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Detection of Earth-like Civilizations in Space Now Possible

Mr. McGibby writes "Astronomers have come up with an improved method of looking for extraterrestrial life with an Earth-like civilization. Theorist Avi Loeb proposes to use instruments like the Low Frequency Demonstrator (LFD) of the Mileura Wide-Field Array (MWA), an Australian facility for radio astronomy currently under construction. The array could (theoretically) detect civilizations broadcasting in the same frequencies as our own society. From the article: 'Loeb and Zaldarriaga calculate that by staring at the sky for a month, the MWA-LFD could detect Earth-like radio signals from a distance of up to 30 light-years, which would encompass approximately 1,000 stars. More powerful broadcasts could be detected to even greater distances. Future observatories like the Square Kilometer Array could detect Earth-like broadcasts from 10 times farther away, which would encompass 100 million stars. ' The original paper describes the details."

21 of 345 comments (clear)

  1. Knowing Your Neighbours by Renegade+Lisp · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think this is a great project. But step back for a moment and think what it means: If there was an earth-like civilization even very close to us, say, at Alpha Centauri, we've had no chance of detecting their stray radiation up until now. And with this new program, it's only within 30 light years that we might be successful. That's really our very, very close vicinity.

    This, I think, puts the fact in perspective that SETI@home hasn't found any signal yet, even after years of listening. They would only be able to detect very powerful transmissions, much more powerful than anything our own civilization could produce.

    The fact that we haven't found any artificial signals from space yet doesn't mean there's nobody out there.

    1. Re:Knowing Your Neighbours by metlin · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The fact that we haven't found any artificial signals from space yet doesn't mean there's nobody out there.

      And to quote Carl Sagan, "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence."
    2. Re:Knowing Your Neighbours by Minimum_Wage · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The flaw with all these searches is that it assumes that any nearby civilizations are exactly at the same level of development as humanity. Isn't high-power broadcast radio actually declining on Earth right now in favor of cable, fiber, and low power systems like the small satellite DBS dishes? If an alien civilization isn't in the same +/- 50 year technological window as we are, we'll probably never hear them even if they are next door. Still, if you don't look you'll never be sure...

    3. Re:Knowing Your Neighbours by zippthorne · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Ridiculous. It depends on just how much evidence you don't have. For instance, there's very little evidence of the existence of Yeti despite some rather concerted efforts to find anything at all. In fact, there is no evidence at all. Yet mountain lions are easy to find evidence of. Therefore yeti are far less likely to exist than mountain lions.

      Absence of evidence is prima facie evidence of absence.

      The question is, does your lack of evidence result from failing to look or from nothing turning up despite exhaustive searching?

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    4. Re:Knowing Your Neighbours by Gulthek · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That depends on how you are searching. Searching for your keys in a cluttered room with the lights off is going to be difficult, and you may look for quite some time without being able to conclude that the absence of evidence is evidence of the keys' absence.

    5. Re:Knowing Your Neighbours by multipartmixed · · Score: 4, Funny

      > Plus, radio is our current means of communicating with our spacecraft(isn't it? I may be wrong).

      No, we use quantum entanglement for long-distance communication, and gravity waves for short-distance (say, under 5 light years). Radio is too slow for the distances involved.

      --

      Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
    6. Re:Knowing Your Neighbours by peragrin · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I forgot the name of the species of fish but scientists thought it to be extinct. For years the evidence pointed to the fact that the particular fish no longer existed, yet one day a fisherman caught one.

      A lack of evidence either way doesn't mean it doesn't exist. There are numerous example of animals that hide first. The possum "plays" dead. An animal intelligent enough to hide from other species isn't unheard of. Given the right locations on earth, two mountainous and relatively uninhabited area's. It is possible a yeti, and big foot exist.

      of course that being said I won't believe it until I see it, but that doesn't mean it's impossible, just improbable. That's a huge difference.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    7. Re:Knowing Your Neighbours by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You are confused about the meaning of the word 'evidence'. When you obtain evidence of X you shift your estimate of the probability of X upwards. That's what 'evidence' means. You need to get this distinction.

      You say "you are attempting a negative proof or proof of impossibility" which demonstrates you didn't actually read or understand the parent post which stated, quite clearly, "Absence of evidence is prima facie evidence of absence.", not "Absence of evidence is prima facie proof of absence". Until you sort out the difference between proof and evidence the rest of what you say is moot.

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    8. Re:Knowing Your Neighbours by egyptiankarim · · Score: 5, Funny

      Universes Worst AIM Conversation Ever... EarthDudez: Hey! Waz up? [30 years later] GrayGuys: Nothing much... u? [30 years later] EarthDudez: brb [400 years later] EarthDudez: back! [30 years later] GrayGuys: your moms back. [30 years later] EarthDudez: lolz. dude you're so GrAY! [30 years later] GrayGuys: lol

      --
      Eek!
  2. "Earth-like" civilizations? by TheWoozle · · Score: 4, Funny

    Great...

    So we're going to pick up an alien version of "The View"?

    --
    Insisting on "correct" English is like saying that there is only one, definitive recipe for chili.
    1. Re:"Earth-like" civilizations? by j00r0m4nc3r · · Score: 5, Funny

      I think perhaps we already watch the alien version.

  3. any physicists out there? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 4, Funny

    Could you list any of the current areas of research which may some day allow for information transmission faster than c? Let's keep in reasonable: only mention theories we may be able to explore within the next 1000 years.

    --
    A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    1. Re:any physicists out there? by inviolet · · Score: 5, Informative
      Isn't there something to do with the spin of an electron, which when you reverse the spin, immediately reverses the spin of some other electron, with no delay? Couldn't you reverse the spin of a bunch of electrons on earth, and have their counterparts match the reversal, 30 light years away. It could be used for exchanging information at faster than light speeds.

