SETI (Search for
Extraterrestrial Intelligence) is an attempt to detect
technological civilizations elsewhere in the universe, particularly
in our galaxy. Billions of places outside our solar system may host
life, that we could discover, if it has developed to a
technological level at least as advanced as our own.
"In a very real sense this
search for extraterrestrial intelligence is a search for a cosmic
context for mankind, a search for who we are, where we have come
from, and what possibilities there are for our future - in a
universe vaster both in extent and duration than our forefathers
ever dreamed of."
-- Communication with
Extraterrestrial Intelligence (CETI), Carl Sagan, Editor, 1973, MIT
Press, "Introduction", pp. ix-x.
You can see a few thousand stars with the naked
eye on a clear night. This is only a tiny fraction of the actual
number of stars in our Milky Way galaxy - some 400 billion - which
itself is only one of some 50 - 100 billion galaxies observable by
the Hubble Space Telescope.. It seems only reasonable to wonder, if
there might not be creatures on other worlds, wondering if there
might not be creatures on other worlds, wondering...
People have wondered "Are we alone?" since first
we realized that the points of light in the night sky are other
suns. Only within the late twentieth century, however, has our
technology advanced to the point where we can seek scientific
evidence to help answer this age-old question.
Scientists have concluded that life is a natural
phenomenon likely to develop on planets with suitable environmental
conditions. Life started on Earth relatively soon after it was
formed, suggesting that life will occur on similar planets orbiting
sun-like stars.
Encyclopedia article on
/Space/Pictures/SpaceAlien160.gif Astronomers have recently
discovered large planets orbiting other stars in our galaxy -
almost certainly too large to support life, but suggestive that
there could also be smaller, more Earth- like planets too. With the
recent discoveries of extrasolar planetary systems, and the
suggestive evidence that life may once have existed on Mars, this
scenario appears even more likely. Considerations such as these
have led many scientists to believe that there is a likelihood of
life elsewhere in our galaxy, that we stand a chance of
detecting.
Cornell University physicists Giuseppe Cocconi
and Philip Morrison published an article "Searching for
Interstellar Communications," in the September 19, 1959 issue of
the British science journal Nature. In that article, a strategy was
discussed for scanning nearby sun-like stars for microwave
radiation which could not be explained by natural causes.
They pointed out the potential for using
microwave radio to communicate between star systems. They suggested
that radio waves might be the most effective means of communication
across interstellar distances, and therefore the best way to detect
the existence of an extra-terrestrial civilisation.
Light and radio waves are both forms of
electromagnetic radiation - i.e. the same kind of energy - but the
differ only in wavelength / frequency. The electromagnetic spectrum
also comprises infrared, ultraviolet, X-rays, gamma-rays, etc.
These all travel at the 'speed of light' (186,000 miles or 300,000
kilometres, per second). This is the highest speed attainable,
according to Einstein's theory of relativity, but even so, light
(or radio) from the stars and galaxies takes many years to reach
us; about 4 years for the closest stars, and up to 15 billion years
for the farthest galaxies. So any two- way conversation would
probably take lifetimes!
As Morrison and Coccini were writing their
article, radio astronomer Frank Drake was preparing to perform the
very experiment which they outlined. He pointed a 25-metre
(85-foot) radio telescope at two nearby stars called Epsilon
Eridani and Tau Ceti on 8 April, 1960, near Green Bank, West
Virginia, USA. The telescope surveyed for just a few weeks, tuned
to the 21 cm (1,420 Mhz) line of neutral hydrogen, and detected no
extra-terrestrial intelligent signals.
This was the first attempt to detect interstellar
radio signals. Drake's Project Ozma - named after a princess in
Baum's Wizard of Oz books - initiated the modern scientific search
for extra-terrestrial intelligence.
The world's first SETI meeting was convened at
Green Bank by Drake in 1961. Drake drafted an equation for
estimating the number of possible communicative technologies in the
cosmos, as the agenda for that conference. Today Drake's Equation
is the primary mathematical tool with which SETI scientists assess
their prospects of success. Its seven factors encompass cosmology,
planetology, atmospheric science, evolutionary biology, psychology,
technology, and sociology. Thus SETI is possibly the most
interdisciplinary of the sciences.
