Scientists Hope To Broadcast DNA and Earth's Location For Curious Aliens (theguardian.com) 134
Beacon of Galaxy message could be sent into heart of Milky Way, where life is deemed most likely to exist. From a report: "Even if the aliens are short, dour and sexually obsessed," the late cosmologist Carl Sagan once mused, "if they're here, I want to know about them." Driven by the same mindset, a Nasa-led team of international scientists has developed a new message that it proposes to beam across the galaxy in the hope of making first contact with intelligent extraterrestrials. The interstellar missive, known as the Beacon in the Galaxy, opens with simple principles for communication, some basic concepts in maths and physics, the constituents of DNA, and closes with information about humans, the Earth, and a return address should any distant recipients be minded to reply.
The group of researchers, headed by Dr Jonathan Jiang at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, says that with technical upgrades the binary message could be broadcast into the heart of the Milky Way by the Seti Institute's Allen Telescope Array in California and the 500-metre Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope in China. In a preliminary paper, which has not been peer reviewed, the scientists recommend sending the message to a dense ring of stars near the centre of the Milky Way -- a region deemed most promising for life to have emerged.
"Humanity has, we contend, a compelling story to share and the desire to know of others -- and now has the means to do so," the scientists write. The message, if it ever leaves Earth, would not be the first. The Beacon in the Galaxy is loosely based on the Arecibo message sent in 1974 from an observatory of the same name in Puerto Rico. That targeted a cluster of stars about 25,000 light years away, so it will not arrive any time soon. Since then, a host of messages have been beamed into the heavens including an advert for Doritos and an invitation, written in Klingon, to a Klingon Opera in The Hague.
The group of researchers, headed by Dr Jonathan Jiang at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, says that with technical upgrades the binary message could be broadcast into the heart of the Milky Way by the Seti Institute's Allen Telescope Array in California and the 500-metre Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope in China. In a preliminary paper, which has not been peer reviewed, the scientists recommend sending the message to a dense ring of stars near the centre of the Milky Way -- a region deemed most promising for life to have emerged.
"Humanity has, we contend, a compelling story to share and the desire to know of others -- and now has the means to do so," the scientists write. The message, if it ever leaves Earth, would not be the first. The Beacon in the Galaxy is loosely based on the Arecibo message sent in 1974 from an observatory of the same name in Puerto Rico. That targeted a cluster of stars about 25,000 light years away, so it will not arrive any time soon. Since then, a host of messages have been beamed into the heavens including an advert for Doritos and an invitation, written in Klingon, to a Klingon Opera in The Hague.
Story to Tell? (Score:5, Funny)
Storytellers always think they have the best story. I would love to hear it.
From the big point of view, I'm not sure we are much removed from Apes yet.
Who's DNA are they sending? It would be really funny if they all showed up in costumes that looked like that person, thinking that was the information we sent them so that we'd know how to look so we didn't blast them from orbit.
--
We meet aliens every day who have something to give us. - William Shatner
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There are an awful lot of assumptions these blinking beacon folks are making about the ability of a completely alien civilization to decode our message. It's preposterous. The best we could hope for is to communicate that we have a basic understanding of simple mathematics, and even that's a stretch. For all we know, things like prime numbers don't mean anything to them.
DNA? They've got to be out of their minds. For all we know, it's unique to earth and some other mechanism is common to the rest of th
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DNA? They've got to be out of their minds.
DNA has some very useful properties and it forms easily in primordial soup. There is a reasonable chance that alien life is based on DNA. But they may use different bases. Researchers have replicated DNA with up to 8 bases [sciencedaily.com] instead of the standard 4.
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Or... perhaps they take it as a warning about a biological infection (why assume all intelligence is biological) and dispatch some kill-bots to clean up the infection
*Alert* hegemonizing swarm detected in spiral arm, all warnings destroy immediately
Hopefully, "immediately" might span the entire course of civilization, but I, for one, support hiding out until we are more capable, and harder to wipe out
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...I, for one, support hiding out until we are more capable, and harder to wipe out
it to late for that. we have been broadcasting unencrypted signal into space for over a century now starting with radio and moving on to television signals soon everything pretty much will be encrypted and look like noise but we have already announced ourselves to the universe. the space race was televised so anyone out there knows we have extra-planetary capabilities (suck for us we actually regressed on that and are only now catching back up to the 60s level off space flight (in many ways the space shuttl
Re:Story to Tell? (Score:5, Informative)
I think a lot of assumptions are made about the frequency of intelligent life too.
