SETI Pioneer Jill Tarter Retires
ananyo writes "After 35 years, astronomer Jill Tarter is retiring from the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) — a field she helped pioneer and popularize, most recently at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California. Tarter, who inspired the late Carl Sagan to create the fictional character Ellie Arroway, heroine of the book and movie Contact, says she will instead focus her efforts on what she calls 'the search for intelligent funding.'"
That would be a first.
...aliens everywhere can sleep easy.
Not limited to actually finding aliens but looking at everything coming out of SETI: What good has come out of SETI so far?
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1. Might the resources at her command be in any way useful as a backup system for commercial space endeavors?
2. Is SETI funded to any degree by foreign institutions?
3. What possibilities might there be to get money from Hollywood? Aliens in movies are certainly popular.
The good astronomer has a point
There have been too many dumb funding which often end up wasting the precious financial resources that could have been used for something else
But then ... who's the ultimate judge in determining the level of "intelligence" of a given project?
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
I am fairly certain that a lot of good work has been done by the SETI Institute in terms of science (e.g. consistent monitoring of parts of the RF spectrum and identifying new sources) and engineering (e.g. signal processing and distributed computing). Of course, I would also love to find an extraterrestrial funding.
But the Intelligent Funding has never been with SETI. When SETI started, we did not even know if extrasolar planets existed. Smart money would say that they did, since the abundance of stars in our galaxy alone puts the odds in favour of there being an awful lot of planets out there, but we only had a rough idea of how planetary systems formed based upon a sample of one. That left major gaps in our knowledge, such as the probability of finding a planet around any given star and what the composition of those planets would be. Even our present knowledge of extrasolar planets is skewed because of observational limitations.
There remain many limitations to the idea of searching for extraterrestrial intelligence. Searching for weak signals is challenging even if you knew what to look for and where to look. Because of that, I believe that the Intelligent Funding should be directed towards astronomical research that would lay down a foundation for a real SETI in the future. This would be things like finding and characterizing extrasolar planets, creating better models of star formation (particularly with respect to the protoplanetary disc), and getting a better handle on the chemistry of the objects that we are observing.
I respect what Jill Tarter has helped accomplish in terms of constructing a (half-finished) radio telescope optimized for SETI, but overall I must say that the quest she had been entrusted with is in shambles - and her successor likely won't do much better. We're at a point in time in which both human and computer resources are more abundantly available on the internet than ever before. SETI Institute, on Jill Tarter's watch, has chosen to forego the opportunity to utilize these resources to vastly expand the amount of search space covered by the Allen Telescope Array, instead opting to keep the real-time data produced by the telescope under wraps and sharing it only with a few, select partners - presumably, to be able to keep the winnings to themselves, if they ever happen upon their big discovery. Is it really any wonder that such a self-interested and greedy scheme is struggling to find support from private benefactors?
Who discovered nothing. Well done.
It was well worth looking for alien signals but when none have been found after so long it's time for a rethink. Either there are no signals or we're looking for completely the wrong things in the wrong way. Time to try something else.
I did SETI since it started in 1999 up to 2005 for "Team Microsoft" - & I don't consider it a "waste"!
I state that since 1 "good thing" MIGHT be a 'future good thing', in that between spectography, & finding a planet that's in the "life belt" (distance from a sun like our own that bears water & other conditions needed to create life like our own on THIS planet is)!
AND
As to the signals detected?
Hey, it MAY function as a form of "stellar 'pre-cartography'", in that it may lend clues on what worlds to attempt to journey to or contact, first...
* One things folks have to also consider is, is that it's really costly effort, even for end-users of the BOINC system, in that folks DO spend monies on their electric bills... & the program does use that, no "getting around that".
See - I'm personally of the belief that NO HARD WORK is EVER WASTED, & one day?
Yes - The data from Project SETI will help advance the human race (hopefully for the better) OR rather, lead to something that will & SETI's data will have contributed to that!
(Call it a "prediction"/hunch...)
APK
P.S.=> So, the efforts in contributing to that, like myself, that spent years on it (1999-2005 here http://stats.kwsn.net/team.php?proj=sah&teamid=26482&sort_order=expavg_time&sort_direction=ASC personally, iirc) weren't a waste of time, or energy, & yes/again - that 1 day, that data will help guide starships into the systems that are MOST LIKELY to bear life such as our own... apk
Would suggest money is better spent curing cancer then finding intelligent life in the proverbial haystack that is the the galaxy.
