paradox.
    • Good point....look at StarFleet...they have a specific rule against this sort of thing, and it gets broken about twice an episode. :P

      Seriously, though, if we were to discover an alien race that was technologically inferior to us, I entertain no illusions as to how our species would corrupt and exploit them. Why do we assume that alien races technologically superior to us would be equally superior ethically?

      • Or read "The Forge of God" by Greg Bear, or the Galactic Center series by Greg Benford. The hazards of becoming visible. Maybe everyone else knows better.
        • The sequal to "The Forge of God" , "Anvil of Stars", took this to and extreme. One solar system had a holographic shield around the entire thing that consumed a large percentage of the entire star's output. And a decoy system that was booby-trapped in a very clever way. p.s. I read that WB(?) have picked up the rights to both books and a third one that has yet to be written, so we might see a movie in the next ten years or so.
      • On the other hand, what if a civilization gets the idea of "aliens" for the first time by discovering patterned interstellar radio signals? It's an involuntary violation of the Prime Directive on our part. In the big scheme of the universe (whatever that may be) I don't think this is so serious.

        On the other hand, that civiliation too would probably get sued under DMCA :P
    • Although we don't have enough data to come to any conclusions, a reasonable first assumption about the nature of ET civilizations that are no longer restricted to their own planet is possible. We can use human experience as a starting point.

      They have somehow managed to not destroy themselves with nuclear and thermonuclear weapons. Supposing that their civilization was similar to ours in terms of conflict and competition, the assumption is that means of dealing with conflict are in place. This is good news for us if they are more advanced than we are.

      They are much older, racially speaking, than us (unless there is a breakthrough in energy right around the corner for us) and so probably have a bureaucracy from hell, making ours look like kids playing office.

      So if they did decide to wipe us out or make us a dependent colony, then most likely the Emperor's order would be lost for a thousand years in the filing system!

  • Not True (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Perdo ( 151843 ) on Monday July 29, 2002 @11:53AM (#3972027) Homepage Journal
    I thought of this years ago. Then realized I was wrong. How much power does your local AM radio station put out? 50,000 watts. Will the ammount of power required to broadcast to three states ever drop? Nope. How many 50,000 watt radio stations are there in the US alone? Over 8000.

    Will XM sattelite radio change that? Has linux been able to break Microsoft's monopoly?
    • Actually, almost all of the high power AM stations are required to throttle back at night so that they can't interfere with each other. During the day they have to pump out that much power to get through the Sun's radiation; at night the signals have no such interference and so have to operate at low power to keep from trampling each other. There are only a dozen or so AM stations allowed to broadcast at full power overnight as a result.

      So, yeah. The amount of power required to broadcast to three states rises & falls every single day, and the amount of power used to accomplish this is adjusted accordingly :)

      Another interesting angle is signal compression & encryption, both of which can make the signal sound like so much static. Will this make us more "invisible" too? Presumably a burst or stream of seeming gibberish might be distinguishable from true static if you know what you're listening for, but if not it could easily blend into the background noice. Conversely, if other civilizations are doing the same thing, picking up their signals could be very difficult -- much harder than just scanning for Betelgeusian episodes of "I Love Lucy"... :)

      • There are only a dozen or so AM stations allowed to broadcast at full power overnight as a result.

        I suspect Denver's KOA (850 kHz) is one such. They certainly pump out 50 kW, and brag about reaching a 38 state (plus Canada and Mexico) area.

        OTOH, one reason for the huge range is that the radio signal is reflected back to Earth by the Heaviside layer, reducing the amount of it detectable beyond the ionosphere.
  • "I am an invisible planet. No, I am not a Kamino like that which eluded Obi-Wan Kenobi; nor am I one of your Hollywood-movie hurtling asteroids. I am a planet of substance, of soil and bedrock, forests and oceans -- and i might even be said to possess a voice. I am invisible, understand, simply because bug-eyed aliens refuse to listen to my... erm... reduced-power, shared-spectrum, electromagnetic transmissions."
  • I don't think that we have to worry about being a silent planet if these guys [vaticanradio.org] keep it up [guardian.co.uk].
    • Italy passed a new law regulating electromagnetic emissions in February, which sets a limit of six volts per square metre for inhabited areas. Residents in Cesano have complained that the eletromagnetic emissions in their homes sometimes exceed 50 volts per metre.

      Wow! I thought the neighbors described in the article were whining until I got to this part. This is a staggering amount of radiation that they are pumping out.

      I once spoke to some Air Force dudes about this sort of stuff, and they said that the big concerns were over endocerine systems. It would be very interesting to see if there are any problems with diabetes or other such diseases in the area. Sounds like a perfect test bed to see if e-mag emissions really can be harmful.

      Of course the complication here is that if someone there gets sick, they can rest assured that the pope will be praying for them. It is probaly a bit tough to add such complications into your statistical models.

  • We don't know how these aliens think. They may be curious and interested in us, or they may not. Their way of thinking may or may not be similar to ours. It is hard to know how they view the universe.

    I don't think they will invade the Earth though. The amount of energy needed to come over means that it wouldn't make sense to come over for resourses and they don't need us for slaves if they can develop artifical intelligence technology.

    The best reasons for contact would be curiosity and to share knowledge of mathematics and what not.

  • What the heck is stopping us from setting up a transmitter station on the far side of the moon which beams out as powerful a message as we want without interfering with terrestrial communications one bit.

    You'd be able to broadcast a hemispherical signal in all the transmission windows no problem. You could broadcast with as much power as you can provide, and the moon would sheild earth-bound and even orbital communications systems.
  • Even if some extra-terrestrials can pick up our wireless communications, their ability to decipher it from noise may be limited because of new technologies, notwithstanding the power of our transmissions.

    Consider the 2.4GHz range and frequency hopping. There's no way anyone picking up the earth's aggregate transmissions in that band would be able to decipher them, (frequency hopping is designed that way)... TV and AM/FM broadcast signals are relatively simple to decipher, having carrier signals that are quite regular.

    I also understand that radio waves are fairly common in the universe, although not being at all the astronomer, I have no idea why. If our airwaves get too muddled, I imagine we won't look much different to a radio telescope than some other radio-prolific celestia.

    Another question is, has this already happened somewhere else? I think I remember hearing that SETI's work, particularly their distributed computer search software would probably miss wide spread-spectrum FH radio technology and consider it white noise. Any word on that?

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