Drake's
Equation
N = R* . Fp . Ne . Fl . Fi . Fc . L
where
N = number of civilisations,
R* = rate of star formation in our galaxy,
Fp = fraction of stars with planets,
Ne = number of habitable planets per planetary
system,
Fl = fraction of those in which life
starts,
Fi = fraction of life that evolves to
intelligence,
Fc = intelligent species that develops
communication,
L = technological lifespan.
Making reasonable guesses, it turns out that the
first few factors are either approximately 1, or effectively cancel
each other, so that the final term dominates the equation - i.e. N
is approximately equal to L. This last factor, L, is the hardest to
estimate. It depends on how likely it is that civilisations destroy
themselves, or are destroyed, or become reclusive, etc. We can only
make the roughest of guesses, at somewhere between 1,000 years, and
1,000,000 years. This implies that we could expect our galaxy to be
home to between 1,000 to 1,000,000 communicative
civilisations!
These civilisations could be detectable with
present day technology, either through attempts on their part to
communicate, or through by-products of their activities, such as TV
and radio broadcasts. Such signals would likely be extremely weak,
but modern electronics is capable of extremely high amplification.
But, it's not simply a matter of pointing an antenna at the sky and
hoping - SETI researchers face several challenges. There are
several issues to address, such as knowing where to look, for how
long, what to look for, how to differentiate between ET and local
interference, the most likely frequency where ET may be
broadcasting, either as a deliberate message or as interstellar
communication.
In 1971/2, a team of radio astronomers and
engineers headed by Bernard Oliver, a vice president of engineering
for Hewlett-Packard (and later the chief of the NASA SETI program),
wrote "Project Cyclops," a detailed plan for a SETI search. The
ambitious plan was widely distributed by NASA and sparked several
search efforts, but it also spurred a congressional backlash that
eventually led to a ban on SETI funding in 1993.
During the Cyclops study, Oliver hypothesized
that the Hydrogen (H) and Hydroxyl (HO) lines - at about 1420 MHz
(corresponding to a wavelength around 21 cm) and 1660 MHz (a
wavelength of 18 cm) respectively, constituted obvious signposts to
a natural interstellar communications band.
Since H and HO are the disassociation products of
water, the spectrum between them is known as the "Water-Hole".
Cosmic background noise (left over from the Big Bang) and
absorption in the atmosphere are both low in this range. Since the
H and OH lines are visible throughout the universe, in the quietest
part of the radio spectrum, it would be a logical band for other
civilizations to choose to send out a signal.
Project Phoenix is the successor to the ambitious
NASA SETI program that was cancelled by Congress. It's the world's
most sensitive and comprehensive search for extraterrestrial
intelligence. Phoenix began observations in February, 1995 using
the Parkes 210 foot radio telescope in New South Wales, Australia -
the largest radio telescope in the Southern Hemisphere.
When SETI began, the technology was barely
available to make the search. Drake had one channel to scan two
nearby star systems in 1960. Today he is president of the SETI
Institute and its Project Phoenix is studying 1,000 nearby stars
sifting through 28 million channels simultaneously every
second.
Upon Congressional cancellation of the NASA SETI
program in 1993, many former NASA staff found themselves continuing
their work through The SETI Institute's Project Phoenix. This is a
highly professional organization doing more than just a radio
search for signals; it is also the home for over three dozen first
rate scientific and educational projects involved in many aspects
of the Drake Equation.
The SETI Institute and the University of
California, Berkeley, recently signed a memorandum of understanding
that could result in the construction of a world-class telescope
array that would be an order of magnitude less expensive than
comparably sized, contemporary instruments. The new telescope,
called the Allen Telescope Array would be used for both nonstop
SETI and cutting-edge radio astronomy research.
SERENDIP: The UC Berkeley SETI Program, SERENDIP
(Search for Extraterrestrial Radio Emissions from Nearby Developed
Intelligent Populations) is an ongoing scientific research effort
aimed at detecting radio signals from extraterrestrial
civilizations. The project is the world's only "piggyback" SETI
system, operating alongside simultaneously conducted conventional
radio astronomy observations. SERENDIP is currently piggybacking on
the 1,000-foot dish at Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico, scanning
168 million radio channels. This data will be fed to thousands of
SETI@Home participants.
SETI@Home is a scientific experiment that uses
Internet-connected computers in the Search for Extraterrestrial
Intelligence (SETI). You can participate by running a free program
that downloads and analyzes radio telescope data.