SETI Researcher Quashes Signal Rumors 379
brainstyle writes "According to Dan Wertheimer of SETI the whole ET signal excitement is more hype than science. I told myself it was in all likelihood nothing special, but I'm still disappointed. Darn."
This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is no (Score:5, Funny)
With that much denial in one news report, you know it has to be a cover-up
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, in light of these facts, which are not denied in the BBC article, the "We're not investigating it further" type responses certainly sound like an attempt to prevent the media from getting their panties in a twist. "Actually it was a reflection from a weather balloon..."
I hope SETI does investigate. That's the whole point of the project, isn't it?
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:3, Funny)
The bionic Lemming says
A navigational Beacon? Rotating on a repair facility? Made to cover as much of an area as possible in times of distress?
Or do the aliens have Software written by their version of Microsoft - and they accidentally have a
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe a hollow sphere or ring rotating for artifical gravity? ie. DEATH STAR.
-molo
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:3, Insightful)
Isn't that the whole point of FM? (i.e. frequency modulation... varying the frequency to encode data?)
Couldn't it be a signal from a stationary source that's being modulated as a carrier wave? Think outside your tiny box once in a while...
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:5, Insightful)
Only one thing I always say about this: It's a very naive to assume aliens are smart. We're not all that bright by the standards we seem to expect of aliens, and we used to be a lot dumber. We're just as likely to detect an early industrial civlization by their sitcom broadcasts as we are to detect some hyperadvanced godlike race beaming lasers at us accross the galaxy.
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, considering the "WOW" signal from a few decades ago it seems that perhaps the odds are against us. Maybe there was
NEW COMMENT FROM SETI.ORG (Score:3, Informative)
Alas, this story is misleading. According to Dan Werthimer, who heads up the Berkeley SERENDIP SETI project, this is a case of a reporter failing to understand the workings of their search. He says that misquotes and statements
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:3, Funny)
You mean....
Aliens with frickin' lasers on top of their heads?
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps 1420 is the start-of-message signal?
Realistically speaking, if I took a reading of a signal that always started the same way and behaved the same way no matter when I started, I would suspect an artifact of the equipment or software.
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:5, Interesting)
I wouldn't be surprised if the signal only showed up periodially if it were artificial. After all, they would probably be scanning the sky with a high-gain antenna. They'd expect a recipient to figure out the period and then be ready to capture whatever higher-speed data is being sent on some other frequency, or something like that.
Most likely this is just a natural phenomena. However, that makes it just as useful to study - it means we can learn something just the same...
From the horse's (Score:5, Informative)
Unfortunately, reporters, editors and scientists often work at cross purposes. Reporters want to sell stories, editors want to sell magazines, and scientists want the public to hear about their research. When the science won't sell the story, there is often some creative writing that goes on.
That said, I was both misquoted and quoted out of context in the New Scientist article. The crux of the issue is that there really isn't much chance that the "signal" is actually extraterrestrial or even real. The point I was trying to make to the "New Scientist" reporter was that the combination of a stable frequency between observation and the rapidly changing frequency during an observation meant that it was unlikely that it was real, and that it was likely to be a spurious signal due to noise or interference. I reiterated that several times.
I don't know how that got misinterpreted to the point where the article claims I said the signal was unlikely to be interference or noise.
We don't have any plans for reobservation or monitoring, and I'd give 1000:1 odds that there's nothing there.
Re:From the horse's (Score:4, Informative)
This candidate is still the best scoring candidate that we have. That doesn't make it likely that it is ET. If you find a penny, the likelyhood that it will turn into a hundred dollar bill is small.
At some point the telescope will swing past this point again. If we don't see anything at that point, this whole discussion will go away. If we get the chance, (right now we don't have any allocated telescope time and we don't know when we will get any), we might swing the telescope that way just to lay this to rest.