While I would be fascinated by the idea we are not alone in the universe, ultimately I really don't care. While other "pure" scientific investigation might yield off-shoot technologies, having radio scanners record and computers process Fourier transforms trying to find some pattern to space noise pretty much has yielded about all the scientific discovery that is going to come out of the project. Nothing is going to be cured, improved, or evolve out of a continued dumping of money into Seti.
While I would love to live in a society that has the luxury of spending money on esoteric concepts like asking if we are alone in the universe, with the current crumbling of financial markets, looming crisis in Global Warming and loss of fossil fuel, and an increase in disease and cancer with an ageing and forever expanding world population suggests that wasting money scanning the heavens for alien life makes you an asshat.
Solve real problems today so we can sit back and paint pictures, weave baskets, and listen to white noise without guilt tomorrow.
I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
I am really looking forward to the day when SETI announces evidence of an intelligent signal from deep space. Not only will it be exciting to learn about out interstellar neighbors, it will be great fun watching young earth creationists develop wild and elaborate denials of the existence of extraterrestrial life. Let's have very thorough background screenings of stargate workers this time, please.
Ask me about my sig!
I am all for SETI, let me point that out now. I also believe that SETI has made scientific contributions. We have always been looking for a needle in a haystack, but the haystack is getting larger.
We are searching for radio signals. Using our history as a guide, with the spectrum getting dividd into smaller, lower power pieces, it appears there may only be a 100-200 year window of detectable signal from an intelligent civilization. That span is tiny compared to the possible time frame such a civilization could exist, and a molecule in the ocean of time range in the observable universe.
Silence is a state of mime.
Maybe I'm stretching it a bit. But outside of military applications, it was pretty scare before the 1940s. Then scientists have become addicted to it like crack. Its nice to see tech moguls occasionally fund things like space & rocket science, medical aid etc.
In many ways she is SETI and she is definitely the soul of SETI. She isn't throwing in the towel but it still feels that way. It was sad Sagan didn't live to see first contact but to potentially stop looking during Miss Tarter's life makes me feel like it is truly hopeless. The science is there but the will as a society isn't. SETI could be funded for a 100 years for 1/10th of one percent of what we just spent banging our dicks on the table in Iraq and Afghanistan but it'll never happen. Having her retire so she can devote a 100% of her time to look for funding is a crime against science and a serious waste of creative talent. The movie Contact made an excellent point. Hollywood lately is spending more each year making aliens attack Earth films than SETI has spent in it's entire history. EACH YEAR! Most people think there has been a serious effort and they found nothing. What has been done to date is the equivalent of looking under one rock in a dry valley in Antarctica and declaring there is no life on Earth.
You see, the LR (labeled release) technique was developed by Levin to do assays on treatment plant effluent without having to streak plates, which doesn't work if the levels are too low. Levin's LR on the Mars Viking Lander gave a positive life signal according to pre-determined criteria, but folks said, "Nah! That can't be!" after the fact and blamed the signal on soil oxides, a hypothesis that hasn't been nailed down either.
Levin has been wanting to fly a follow-on "Chiral LR" experiment to follow up, but NASA says nothing doing and the British agreed but crumped their South Polar Lander on Mars.
What would happen is that Gilbert Levin would be awarded a Nobel Prize, and I would be remembered as the chump who gave up his Powerball jackpot.
For this to happen I would have to actually purchase one or Powerball tickets, which I haven't done, because lotteries are a scam and the jackpots are manipulated and hyped to get fools to part with their money.
"Science rules the universe, not science fiction."
Anyone who thinks that the current view we have of physics is more or less complete with just a couple of things left to fill in here or there is deluded. I would wager a large amount of money that in 1000 years technology based on physics we know nothing about yet will as Arthur C Clarke said - be indistinguishable from magic. And that may well include some method of faster than light travel. And if that physics is possible then its also possible that an intelligent alien race as already developed it.
So no, the possibilities of those scenarious happening are not essentially zero. If there's a highly advanced alien race out there then they're highly probable.
Well? No good reasons, right trolls??
APK
P.S.=> That's ok - you only make yourselves look like the little no balls cowards you are doing "hit & run downmods" with NO justification behind them... apk
If your analogy is to be taken seriously we would have to increase the efforts (and thus budget) of SETI by
TotalSETIExpendituresToDate * VolumeOfEarthsBiosphere / VolumeOneAntarticRock
In other words - by your analogy SETI is just a fools errand, and we should not throw good money after bad.
Semi-ironic Captcha : walnut
Seems like she is a good candidate for the "answer your questions" section of /.
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