SETI Goes to Arecibo To Stat *Candidates* 208
Neuropol writes "In the most rescent Seti@home news letter. Seti recieved (only!) 24 hours of telescope time at Arecibo to investigate interesting points in the sky where signals have not only shown up once but several times in data crunches in the last 4 years. The Planetary Society web site has an excellent summary of the reobservations.
The Seti web site lists the reobservation targets
and the 7,000 users whose computations directly contributed to finding them."
This sucks (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This sucks (Score:2, Insightful)
At least they were able to reschedual the 2nd and 3rd 8 hour periods, seeing solar flares washd out the original dates.
Re:This sucks (Score:2)
[TMB]
Aw man (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Aw man (Score:5, Insightful)
Lets just say that with us checking the rest we made it possible for these lucky guys to find a real hit
Jeroen
Re:Aw man (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, as someone who *did* make it to the list...
I feel exactly the same as you do.
I don't care about some top-6000 candidates list (although I will admit, I did originally hope to make it to the top 1000 overall... But failed, sigh. Just couldn't compete with the likes of SGI and Pixar <G>).
I care that maybe, just maybe, all that otherwise-wasted CPU power went toward helping us find the first real proof of intelligent life off-planet.
father figure (Score:5, Funny)
Would you prefer... (Score:2)
The world would be a sad, sad place without South Park. ;)
Re:Would you prefer... (Score:2)
*ZAP*
I love to sing-ah, 'bout the moon-ah
And the June-ah and the spring-ah
I love to sing-ah
Re:father figure (Score:3, Funny)
I think we all hope that what ever it is, it has better things to do than that.
Re:father figure (Score:2)
I mean, attention to details...
Re:father figure (Score:2)
Thanks though. See here [reference.com] for the truth.
Re:father figure (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Water's not the only liquid in universe (Score:3, Funny)
i thought (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:i thought (Score:4, Informative)
Although the SETI@home team was ready to pounce on any possible extraterrestrial signal the minute it was detected, nothing resembling such a signal was detected in real time, during the observations. This, however, is no cause for discouragement: real-time analysis is very rough, and would only detect the strongest and most obvious extraterrestrial signals.
Re:i thought (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:i thought (Score:4, Informative)
Seriously though, it's not as though SETI is competing with space exploration in any serious way. Since it's been privatized (and even before, actually), the yearly budget for SETI is _much_ lower than the cost of launching the cheapest satellite. Interplanetary travel is orders of magnitude more expensive.
Re:i thought (Score:2, Funny)
Re:i thought (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:i thought (Score:2)
Re:i thought (Score:2)
Plus, the Spaniards (and everyone else of the era) would have had a much harder time justifying their expeditions if they intelligent communication prior to bumping into each other.
Re:i thought (Score:2)
So would just about everybody else. But any permanent presence in space, let alone a self-sustaining independent presence, seems completely infeasible at this point. It will probably be another century or two until technology is up to that. Until then, we should focus on unmanned exploration.
Re:i thought (Score:2)
--No. It shouldn't *have* to be that way! We put a man on the moon within 10 years due to Kennedy's vision and boldness, we should be able to say+do the same for a Moon base.
--The US economy is stagnant because there are no "frontiers" anymore. We can *do* this, we just don't have the *will* or the *mandate* to do so.
--I can't take credit for this idea (saw it on
Re:i thought (Score:2)
First Light! ;-) (Score:5, Funny)
Re:First Light! ;-) (Score:2)
Re:First Light! ;-) (Score:2)
Re:First Light! ;-) (Score:2)
I'm no physics professor, but that probably depends on if you see it as a particle or a wave. As a particle, light is photons while radio is electrons. As waves, it's the same (EM radiation) and my post is just a lame attempt at a joke.
I like to think of them as wavy particles, kinda like really fast sperm, hitting the eye. :-)
Re:First Light! ;-) (Score:2)
24h is a lot (Score:4, Insightful)
exactly what i was wondering (Score:2)
two things can happen:
1) they turn it very very slowly - a lot of the 24 hr is wasted pointing the dish
2) they don't turn it and wait until the dish points in the right place - a lot of the 24 hr is wasted waiting
anybody knows?
Re:exactly what i was wondering (Score:2, Informative)
They can also (I assume) do limited 'pointing' by turning the reception gear that is hanging at the center of the huge dish.