Re:From the horse's (Score:5, Insightful)
Consider for a moment there may be an alien project on that planet, and some guy struggling for budget to keep his signal transmitter running and you don't have all the time in the world, maybe they had an equipment upgrade between your scans, or a change in transmission theories. Maybe the have detected methane and oxygen in our atmosphere after extensive surveys of their sky and are targeting us with a signal.
My point is not that this is likely, but given this is the only signal and we don't know much about most of the factors in Drake's equation and the anthropic principal is at work here thare are many reasons for *showing a little bit of enthusiasm* and checking out this signal one more time, and not taking your sweet time to do it.
Re:From the horse's (Score:3, Insightful)
There are about a zillion research projects that compete for a scarce resource, telescope time. Each telescope has a time assignment committee, that will decide who will be able to point the telescope. SETI is the last in the list. So you should send your request to Arec
These are not the droids you are looking for (Score:4, Funny)
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat - This is no (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This is not a cover-up. I repeat This is (Score:3, Funny)
I was all ready (Score:2, Funny)
And how interesting.. (Score:5, Funny)
Nothing for you to see here. Please move along.
Instead of the story..
Re:And how interesting.. (Score:4, Funny)
Cover Up exposed. (Score:5, Funny)
Hello,
I am Mr Buck Francisco, General Manager(Treasury) of Land
Bank, Helopkino, in the Alpha Centauri System.This is an urgent and
very confidential business proposition.
On earth date June 6, 2000,an alien Oil consultant/contractor with
the Alpha Centauri Institute of Mining and Metallurgy,
Mr. Darth Vader made a numbered time(Fixed) Deposit for
twelve earth months, valued at US$26,500,000.00,
(Twenty-six Million, five hundred thousand of your Earth US Dollars).
Upon maturity,I sent a routine notification to his forwarding
address but got no reply. After a month, we sent a reminder and
finally we discovered from his contract employers, the Centauri
Petroleum Corporation that Mr.Darth Vader died from a spaceship
accident.On further investigation,I found out that
he died without making a WILL,and all attempts to trace his next
of kin was fruitless.
I therefore made further investigation and discovered that
Mr.Darth Vader did not declare any kin or relations in all his
official documents,including his Bank Deposit paperwork in my
Bank. This sum of US$26,500,000.00 has carefully been fixed in my
bank for safekeeping.
No one will ever come forward to claim it.According to Helopkino
Law,at the expiration of 5 (five) earth years, the money will revert to the
ownership of the Government if nobody applies to claim the fund.
Consequently, my proposal is that I will like you as a Alien to
stand in as the owner of the money which was fixed deposited in my
bank. I am writing you because I as a public servant,i cannot operate
an alien account.
I want to present you as the owner of the funds so you can be able to
claim them with the help of my attorney. This is simple.I will like
you to provide immediately your full names and address so that the
Attorney will prepare the necessary documents which will put you in
place as the beneficiary of the funds.
The money will be moved out for us to share in the ratio of 80% for
me and 20% for you. The paperwork for this transaction will be done
by the Attorney.If you are interested, please reply immediately via
my SETI@home address and Upon your response,I shall then provide you
with more details and relevant documents that will help you understand
the transaction.Please observe utmost confidentiality, and be rest
assured that this transaction would be most profitable for both of
us because I shall require your assistance to invest my share in real
estate within your country.
Due to the nature of confidentiality in this Transaction our
communication can only be via SETI.
Awaiting your urgent reply via my email Above.
Thanks and my regards.
BUCK FRANCISCO.
Oversight ala Contact? (Score:2)
But even if it's not, the real question is whether the Government is swooping in to take over management of detecting and decoding of the Signal ala "Contact"
The denials mean little in themselves, but if the next day includes evidence of some Science oversight committee on flight to SETI@Home and various other radio observatories, and if a suspiciously high percentage of radio dishes start pointing in the same direction in the sky - well then interesting days may be ahead.
Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:5, Funny)
Dan, did you try to map the signal to a 3 dimensional shape? A cube maybe??
Re:Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:2)
Re:Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:2)
Re:Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:2)
dumb to know there are
4 different simultaneous
24 hour days within a
single rotation of Earth?