The universe is likely too vast for us to be the ONLY intelligent civilization around right now, but if there are currently say, 1 million active, intelligent civilizations in the visible universe that would still put them at like - 1 per 100,000 galaxies to 1 per 2 million galaxies (depending on which estimate you go with for # of galaxies in the observable universe).
Just due to scale both of the following statements can be true:
1. The universe has many, many intelligent civilizations.
2. Detection, let alone communication, is virtually impossible.
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When they designed the golden record on the Voyager probes they sat down a bunch of industry-leading leading and gave them a draft of the record with no explanation whatsoever, other than it had been discovered. It was a test to prove that there was some chance of them figuring out its inscriptions and how to read its data. They were able to do it, as I recall, but the thought that went into the instructions was extensive.
Give industry professionals DNA data in some binary format with no explanation and the
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These things are done under the assumption that aliens will all be friendly. Based on the history of this planet, that seems unlikely.
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They'll monitor our TV and send silly game-show hosts with odd hair and facial tints because they won't get all the details right ... Oh, wait a second...
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They'll monitor our TV and send silly game-show hosts with odd hair and facial tints because they won't get all the details right ... Oh, wait a second...
Funny? You think sending a bluefin of homo sapiens to civilisation in the galaxy is smart? The are planning to give our species' enemies the perfect tool to deveop at virus (etc) that will exterminate us. The least they could have done is paid for a falcon heavy launch to send the transmitter out of the solar system before it starts broadcasting.
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The least they could have done is paid for a falcon heavy launch to send the transmitter out of the solar system before it starts broadcasting.
that wouldn't help they could triangulate its vector based timing of the Doppler shift of the signal as it flys through space relative to them and then backtrack it to us, or just listen to the last century of broadcast signals we have sent out in the form of radio and television signals and compare it to the compiled dna sequence and go oh its you.
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Beowulf Clusterf$ck (Score:2)
> good way to monetize egomaniacs. Highest bidder's DNA is shot through the cosmos...
No no no, we don't want the galaxy filled with our biggest egomaniacs. One is fucking enough! Imagine a million of "them", aaaHHggg!
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Why do I feel like this is (or will be) the prologue for a movie where we get invaded by aliens?
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Re: Story to Tell? (Score:2)
Every time an article like this comes up:
The Killing Star [wikipedia.org] a very good read.
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Who's DNA are they sending? It would be really funny if they all showed up in costumes that looked like that person, thinking that was the information we sent them so that we'd know how to look so we didn't blast them from orbit.
Lobsters. [antipope.org]
Seriously, it's worth the read.
Donna beams at them enthusiastically. "Fascinating!" she enthuses. "Tell me, what are these lobsters you think are important?"
"They're Amber's friends," Ang explains. "Years ago, Amber's father did a deal with them. They were the first uploads, you know? Hybridized spiny lobster neural tissue and a heuristic API and some random mess of backward-chaining expert systems. They got out of their lab and into the Net and Manfred brokered a deal to set them free, in return for their help running a Franklin orbital factory. This was way back in the early days before they figured out how to do self-assembly properly. Anyway, the lobsters insisted – part of their contract – that Bob Franklin pay to have the deep-space tracking network beam them out into interstellar space. They wanted to emigrate, and looking at what's happened to the solar system since then, who can blame them?"
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Re: Story to Tell? (Score:2)
I wonder if the message mentions that we're covered in fat and probably fry up real nice?
Do you want Ants? (Score:2)
Not their decision (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know if there's anyone else there to receive the message. But suppose there is. Thus the consequences might affect us all. Then it's up to humanity in its entirety, not a bunch of "scientist" tinkerers with nothing better to do, to decide whether we want to put out the calling card or not.
I for me say no.
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Compared to all the other RF we're emitting, the signal from these scientists is insignificant.