Re:exactly what i was wondering (Score:5, Interesting)
For many purposes, Arecibo is quite restrictive; for seti@home, it is excellent - unless, of course, ET lives due north or south.
Re:exactly what i was wondering (Score:2)
--Heh; I guess that's *one* way to hide in plain sight... One of my favorite theories is that they're just on the opposite side of the sun.
Re:exactly what i was wondering (Score:2)
Re:exactly what i was wondering (Score:2)
Inclination to galactic disc... (Score:4, Informative)
The Milky way is quite "flat" when you look at the whole galaxy, so if the earth is rotating in the same plane, you should be able to hear quite much. Right "up" or "down" there probably won't be as many candidates. Anyone know on what "scale" we're listening? Would that even matter, or are we trying to listen "locally", galactically speaking.
Kjella
Re:Inclination to galactic disc... (Score:3, Informative)
And it only looks flat when you view it from afar. Just look out at the night sky, and see how many stars are "North" of you, and how many are "South" of you. There are stars in the Southern hemisphere that can't be seen from the Northern hemisphere, and vice versa. Because of this, one could assume that since Arecibo has such a limited view of the sky, we could very well miss a star from wh
Re:Inclination to galactic disc... (Score:3, Insightful)
And anyway, there is plenty of sky to look at with "just" 24 hours.
Re:exactly what i was wondering (Score:2)
If so, Arecibo could cover most of the galaxy, excluding the stars in the local neighborhood to the North or South.
Re:exactly what i was wondering (Score:2)
Unless the Arecibo radio telescope was so carefully planed that it was built juuust the right distance from the equator so as to be aligned with the galactic plane, it's either going to point "down" or "up", and either way that's largely away from the galactic disc.
Re:24h is a lot (Score:5, Informative)
Uhhhh no. The data they get is ALL from Arecibo, but most of the time it's just 'wherever it happens to be pointing for someone else's research'. The only difference is that for 24 hours they got to decide what it's pointed at.
Re:24h is a lot (Score:2)
Re:24h is a lot (Score:2)
Whew (Score:4, Funny)
(insert evil laugh here)
Re:Whew (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Whew (Score:2)
-
What the signal will look like? (Score:5, Funny)
Perhaps if we're lucky, we'll receive the first episode of their SCI-FI series - "Pale Men From Earth!"
Re:What the signal will look like? (Score:2, Informative)
But not for much longer and definietly not on the frequencies Seti is searching. I give our current single carrier based broadcast signals another 70 years before they are completely replaced by cable, line of sight, spread specturm, laser or whatever. Any of which will substantially reduce power and/or off-planet radiation.
SETI doesn't search the easy to use frequecies used by broadcast media because they would be swamped by terestrial signals. But they argue
Spoiler (Score:2)
In it they plausibly assert that deciding to run the mothership on Apple Xserve's is a good idea because no major Earth government would defy the monopoly and run anything other than a Windows OS.
what if they missed it (Score:2, Interesting)
what if the aliens took a 10 min break?
or what if whatever organization on the alien world that signals to us was only allowed 1 day, and it was yesterday.
a place as big as the universe could be constantly monitored for 1000's of years, and may still come up with nothing.
Re:what if they missed it (Score:5, Insightful)
Bad luck then. This is - to some extent - a game of chance. But you have to play it to have any chance to win.
Re:what if they missed it (Score:2)
That would be akin to the entire Earth, with all transmissions from it, including all Tv/Radio/Cellular/Military/Naval/Commercial Comms/3D Holographic Programming (this is the Aliens transmitting, remember) switch off and take a 10 minute break at the same time. Ain't gonna happen.
Unless they had some serious planetary moment-of-silence thing going on just when we looked.
Re:what if they missed it (Score:2)
SETI is looking for extremely narrow band signals, simply because we really don't have the technology to detect anything else at astronomical distances. An extremely narrow band signal is really only good for one thing; a beacon that simply runs all the time.
That would be akin to the entire Earth, with all transmissions from it, including all Tv/Radio/Cellular/Military/Naval/Commercial Comms/3D Holographic Programming (this is the Aliens transmitting, remember) switc
Gahdamn Aliens! (Score:2)
Pay no attention to those scabs!
Only? (Score:5, Insightful)
-E2
Re:Only? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Only? (Score:2)
They seem to be doing a good job mapping, indexing and cataloguing the radio-map of the sky. I bet there are people on SETI who don't think there's a chance of finding an ET, they just want to check out and catalogue cool unexplained signals.