Re:Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:2)
Re:Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:3, Funny)
Clueless mods at it again. (Score:2)
God if you're going to moderate someone down at least know what you're doing.
Re:Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:2)
And I'll bet if they triangulate the signal they'll find out it's probably coming from pop-star Lance Bass's own personal space station.
That freaky eccentric teen idol is only trying to spur on our scientific endeavors. He's so dreamy.
Re:Don't be too quick to judge! (Score:5, Funny)
They did, and results were disturbing.
Decoded, the signal resolved into the datastream of a Usenet flamewar decades ago, culminating in the invokation of Godwin's Law.
oh well (Score:3, Funny)
I for one (Score:3, Funny)
And the signal says... (Score:3, Funny)
Obviously not intelligent.
Should be safe (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Should be safe (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Should be safe (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Should be safe (Score:2)
Maybe not radio? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Maybe not radio? (Score:5, Funny)
message was real... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:message was real... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And the cover-up begins. (Score:3, Funny)
Cover-up conspiracy theories (Score:3, Insightful)
Y'know, I get really tired of all this bullshit I hear. It's bad enough to hear this bullshit when I interact with "normal" people -- do we really need this on slashdot as well?
Look everyone, making any sort of contact with an alien civilization would be such an incredible discovery, there's no way the government could ever keep it quiet. Christ, they can't even keep China from obtaining detailed blueprints on every single nuclear weapon in the US arsenal. So how are these nincompoops going to keep a bu
Well (Score:4, Funny)
I'm not usually one for conspiracy theories but... (Score:5, Interesting)
Yesterday, we get this quote from Dan Wertheimer:
"It's the most interesting signal from SETI@home. We're not jumping up and down, but we are continuing to observe it."
but today we get:
"It's all hype and noise. We have nothing that is unusual. It's all out of proportion."
and we also get Paul Horowitz:
"It's not much of anything at all. We're not investigating it further."
So yesterday the chief scientist for the project says it's the most interesting signal (which in and of itself just means it was a little different than the rest) and that they will continue to investigate it. But now today it's just a bunch of media hype and they aren't investigating it any further (I'm not sure who Horowitz actually is, but it seems a safe assumption, based on his comment, that he's associated with the project".
Yes, it COULD just be a case of "Oh wow!... Oh no, wait, nothing". Or it could be an outright coverup. I suspect it's something in between, but chains of comments like these really do lead a person down a particular path.
Unlikely .... (Score:5, Insightful)
I think you would probably find that the people who want to find extraterrestrial life really, guinuinely want to find it. They would neither risk being considered cranks by repeatedly saying "found one -- oops, psyche" nor would they willingly participate in a cover up if they did.
A lot of scientists already think of SETI as being a little flaky. Giving people reason to believe that more would be silly.
[ then again, since I can't prove a negative, I can't completely rule out the assertion either. =]
Re:Unlikely .... (Score:2)
If that's the case, I'd really like an expanded explanation. If they figured out it's a telescope malfunction, let us know. If they discovered it corresponds with a Pulsar or something, let us know. If they think someone hacked the software, let us know. They way they left i
Re:I'm not usually one for conspiracy theories but (Score:3, Informative)
Paul Horowitz is a physicist at Harvard who's primary claim to fame is being one of the co-authors of The Art of Electronics [artofelectronics.com]. The other author being Winfield Hill.
Paul is a damn smart guy, is pretty funny, and has an encyclopedic knowledge of electronics. I took the Physics 123 class with him and Tom Hayes at Harvard about 5 years ago so I have some sense of his intellect.
Correct link (Score:2, Informative)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/sci/tech/3621608.stm [bbc.co.uk]
see the 2 in the URL ? that denotes US based servers (bbc world edition) if its a 1 its UK servers, great and superquick for the UK but as most of the traffic here is US based its better/quicker to use the designated servers for that area
Wait a minute... (Score:5, Insightful)
i understand its so very probably not an ET signal...but what if it was?
