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    SETI's Search for Intelligent Alien Life Resumes

    MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. — Astronomers have rebooted their search for intelligent life on alien planets, and they've got thousands of targets to scan.

    After hibernating for more than seven months, a set of radio telescopes run by the SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) Institute has once again begun listening for signals from the many alien planet candidates discovered by NASA's Kepler space telescope, researchers announced Monday (Dec. 5).

    "This morning, at 6:18, we began re-observing the Kepler worlds," Jill Tarter, director of the Center for SETI Research at the SETI Institute, said Monday during the Kepler Science Conference here at NASA's Ames Research Center. "We're just extremely excited to be back on the air today."

    A long hibernation

    SETI's Allen Telescope Array (ATA) is a set of 42 radio dishes located about 300 miles (500 kilometers) northeast of San Francisco. It began scanning the heavens for "technosignatures" — electromagnetic signals that could betray the presence of an intelligent alien civilization — in 2007. [10 Alien Encounters Debunked]

    SETI researchers recently started using Kepler's discoveries to guide the ATA's activities. Kepler launched in March 2009 on a mission to hunt for Earth-size planets in their parent stars' habitable zone, that just-right range of distances where liquid water — and perhaps life as we know it — could exist.

    In January of this year, Tarter said, the SETI team started training the Allen array on the 54 planet candidates Kepler had detected in the habitable zone to date.

    The work didn't last long, however. SETI had to shut the ATA down in April after budget problems forced the Institute's former partner, the University of California, Berkeley, to withdraw from the project.

    SETI launched a crowdfunding site, www.setistars.org, in an attempt to get the array back up and running. And the public came through, donating enough money to take the ATA out of mothballs. As of Monday, citizens had chipped in more than $230,000.

    Some funding help has also come from the United States Air Force, which is interested in using the array to track satellites and space debris, SETI officials said.

    Many new worlds to scan

    On Monday, the Kepler team announced the discovery of 1,094 new exoplanet candidates, bringing to 2,326 the total number of potential alien worlds the instrument has detected in its first 16 months of operation.

    Researchers have confirmed only about 30 of these candidate planets to date, but Kepler scientists have estimated that at least 80 percent of them will end up being the real deal.

    The ATA will take special interest in Kepler's candidates in the habitable zone, Tarter said. But SETI researchers hope to scan every last one of the potential planets to minimize the chances that we're blinded by our assumptions about where life "should" be.

    "What we think we know actually might be a barrier to [finding] what is actually out there," Tarter said. "We intend to systematically explore all of these candidates."

    The search of the Kepler candidates will involve scanning 9 billion different channels in a broad window of microwave frequencies. It should take two to three years, at $1.2 million per year, to search for signals from every potential alien world from the study, Tarter said.

    It's exciting to focus the ATA on likely alien solar systems rather than just point the dishes toward stars and hope for the best, she added.

    "We now know where to look for planets," Tarter said. "We're going to take the public's quest for technosignatures to the next level."

    You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter: @michaeldwall. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcomand on Facebook.

     

    27 comments

    • Atilla  •  5 mths ago
      What makes then think aliens use electromagnetic radiation to communicate? If Edison had his way, radio and all other forms of electromagnetic communication as we know it, would never had been invented. Radio was invented by Tesla, and patented by Marconi, aided by Edison, to stop Tesla from making electricity available for FREE.
      • Sarge 5 mths ago
        Tesla Was Betrayed Because AC Took Over DC
    • Phil  •  Los Altos, United States  •  5 mths ago
      What if alien civilizations use things like lasers to send information rather than radio. Do we even have anything that would detect that?
      • Horatio 5 mths ago
        Not really, unless the signal is extremely strong. Almost all of our instruments are designed to look for sources of radiation that are of the size (and energy output) of stars or even galaxies.

        A successful inter-stellar communication scheme would require highly specialised devices, most of which are probably beyond our current technical and financial means.
    • michael  •  5 mths ago
      Horatio, what do you mean by optical? Are you talking about long baseline combined telescopes or orbital scopes with hundreds of meters of mirror? both could on threoy image a planet from huncreds of light years.
      • Horatio 5 mths ago
        That's exactly what I am talking about. Infrared to near UV... that's your best choices, as the universe can be explored best in that range of frequencies.