SETI has also done a good job with distributed computing.
They've also captured the interest of millions of people around the world.
Re:Only? (Score:2)
Let's say tomorrow we get some green alien saying "Hello, anyone out there?". We reply, and a thousand years from now, his 500th generation hears "Yes!" Maybe they figure it out. Now what? It's like two single people meeting at a party. "Hi." "Hello." "Um, so...uh...send radio signals often?"
Why shouldn't they be considered crackpots? The SETI people ignore all the basic facts- namely that any signal we could "se
Re:Only? (Score:2)
I must have missed the memo. I was under the impression that we were just now (last 10 years or so) able to detect planets, and indirectly at that. I think it's a tad early to start declaring omniscience (sp?) and declare the search unworthy.
Re:Goldeneye is "hard" science (Score:2)
This is old news (Score:2, Interesting)
Some precisions (Score:2, Insightful)
Last SETI Update : 21/05/2003 [planetary.org]
Dupe... :D (Score:2, Informative)
That, or the internet is severely lagged at the moment(There was that IP over avian carrier thingy...)
Patterns...... (Score:3, Interesting)
I just find it fascinating, how the SETI project is looking for signals coming from outer space that have the tiniest pattern to them. Because, they assume, if it has a pattern, it was created by intelligent life. But back on Earth, they have been studying DNA, which has an incredible pattern. Yet they say that it doesn't have an intelligent creator.
Patterns? - Read the protocols (Score:5, Informative)
Who assumes that? Certainly not the SETI @ Home people.
There are quite elaborate "protocols" for weeding through the many, many signal patterns the SETI project does hear, precisely because it ain't necessarily so. That's, um, a whole lot of what the SETI project is doing, if you would care to consider what all those home boxes are up to with their spare cycles.
The most obvious example of a naturally occurring regular pattern -- mentioned prominently in the article /. linked to -- is pulsars, which tick away regularly and give off a very distinct radio signal pattern.
(You really want to read a criticism or two of the "watch watchmaker" thing you're arguing. Go find a critique or two of Darwin's Black Box, which is basically the same argument made on the same, sub-molecular level that you're already thinking of.)
Re:Patterns? - Read the protocols (Score:2)
Interestingly enough, when pulsars were first discovered, some scientists thought they had to have some intelligence behind them because their rotational periods were too regular.
Re:Patterns? - Read the protocols (Score:2)
Re:Patterns...... (Score:2)
Re:Patterns...... (Score:2)
> I just find it fascinating, how the SETI project is looking for signals coming from outer space that have the tiniest pattern to them. Because, they assume, if it has a pattern, it was created by intelligent life. But back on Earth, they have been studying DNA, which has an incredible pattern. Yet they say that it doesn't have an intelligent creator.
The atoms in a dog turd sport "an incredible pattern", yet no one claims that dog turds have intelligent creators.
Re:Patterns...... (Score:2)
Intelligece tends to create complex patterns. Not all complex patterns are created by intelligence.
(Human) intelligence often create arches. Not all arches are created by by intelligence. [wapers.com]
Evolution is a powerful natural process of creating complex patterns. If there is a natural system undergoing evolution and emmiting radio signals they could contain arbitrarily complex patterns without intelligent creation. That would be a huge scien
Re:Patterns...... (Score:2)
There are in fact many distint differences between patterns generated by intelligence, patterns generated by Life, and patterns generated by non-living natural forces.
Patterns generated by intelligence are less likely to be repeated quickly/nearby. (Libraries
feedback? (Score:2)
I've been running this off and on for years, and the only thing they've sent me is congratulations emails for processing a certain number of data sets. So I wonder, if I did find something of interest, would they let me know?
Re:feedback? Well, not directly (Score:2)
For example, when my computer was working on the data in an area near the equator at the body of leo [planetary.org] (look at the third yellow square for leo--that's approximately the location), I mixed in some Elvis with the data, and got back a 20-second pause in the bitrate.
I have to say: it's really been great to be able to analyze the dynami
I think... (Score:2)
I can imagine the fun (Score:3, Funny)
World:(begins to panic)"Really? How far away are they? How old's the signal?"
Seti: "Well, these signals came from that star cluster over there about 950,000 years ago."