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https://www.newscientist.com/a... [newscientist.com]
Re: Not their decision (Score:2)
Re: Not their decision (Score:2)
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Sending the human genome is kind of a bad idea
It is. But they're not doing that.
What they are doing is saying "We have DNA". They are not sending the sequence.
Disclaimer: I have no idea how they are sending the info in a way an alien would understand.
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Disclaimer: I have no idea how they are sending the info in a way an alien would understand.
The paper is worth a read: "A Beacon in the Galaxy: Updated Arecibo Message for Potential FAST and SETI Projects" [arxiv.org], even if you just glance at the pictures. (Warning: Possible NSFW images depending on your local church and/or school board.)
A for Andromeda (Score:2)
Q. How would an evil intelligence send itself across the vast distances of space? Forget science fiction hyperspace nonsense, I mean really, using real physics?
A. As a radio wave. A computer program that is designed to be run on someone else's computer. Malware with a capital M.
And once we run it it will appear friendly until it leaks out. Which it will.
How about we just do not run it? That would be like not creating interesting biological viruses like they did in Wuhan. No way would we not run it.
this will end badly (Score:1)
Great (Score:2)
Why the hell would they bother? (Score:2)
Literally the only reason for aliens to come here is tourism. Worst case scenario are some intergalactic Karens yelling at waiters.
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wars are fought over resources.
Wars are competitions. What competition is about is vast and varied.
If they were advanced enough to drop a missile on us they're advanced enough to mine asteroids. And there's no shortage of habitable worlds *if* you can get to them.
Literally the only reason for aliens to come here is tourism. Worst case scenario are some intergalactic Karens yelling at waiters.
Worst case scenario humans are weeds and alien ships are stocked with this... [ortho.com]
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Wars are also fought over religion. My god is better than your god, you're not following the correct grandson of the Prophet, not that Prophet, the other one, indulgences are holy/blasphemy, etc etc.
If you can get here resources are not the reason you would come. At least I don't think so. Unless they badly needed something scarce that could only concentrate in earth-like planet with a hydrothermal system, like zinc or barium. An insane need for a gigaton of calcium carbonate?
I'm not coming up with ant res
Re: Great (Score:2)
Broadcast NOTHING, may eat or conquer us (Score:3)
The context for this is hypnosis-based reports from alleged abductees who pretty much described the "grays" as short, dour and sexually obsessed. The sexual part seems to be related to their focus on breeding human-alien hybrids, or at least re-engineered humans.
If the reports are to be believed, the aliens expect humans will soon trigger an apocalypse, at which time the aliens will take over and run things with the new improved better disciplined "version" of humans in charge, who then will need to breed quickly to take over any left-over "ordinary" humans. Although, the interpretations and details are murky. Odd stuff.
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If the reports are to be believed, the aliens expect humans will soon trigger an apocalypse, at which time the aliens will take over and run things with the new improved better disciplined "version" of humans in charge, who then will need to breed quickly to take over any left-over "ordinary" humans.
No matter what they send, "Keeping up with the Kardashians" will get there first.
We're doomed.
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> "Keeping up with the Kardashians" [broadcasts] will get there first
Then booty-obsessed aliens will arrive first, from the constellation Bootes I would expect.
Already here (Score:1)
Then booty-obsessed aliens will arrive first
Wouldn't the large number of people claiming anal probing by aliens demonstrate the Kardashian focuses aliens arrived some time ago.
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I think it's time to end this line of speculation.
Re: Broadcast NOTHING, may eat or conquer us (Score:2)
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Even though the Aztecs were "conquered", their progeny lives on via Spaniard + native-American interbreeding. Thanks (or unthanks*) to the Catholic Church's anti-birth-control stance, they are pretty numerous, actually. That's Montezuma's real revenge, and it's driving the orange guy nuts.
My point is that being "conquered" isn't necessarily the end of humanity.
* Depending on your point of view
Re: Broadcast NOTHING, may eat or conquer us (Score:2)
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Or maybe they just won't even bother with us...
"Well, yes, the humans. The hillbillies of the galaxy." - Ildis Kitan
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Imagine if these aliens receive our DNA and attempt to hybridize it with their species. And the experiment goes amuck. Producing a being that, under normal circumstances looks just like them, scales, tentacles and all. But when triggered, morphs into an entity resembling Natasha Henstridge. Who proceeds to attempt to reproduce without limit, replacing the native species on their planet with this abomination.