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:2)
Delay tactic (Score:4, Funny)
Alone (Score:4, Funny)
Although (Score:5, Informative)
If they have found an interstellar signal in this frequency, and it isn't artificial, will we have to revise our understanding of astrophysics? My understanding is that this can't be regular white noise. Maybe it's from our solar system (a naturally occuring local signal rather than interstellar). Or maybe it's something new.
Re:Although (Score:2)
Eh? Wouldn't that mean interstellar hydrogen would also absorb the signal? Your link would be useles, unless your signalling power was humongous, in which case... Why worry about noise?
Not quite (Score:4, Informative)
No, it's exactly the opposite. There is very low absorption on this frequency, which means the signal will propagate farther than in other frequencies.
will we have to revise our understanding of astrophysics? My understanding is that this can't be regular white noise.
From what I have read, it's a "marginally regular" white noise. That is, it has a shape that's somewhat unusual to find in noise, but not really impossible, just low probability.
Re:Although (Score:2)
It's most likely the ... (Score:4, Funny)
STAY AWAY! Mostly Harmless (but they're getting worse).
Yeah, redundant, but... (Score:3, Funny)
1420 MHz (Score:2, Funny)
"4ll Ur B4s3 r B3l0ng 2 Us"
Crap! (Score:2)
swamp gas (Score:2, Funny)
it was all swamp gas, move along now, nothing to see here
Conspiracy (Score:2, Interesting)
But if something like extraterrestial contact were to happen to us as
Re:Conspiracy (Score:2)
Proving microbes on Mars wouldn't rock the boat much.
Alf landing in Moscow and eating lunch with Putin might be hard for some to take, though.
Re:Conspiracy (Score:2)
"five great machines. First one is crossing the river. I can see it from here, wading... wading the Hudson like a man wading through a brook..."
vs.
"Hey, I think I hear something."
Re:Conspiracy (Score:2)
Well, in their defence, they thought the aliens were attacking. I don't recall reading about a bunch of people recanting their religious views due to the broadcast. The "invasion" part is what freaked them out. Therefore, I don't think that it is useful to attempt to draw a conclusion a
Re:Conspiracy (Score:3, Insightful)
FYI, incidentally, Kabbalah isn't a book. The Zohar is the main Kabbalist text. (And, as it happens, deals with all sorts of angels, seraphs and other extra-terrestrial creatures.)
which book (Score:2)
Maybe we don't want to find these guys after all.
there is still hope (Score:2)
Personally, I'm hoping this is some kind of military craft that is going to be unveiled soon, so we can check out whatever cool tech is inside.
Re:there is still hope (Score:2, Interesting)
It's a shame that this whole situation still gets treated like this. A lot of people know and it still continues. All the data is there for anyone that wants to see it. SETI puts the face on it that mainstream scientists are willing to accept.
Damnit Damnit Damnit (Score:2)
Or maybe a giant planet would coem towards us and try to eat all our satelites.
Or maybe parasitic aliens would come use us as hosts and enslave us.
Oh the possibilities that could have been....
What if we get busted for signal theft? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm just waiting for the Galactic police to show up.
Screensavers? (Score:2)
I mean, the screensaver might just one day solve one of the biggest questions to mankind. The same perky things that were thought to be obsolete years ago and brought you Hotbar and Gator. This world just keeps amazing me.
how does he explain the drift? (Score:3, Interesting)
The relatively rapid drift of the signal is also puzzling for other reasons. A planet would have to be rotating nearly 40 times faster than Earth to have produced the observed drift; a transmitter on Earth would produce a signal with a drift of about 1.5 hertz per second. What is more, if telescopes are observing a signal that is drifting in frequency, then each time they look for it they should most likely encounter it at a slightly different frequency. But in the case of SHGb02+14a, every observation has first been made at 1420 megahertz, before it starts drifting. "It just boggles my mind," Korpela says.
I can understand they don't want to say there's aliens YET but come on - something weird is there...