World:(disappointed)"Almost a million years ago - and they never invented space travel"
World:
Re:I can imagine the fun (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean, *light* has only just got here, and galactically speaking, we were pretty boring a million years ago (hell, in even inter-solar-system terms, we're pretty boring now!) I wouldn't get out of bed to travel a million light years to see if there's something here
So, they may have colonised their entire sector/galaxy/galactic cluster using weirdo-science space travel; just because they didn't make it here yet, doesn't mean they didn't/couldn't...
Simon.
/. made it (Score:2, Informative)
Crap! (Score:2)
What, this is about science?
Re:24 hours? (Score:4, Funny)
-Tupshin
Re:24 hours? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:24 hours? (Score:5, Funny)
That's terrible!
Don't these people realize they're looking for signals from the stars, and the stars only come out at night?!
And even if they do find something, anything an alien civilization happens to broadcast during daylight hours is likely to be nothing more than soap operas, talk shows and infomercials.
I insist that the scientists wait until prime-time, and equip the telescope with a cable descrambler, to catch all the good alien shows.
Re:24 hours? (Score:3, Funny)
Nothing like Good Alien Pron. I hope they're green =)
Re:24 hours? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:24 hours? (Score:2)
I don't think I want us to have to deal with an alien DMCA lawsuit with their version of the MPAA. Maybe it's just me.
Re:24 hours? (Score:2)
Say, DirecTV and other companies should be lobbying Congress for longer extensions to copyright holdings, lest some alien civilization start freeloading off of them in 200 years!
Re:24 hours? (Score:2)
Re:24 hours? (Score:2)
But a RADIO Telescope can still look at them.
Re:24 hours? (Score:2)
A radio telescope can't see though a planet sized lump of rock.
Re:24 hours? (Score:2)
I hope an actual radio astronomer comes and clears things up, but...I suspect that the image given in "Contact" of radio astronomers sitting near the equipment, monitoring it for a signal and guiding the search moment to moment is probably quite misleading.
Instead, I bet they write something like a perl script that executes a well-researched plan on a preset schedule. In theory, the 24 hours of data collection could have been a very non-eventful period, hardly requiring any caffeine at all.
Of course, onc
Re:24 hours? (Score:2)
In the words of the time honoured Spectrum games, Congraturation! You sucsess!
You're exactly right. The eStar [estar.org.uk] project is a robotic telescope network, as well as having various databases of previous observations. The telescopes and the databases can be queried in the same way, with the databases returning rows and the telescopes zooming off to look at the object in question. All of this is controlled in Perl.
This takes some of the glamour out of astronomy in favour of more rapid results. I still remem
Re:Eh? (Score:2, Funny)
rescent
reobservation
Thank god for the "Editor" union...
Re:Last 100 years has been about flight, next.. sp (Score:3, Funny)
With an attitude like this you can better hope for stem cell research to come up with an artificial brain....
Jeroen
Re:Last 100 years has been about flight, next.. sp (Score:5, Insightful)
Doubtful. The thing about passenger jets is that they take you to places that you have business going to - places with stuff like oxygen.
How long will it be before "common" space flight is even possible, let alone with destinations to go to?
50 years is far too short.
Re:50 years isn't too short for frequent space tra (Score:2)
With any luck, she will be left there.
Re:50 years isn't too short for frequent space tra (Score:2)
What? They are retiring the Concorde? Yeah, but this is only to replace it with a better plane. What? No replacement? Why? The riches can't afford the lousy $6000 ticket?
You get the picture? Going to space is not as cracked up as it sounds, and if I were a billionnaire, I would rather give $20 million to charity
Re:Last 100 years has been about flight, next.. sp (Score:4, Insightful)
And in those 50 years we have just got better at making overgrown, unreliable, inefficient, at best, only partially reusable bloody FIREWORKS. Our space programs are a sick joke, flinging man and machine into the big black through brute force because we haven't thought of a better way. In 50 years we have gone virtually nowhere in terms of technological advancement: we have cleverer probes, faster rockets, bigger payloads but there is nothing fundamentally different from the V2 rocket. Before space travel can really - for what of a better term - take off we need to get a technology that doesn't rely on strapping the traveller to a giant tube containing huge quantities of volatile chemicals in big tanks and then igniting them in a combustion chamber.
Re:Last 100 years has been about flight, next.. sp (Score:2)
Good enough for you?
Re:when we make first contact..... (Score:2)