Dark Forest Theory (Score:5, Interesting)
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We do not need any alien species to destroy us. We are more than capable and entirely willing to do it ourselves long before anything gets any past of future message from us.
"More News at 6, 10, and 11."
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Ninja'd. I came here to say exactly this. It's easy to imagine how this could come back to bite us in the ass but not so easy to see how it could profit us. Doesn't seem like sound reasoning at all.
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I thought these people were supposed to be smart. This is an incredibly stupid thing to do. The most likely solution to the Fermi Paradox is that any species stupid enough to advertise their presence has been wiped out. It only takes one xenophobic species out of potentially Billions. These fools need stopping.
That statement, although i totally agree, makes assumptions. An alternate is the zoo hypothesis, and combined with some active engineering, scientists just do what they are sort-of programmed to do. In the bigger scheme of things, history repeats. Maybe our society and development is very or reasonably predictable. And we just upload our latest research efforts to the intergalactic cloud.
Just saying, there's (plenty) alternate explanations for the Fermi paradox, and so far they seem to avoid us to draw any
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Already saw it (Score:2)
I think I already saw that movie.
Wasn't it called, "attack of the clones" ?
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Yes, the dark forest theory is incredibly stupid. If there are aliens that can wage war on an interstellar scale, you can be absolutely sure that they have already detected our presence whether we "advertise" it or not. Humanity is right now on the verge of being able to detect life on planets orbiting other stars, but we're nowhere near interstellar travel. By the time we achieve the latter, we'll have a very good idea of what every planet within hundreds of lightyears is like. In short, the "dark forest"
Re: Dark Forest Theory (Score:2)
And I for one welcome our new alien overlords. (Score:5, Insightful)
Having our DNA ahead of time will allow them to develop more efficent bio weaponry so we can be eliminates quietly while preserving the rest of the natual habitat.
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Much like the best beef tends to be "grass fed" one has to wonder what the ideal feedstock for the highest end, dry aged human steaks. How do you raise Wagyu Human basically. If it actually turned out to be grass fed beef, that'd be funny.
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How do you raise Wagyu Human basically.
Raise them in America. Lots of beer and corn in the diet. Best marbling on the planet.
Re: And I for one welcome our new alien overlords. (Score:2)
Hawking Was Against This (Score:1)
Re: Hawking Was Against This (Score:2)
DNA not included (Score:2)
I'm all for broadcasting a "we are here" message to try to catch the attention of any nearby species, but what possible benefit is there in broadcasting our DNA? That'd be a *huge* amount of useless data.
Ah, a closer reading says that's NOT what they're doing - they're broadcasting "the constituents of DNA" - which I believe translates to "our heritable information matrix is built out of these amino acids", probably including the basic structure. Which could be incredibly interesting information for any s
Really? (Score:1)
Re:Really? (Score:4, Funny)
Because the scientists are all Enlightened liberals, and they know that, of course, any other intelligent species must also be Enlightened liberals, who would never, ever think of doing such a thing. Trust the scientists, they're never wrong.
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Aliens will be competitive products of evolution (Score:2)
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On the other hand, humans evolved in a highly competitive environment but are largely cooperative and social. As a species develops complex communication mechanism cooperation in social groups evolves naturally and non-zero-sum interactions contribute to overall fitness.
If we discovered life on another planet our first response would not be Protein!
Re: Aliens will be competitive products of evoluti (Score:2)
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all earth symbionts may be compatible in part because they all originate from a common phylogeny.
Irrelevant.
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But what would aliens, with space travel technology, need from Earth? It can't be water, there is plenty of water in the universe. Just within our solar system there are plenty of comets with water. It can't be food, they can surely synthesize food from the elements found on any other planet. Presumably aliens would be able to utilize nuclear fusion or solar power for the energy needed to synthesize food given the huge amount of carbon, nitrogen, and water that exist in the universe .. or even the solar sys
Xindi (Score:4, Interesting)
Did no one at NASA watch Star Trek: Enterprise prior to coming up with this idea?