      You are thinking of quantum entanglement, aka "spooky action at a distance".

      It cannot be used to transmit information. Think of it this way:

      1. You take two slips of paper, one black and one white, and put them in envelopes.
      2. You randomly select an envelope and mail it to your brother in Poughkeepsie. You keep the other envelope for yourself.
      3. While the envelopes are in transit, nobody has yet observed their contents (i.e. their spins). Yet you know that their contents (their spins) must be opposite because they are an entangled pair.
      4. The envelope travels to Poughkeepsie at the speed of light, or significantly slower in the case of the US Postal Service.
      5. Your brother receives and opens his envelope. He observes that his slip of paper is black. The uncertainty collapses: he now instantly knows that your slip of paper is white.

      Notice that you cannot send actual information by this route. The uncertainty of "which slip of paper is in my envelope?" collapses instantaneously, but it collapses into a random choice. Neither of you could know in advance which color you would find in your envelope.

      This illustration changes slightly when executed at the quantum level: while the envelopes were in transit, both slips of paper were actually grey... though some might insist that they were both all possible colors, until they were finally observed.

      --
      FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
  4. Impossible! by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Funny

    The Recording Industry Galactic Alliance (RIGA) mandated that no radio signals shall leave the atmosphere of any planet.

    The respective governments all attempted to stop this legistation getting in but the RIGA had bigger guns!

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  5. Obligatory by inviolet · · Score: 4, Funny

    And I, for one, welcome our new nearby, low-frequency-emitting overlords.

    And I would like to remind them that as a net.geek, I could be useful in rounding up others, to toil in their oneline goldfarms.

    --
    FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
  6. Let's hope they're not like us by orson_of_fort_worth · · Score: 4, Funny

    The signals we'd pick up from a civilization similar to ours would be viagra spam and Saved by the Bell reruns. So disappointing it might set back space exploration by centuries.

  7. Not a big area by Orange+Crush · · Score: 4, Interesting

    30 or even 300 LY is tiny on a galactic scale. Then again, anybody who's more than 30 ly away won't be able to have a meaningful conversation with us over the course of a single researcher's lifetime . . . unless of course they're kind enough to send instructions on how to communicate FTL.

    Speaking of FTL communications . . . maybe civilizations only use radio for a relatively short time in their development. Present understanding of physics pretty much rules out FTL communications, but there could always be some exotic aspect of our universe we haven't discovered yet that would allow it and we'll finally be able to log in to the giant IRC server of the universe.

    1. Re:Not a big area by David_Shultz · · Score: 5, Interesting

      anybody who's more than 30 ly away won't be able to have a meaningful conversation with us over the course of a single researcher's lifetime

      Are you joking? Do you not think it would be meaningful just to receive the message "hello"? this would be one of the most important moments in the history of humankind (not to mention alienkind). A long conversation isn't needed for this to be meaningful. Heck, no conversation is required -we just want to find someone else out there.

  8. Re:Hmm. by silentounce · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Given the massive distances between stars, astronomical mass extinction theories, and the time evolution takes, aren't the odds of two technically advanced civilizations being around at the same time...umm astronomical? :)"
     
    The true probabilities are not known. We don't know how common life is. We don't know how often a mass extinction of life occurs. We don't know how long evolution takes except for on our one world. We don't have enough data to accurately predict whether or not life is rare or common in the universe. Another perspective could be that it is in fact more likely that advanced civilizations would be around at the same time if the universe has a consistant timeline. If the way that life-harboring star systems form, the way that life itself forms, and the way that intelligent life evolves is analogous across the universe then this may be the Golden Age of intelligent life throughout our galaxy.

    --
    There are many tongues to talk, and but few heads to think. -Victor Hugo
  9. Fiber to the Home. by crhylove · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Unless alien civilizations are just as beholden to corporate interests and backward technology as we are (which I doubt, and if it is the case why should we bother communicating with their ignorant asses anyway?), I would assume their civilization has fiber to the home, and I doubt their wireless controllers, cell phones, and remote controls are going to have a signal that gets off the planet at all.

    If we were REALLY interested in contacting alien civilizations, we would make our own much more attractive first. I doubt any alien civilization is going to be interested in sharing technology with a planet of retarded monkeys that give morons like Bush who openly admit talking to invisible men in the sky nuclear weapons.

    As a matter of fact, I can't imagine any advanced civilization bothering with the kooks who live here and believe in such ludicrous stone age fantasies. Particularly kooks with nuclear weapons and who engage in water-boarding.

    I'm so ashamed of our whole species I can't even begin to imagine why *I* bother interacting with them, much less some aliens who weren't so unlucky as to be born in this idiotic power-structure of ignorance.

    rhY

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
  10. Whoa, there... by Rob+T+Firefly · · Score: 5, Funny
    improved method of looking for extraterrestrial life with an Earth-like civilization
    Do we really want to find something Earth-like? I for one would rather find someone who's got it right. We need a wise older sibling, not an equally dysfunctional twin.

    I could just imagine the space phonecalls..

    EARTH: Hey, guys. How's it going?"
    ALIENS: Well, our environment is crapping itself, we're all trying to kill each other, and we still won't grant marriages to every couple who wants one.
    EARTH: Yeah, same here. Any, you know, wise alien tips for us?
    ALIENS: Well... have you invented Reality TV yet?
    EARTH: Yep, doesn't seem to have helped much.
    ALIENS: Have you, I dunno, tried invading someplace oil-rich?
    EARTH: Done that, lots of times.
    ALIENS: How about starting arguments about the origins of your own species?
    EARTH: Oh hell, don't get me started on that can of worms buddy.
    ALIENS: Well, try inventing a couple of new incompatible game consoles...