        SETI does the right thing... long baseline interferometry... but they are doing it with wavelengths that fall a factor of 1000 short of what they should be doing.
    • michael  •  5 mths ago
      There are about a milion suns within 1000 light years, if 10 percent resemble our sun with plants that is a 100,000 planetary systems and if 1 pecent have earth like planets than we have 1000 earth like planets to look at and we allready found two.
    • marcelo  •  Tempe, United States  •  5 mths ago
      SETI ROCKS!
    • Steve  •  5 mths ago
      I've had my doubts about SETI due to the inverse square law would make distant signals too weak to receive, however with so many potential new targets thanks to the Kepler program I'll keep an open mind
    • HybridX  •  5 mths ago
      SETI: Please start with our goverment!
    • Sarge  •  5 mths ago
      S.E.T.I. Home Member Computer On.
    • SamuelClemensGhost  •  Atlanta, United States  •  5 mths ago
      good gig
    • Marshal  •  Williston, United States  •  5 mths ago
      How about we find life first and then move to the "intelligent" part later?
    • Snorri Sturluson  •  Poughkeepsie, United States  •  5 mths ago
      There is a very low probability that we will detect any signals from other life forms. Perhaps those other life forms are deliberately keeping silent after viewing our broadcast TV shows eg: Dancing with The Stars, The Karashians, the GOP debates, Iran Today, and America's Got Talent. Those LGM's may be waiting for evolution to improve our species or for our sun to go nova. Right now Earth is just too weird as viewed from space or Earth.
    • Horatio  •  5 mths ago
      Folks, you really need to learn something about communications theory BEFORE you can have an opinion on this issue. TV and radio signals simply don't make it even as far as the next star system. They are being drowned out by the radio background of the universe.

      SETI is using radio wavelengths that COULD be used for communications. However, it is not clear that any advanced civilisation would actually use them for that purpose.

      Twenty years ago we had a hard time imagining that we could ever find extrasolar planets. A few years later we found a few. Then dozens. Now we have a couple thousand candidates in the work, most of which will turn into real discoveries. The next generation of instruments will find hundreds of thousands or millions of extrasolar planets with thousands of candidates in the habitable zones.

      We can already find key gases in exo-planet atmospheres and within probably twenty years we will be able to get crude images of some of these planets. Add another 20 years and we will be able to detect seasonal variations on continent size structures on the closest candidates.

      That's the predictable progress of optical astronomy... and god knows what the unpredictable progress will be. So if you put all of that together, it appears highly unlikely that "aliens" are using telecommunications technology from the 1950s... like SETI pretends they do.
    • Suga plum  •  Chester, United States  •  5 mths ago
      How do they figure that the intangibles of interstellar space won't destroy or mute any signals or transmissions from distance civilizations? sure we may pick up radio active signals from exploding stars or extreme cosmic phenomenom, but if their civilizations are only transmitting basic radio waves similar to ours, their is no chance that we'll get a signal. We won't be sure of how interstellar space works until Voyager finally leaves the solar system.This is an encouraging time for science. Those still interested. Our society has been stupified rather horribly over the years.
    • michael  •  5 mths ago
      Google the subject, the idiots deliberately do not look for any signals that resemble what we radiate and will radiate for hundreds of years. In 2004 one of the founders seemed to be under the impression that over the air TV was something from ancient Egypt so they refuse to look for those kind of signals. What Seti really is, is a radio astronomers wet dream, funding for his or hers search paid for by the peons who are too stupid to realize them are being taken for a ride. Just think the collective radiation of over the air TV in the world is in the billions of watts yet SETI does not want to look for those types of signals, none of which is common in nature and all are high frequency FM digital mostly so are not swamped out by natural noise.
      • Horatio 5 mths ago
        Michael, please get yourself a book on electromagnetic communications theory and learn what the term SNR means. Then you will understand why SETI is NOT looking for tv/radio signals.

        You may, by the way, have noticed that most people are getting their tv these days through cable and it will take only a few decades before long range low frequency communication will be completely replaced by wired and cellular architectures. At that time the Earth will go completely radio silent even for a listener within the confines of the solar system.
    • michael  •  5 mths ago
      If my understanding of this SETI seacrch is correct they will find zero. Why will they find zero, because if of the way the search the software ignors things like radar, TV channels, your phone signal and everything else that actually is used to transmit information.
    • Mark B  •  5 mths ago
      Start looking here on earth......
    • L.G.  •  Kansas City, United States  •  5 mths ago
      But if there are just animals bugs and birds and or fish they wont detect them unless they are smarter than they are here and using some type of communicating device but I hope they do pick up something that will be so cool just hope our government dont censor them from telling us like I bet they will do
    • Bellissimo Pizza  •  Oakland, United States  •  5 mths ago
      err ahhh, OK do you have the drawing yet?
    • Horatio  •  5 mths ago
      If SETI would invest half as much effort on OPTICAL detection as they are wasting on radio waves, I would be a lot less sceptical of them. But there is really no conceivable scientific reason why any advanced civilisation would be using the frequencies they are investigating for communication.

      Before you communicate, you will want to image the planets you are communicating with. In order to do that, you need large optical arrays. But once you have large optical arrays, you might as well communicate with them...
    • J P  •  5 mths ago
      yeah...there's a growth industry. Maybe they should try to find intelligent life within the SETI institute.
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