Astronomers look at one patch of sky and see no signs of alien life
Worlds without end: Using an Australian radio telescope array focused in the FM frequencies, astronomers did a seventeen hour sweep of one small of sky and found no evidence of alien transmissions.
“We observed the sky around the constellation of Vela for 17 hours, looking more than 100 times broader and deeper than ever before. With this dataset, we found no technosignatures—no sign of intelligent life.”
Professor Tingay said even though this was the broadest search yet, he was not shocked by the result. “As Douglas Adams noted in The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, ‘space is big, really big’. … And even though this was a really big study, the amount of space we looked at was the equivalent of trying to find something in the Earth’s oceans but only searching a volume of water equivalent to a large backyard swimming pool.
The radio array used in this search is only a small precursor to a much larger array, dubbed the Square Kilometer Array (SKA), which is under construction and many times more sensitive.
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Worlds without end: Using an Australian radio telescope array focused in the FM frequencies, astronomers did a seventeen hour sweep of one small of sky and found no evidence of alien transmissions.
“We observed the sky around the constellation of Vela for 17 hours, looking more than 100 times broader and deeper than ever before. With this dataset, we found no technosignatures—no sign of intelligent life.”
Professor Tingay said even though this was the broadest search yet, he was not shocked by the result. “As Douglas Adams noted in The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, ‘space is big, really big’. … And even though this was a really big study, the amount of space we looked at was the equivalent of trying to find something in the Earth’s oceans but only searching a volume of water equivalent to a large backyard swimming pool.
The radio array used in this search is only a small precursor to a much larger array, dubbed the Square Kilometer Array (SKA), which is under construction and many times more sensitive.
Readers!
Please consider supporting my work here at Behind the Black. Your support allows me the freedom and ability to analyze objectively the ongoing renaissance in space, as well as the cultural changes -- for good or ill -- that are happening across America. Fourteen years ago I wrote that SLS and Orion were a bad ideas, a waste of money, would be years behind schedule, and better replaced by commercial private enterprise. Only now does it appear that Washington might finally recognize this reality.
In 2020 when the world panicked over COVID I wrote that the panic was unnecessary, that the virus was apparently simply a variation of the flu, that masks were not simply pointless but if worn incorrectly were a health threat, that the lockdowns were a disaster and did nothing to stop the spread of COVID. Only in the past year have some of our so-called experts in the health field have begun to recognize these facts.
Your help allows me to do this kind of intelligent analysis. I take no advertising or sponsors, so my reporting isn't influenced by donations by established space or drug companies. Instead, I rely entirely on donations and subscriptions from my readers, which gives me the freedom to write what I think, unencumbered by outside influences.
You can support me either by giving a one-time contribution or a regular subscription. There are four ways of doing so:
1. Zelle: This is the only internet method that charges no fees. All you have to do is use the Zelle link at your internet bank and give my name and email address (zimmerman at nasw dot org). What you donate is what I get.
2. Patreon: Go to my website there and pick one of five monthly subscription amounts, or by making a one-time donation.
3. A Paypal Donation or subscription:
4. Donate by check, payable to Robert Zimmerman and mailed to
Behind The Black
c/o Robert Zimmerman
P.O.Box 1262
Cortaro, AZ 85652
You can also support me by buying one of my books, as noted in the boxes interspersed throughout the webpage or shown in the menu above.
Take an expert naval signalman, the kind that uses semaphore flags, and put him on the Moon with a powerful telescope. Ask him to search for evidence that there is intelligent life on the Earth by looking for signs of other flag signalers. He won’t be able to find any such evidence.
Please show how my thought experiment is incorrect and/or irrelevant. Or correct and/or relevant, if you find it so!
Ps. Honestly, I must admit that I find it a bit surprising that such radio surveys have always come up completely empty.
It’s been a while since I’ve done the math for interstellar communications, so I may be wrong, but IIRC, an omnidirectional signal, even an extremely powerful one (1GW), will peter out to 1E-25 W/m2 before even travelling a lightyear. In order to get a signal to another starsystem, you need a high-gain dish or apeture pointed at the target system to confine the energy to a beam that isn’t too wide. Even then, it’s going to be a serious power investment.
So, ET has to know we are here and specifically want to talk to the solar system. He’ll also have to have some patience: If they started broadcasting in (throw a dart at the dartboard of geological time) 800,000,000 BC, then they’re out of luck.
If there were some interstellar civilization with a communications network, it’d be a network of tightly focused directional signals, probably with as short a wavelength as they could manage for focusing effectiveness
If I’m doing the math right, the disc of the sun puts 1.77E-14 W/m^2 into a band from 100-101 MHz. We’d have to outshine that to be visible from interstellar distances.
1E-25 W/m^2 is something like 1.5 photons/(m^2-sec) so unless you have a gigantic dish to integrate the signal, it’s going to be very spotty too.
It’s not just communications signals that are looked for. The most detectable signals humanity has put out over its lifetime that could be recognized by an extraterrestrial intelligence came from the early-warning radars used by the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. High-powered focused beams can go quite a ways further than communications signals and still be recognizable as artificial.
MadRocketSci wrote: “In order to get a signal to another starsystem, you need a high-gain dish or apeture pointed at the target system to confine the energy to a beam that isn’t too wide.”
Right now our SETI searchers are not trying to get a readable signal out of the noise, they are trying to find a tiny non-random pattern buried deep in the noise. The mathematics and methods are postdoctoral, but should they find something non-random then they will concentrate on verification and trying to dig out and interpret the signal. Start with the easy and work toward the hard.
The assumption is that there are civilizations using radio frequencies.
…on the transmitting side of the equation->
“WLW’s 500,000 Watt Transmitter”
K7AGE
https://youtu.be/CbHjcwIoTiY
31:30
“in 1932 WLW increased their power from 50,000 watts to 500,000 watts. They were the only AM broadcasting station in America ever to operate at 500,000 watts. Much of the old transmitter still exists. It is really a high power amplifier with a high level modulator (360,000 watts). The amplifier was driven from their existing 50,000 watt Western Electric transmitter. The system used 20 100,000 watt tubes ($1,600 each in 1932) that required water cooling that used a cooling pond located outside the station.”
The aliens turned off their radios because they received my telepathic command to do so. If you want to talk to aliens come to my bungalow in NY and for $250.00 I will tell you what is on their mind. Usually they ask you to give me more money! (LOL)
wayne
The reasons why they were forced to cut back to 50k watt transmissions are just an interesting.
“The assumption is that there are civilizations using radio frequencies.”
A solid assumption, what other method for communication would a evolving civilization use?
And I have made this point before, the likelihood of intelligent life to exist and eventually developing technology to communicate using the electro magnetic spectrum and us being able to detect their activities in a friendly overlapping existence timeframe has got to be very thin.
We exist in the last 4.5 billion years of the existence of this entire universe. 9.5 billion years of universe existed before our solar system even began to be coalesced.
Working the other end of the equation, how long does an advanced lifeform that has developed advanced technology last? And how long does anything that they had pumped out into the universe remain to be detected?
I would think in the big picture view, not very long.
Ok, so how did we get that movie “A Long Time Ago in a Galaxy Far, Far, Away”?