Possible explanation and some questions... (Score:5, Insightful)
Now if you look on this site [64.233.167.104] the 1400-1700 Mhz range is used by radio astronomy and weather satellites. So with that 3 questions:
Now I'm probably wrong on all of this. Which is why I love
I remember something similar (Score:3, Insightful)
In the end it proved to be nothing.
But what if this isn't ?
signal "drifting" (Score:3, Informative)
First of all, it's doppler shift. Amateur radio operators deal with doppler shift in radio signals when operating amateur satellites. Basically, when either a transmitting station or receiving station are in motion, the transmitted signal will appear lower or higher in frequency at the receiving station, depending on whether the stations are moving closer together or further apart.
It was suggested in the article that the cause of the "drifting" would be due to planetary motion
Here's the problem with that assumption: It assumes that the aliens are intending earth as the recipient of the signal.
It's most likely that the subject signal is being pointed somewhere else and intended for someone else... not us.
It's important here to point out that doppler shift will vary between any two points. SO
Additionally, going on the theory here that we are not the intended recipients of the signal... and thus perhaps not directly in the path of the strongest part of the signal, also explains why reception was a bit weak here at earth.
Armchair scientists unite!
Ping (Score:3, Funny)
c == c (Score:5, Informative)
Re:c == c (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:c == c (Score:2)
Re:c == c (Score:3, Interesting)
#include <nitpick.h>
Both light and radio waves are electromagnetic waves. Light is not a radio wave any more than Linux is a Windows.
not just a good idea, it's the law (Score:2, Funny)
Re:lasers (Score:2)
I think we should start looking for lasers over radio waves simply because you can send more data that way and it is more effcients. Same reason many space agencies are looking to change satellites over to lasers rather than radio then can transmit their data back to Earth much more quickly.
Re:lasers (Score:3, Informative)
Re:lasers (Score:2)
here is a decent story i found while researching the idea of doing it. looks like it is already a group in seti doing it.
Re:lasers (Score:5, Informative)
1. They know we're here and are making a concerted effort to attempt contact us. This means they can't be more than a few light years away, and have already picked up OUR radio waves, meaning odds are we can hear their radio too.
2. They had to know that there was a habitable world here long enough ago to send a signal here on the random chance that there's somebody here to notice. (i.e. they live far enough away that when they sent the laser message, they couldn't know wether or not anybody was here to pick it up)
3. They missed a reciever and hit us by blind luck.
This would also limit us to detecting civilizations advanced enough to have already detected us, and have lasers with narrow enough beams that it's still coherent and good enough aim to still hit us accross great distances.
Non-coherent broadcasts like radio, on the other hand, travels in all directions, and would be expected to be used by civilizations less advanced than us, so we could detect nearly any industrial or better society (assuming we could resolve the signal and recognize it as a signal). Looking for this, we can detect any civilzation, wether they're looking for us or not.
Lasers are easier to detect if they get to us, but radio is much more likely to get to us.
Have we been so primed by TV and movies to expect fantastical aliens that we don't think that we may end up finding the technological equivalent to ourselves fifty or a hundred years ago?
Re:F^%$# aliens, where are you? (Score:3, Funny)
In secret underground bases under the Arizona desert, why do you ask?
Re:F^%$# aliens, where are you? (Score:2)
SECRET LABMO-TORIES de gubbnint keep stashed away underneath Virginia.
Re:F^%$# aliens, where are you? (Score:2)
Re:The Source (Score:2)
Re:what are you looking for (Score:3, Insightful)
What are you hoping they find?
That's actually a very relevant question which hits many UFO believers right in the scrotum.
In my experience 75% are looking for "Shiny happy aliens holding hands", who will of course descend upon us soon, revealing mystical knowledge that will take us, as a species, to the next level of evolution, relieving the believer from his job at K-Mart.
The other 25% believe in horrible, scary aliens, who will of course descend upon us, wreaking havoc and mayhem and instituting
Re:I decoded the signal (Score:5, Funny)
Nmap run completed -- 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 62.359 years