Now I'm aware that a LOT of Trek fans don't like ST:Enterprise, but there was a whole episode during the season 3 Xindi saga where the Reptilians attempt to create a blood-type based bioweapon in Detroit designed to completely wipe out Earth's population. So now we're going to give unknown aliens with unknown intent super easy access to human DNA. Watching Star Trek and being able to quote lines from it, even the bad ones, should absolutely be a prerequisite to conducting ANY scientific endeavor to identify potential issues in advance that might affect the whole planet. Maybe throw a little Stargate, Battlestar Galactica, and even Jurassic Park in that mix as well.
Re: Xindi (Score:2)
Physics (Score:2)
One little nudge of the right Oort object in the right direction, mix in a bit of patience and it's done.
You could call that a 'mass driver', but it's a super weak one yet has much the same end result. Much more energy efficient.
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The further out you are from the primary (the Sun in this case), the less energy required to hit an arbitrary target closer to that primary.
Like... nudge and you're done. With the benefit that, should any of the 3rd rock's monkey inhabitants happen to have recently invented an FTL craft and a WMG to mount in it, it'll look like a natural event and you'll have so much plausible deniability they won't even think to look for a bad guy in the first place.
Uh huh. (Score:5, Funny)
The core of the galaxy is 30,000 to 40,000 years away, so figure 60-80,000 years before we get the return message "unsubscribe".
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Then since our science says you can't travel faster than light it'll be just as long before anyone shows up on our doorstep. I'd like to think that we'll be long gone by then...
So that's why apes in cages keep throwing shit (Score:2)
*nt*
Comment removed (Score:3)
Re: "Broadcast DNA" (Score:2)
Better than amassing an invasion fleet, only to get it swallowed by a very small dog.
Wuhan will beat them (Score:2)
They are probably thousands of light years away. The Wuhan Institute of Virology is next door. And they are very good at what they do.
http://www.originofcovid.org/ [originofcovid.org]
Not entirely a joke. I doubt there will be people on earth in 1000 years, although I think AI is a bigger threat than biological viruses.
DNA is nice (Score:3)
That way, they can breed us and eat us without having to get up from the galactic couch.
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+1. Indeed. They can make people from the DNA and then have their evil way with them.
Would make an excellent plot for a horror movie. Or maybe a Black Mirror.
Will that be carry out or dine in? (Score:2)
This seems an awful lot like broadcasting a source of fleshly delicacies.
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Yes! This is ringing the dinner bell.
Worst Tactical Decision Ever (Score:2)
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"light speed" (Score:2)
Ludicrous speed, GO!!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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DMCA? (Score:2)
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My god! (Score:2)
Winner: Worst idea of the century. (Score:2)
The risk / reward seems insanely low on this one.
When the guys on the ships meet the guys on the shore, it usually ends very badly for the guys on the shore . We need to be the ones on the ships.
Center of the galaxy good for life? (Score:2)
the scientists recommend sending the message to a dense ring of stars near the centre of the Milky Way -- a region deemed most promising for life to have emerged
I could not post a reference backing that, but I thought that galaxy's edges would be better for life, with less chances of been wiped by a collision ot a gamma burst. Do I remember badly, or did consensus change?
Hope they do not misinterpret. (Score:2)
The far away aliens recieved our plea for help in eliminating the invasive species we send the DNA of and has sent an "antidote" that will be arriving in due time.
Galactic "civilization" (Score:2)
We assume they are benevolent, but our own example shows humanity, but for the unlikely one-two chance or discovering a largely open continent and throwing a unique revolution, restricting dictatorial powers, rather than the all too tempting taking them for yourself, humanity would be wall to wall dictatorship.
Do not expect galactic civilization to be otherwise.
Get off your high horse you fools! (Score:2)
What would aliens, with space travel technology, need from Earth? Nothing! It can't be water, there is plenty of water in the universe. Just within our solar system there are plenty of comets with water. Also, it can't be food they need. Earth's animals may taste OK, but aliens can surely synthesize food/proteins (assuming they even use proteins) from the elements found on any other planet. Presumably aliens would be able to utilize nuclear fusion or solar power for the energy needed to synthesize food give
Who cares? (Score:2)
More idiots who think they have found a gravy train.