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Wednesday, 25 February 2015
Should Humanity Try to Contact Alien Civilizations?
Some researchers
want to use big radio dishes like the 305-meter Arecibo Observatory in
Puerto Rico to announce our presence to intelligent aliens. Credit: Arecibo Observatory/NSF
Is it time to take the search for intelligent aliens to the next level?
For more than half a century, scientists have been scanning the heavens
for signals generated by intelligent alien life. They haven't found
anything conclusive yet, so some researchers are advocating adding an
element called "active SETI" (search for extraterrestrial intelligence) — not just listening, but also beaming out transmissions of our own designed to catch aliens' eyes.
Active SETI "may just be the approach that lets us make contact with
life beyond Earth," Douglas Vakoch, director of interstellar message
composition at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California, said
earlier this month during a panel discussion at the annual meeting of
the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in San
Jose.
Seeking contact
Do you think life exists on Mars?
"Whenever any of the planetary radar folks are doing their asteroid studies,
and they have an extra half an hour before or after, there's always a
target star readily available that they can shift to without a lot of
extra slough time," he said.
The content of any potential active SETI message is a subject of
considerable debate. If it were up to astronomer Seth Shostak, Vakoch's
SETI Institute colleague, we'd beam the entire Internet out into space.
"It's like sending a lot of hieroglyphics to the 19th century — they
[aliens] can figure it out based on the redundancy," Shostak said during
the AAAS discussion. "So, I think in terms of messages, we should send
everything."
While active SETI could help make humanity's presence known to
extrasolar civilizations, the strategy could also aid the more
traditional "passive" search for alien intelligence, Shostak added.
"If you're going to run SETI experiments, where you're trying to listen
for a putative alien broadcast, it may be very instructive to have to
construct a transmitting project," he said. "Because now, you walk a
mile in the Klingons' shoes, assuming they have them." http://www.space.com/9788-search-intelligent-life-4-key-questions.html#ooid=pzN3N4cDp1uBpOqfw-WQvZhC2ff8BBIM
Cause for concern?
But active SETI is a controversial topic. Humanity has been a truly
technological civilization for only a few generations; we're less than
60 years removed from launching our first satellite to Earth orbit, for
example. So the chances are that any extraterrestrials who pick up our
signals would be far more advanced than we are. [The Search for Intelligent Life: 4 Key Questions (Video)]
This likelihood makes some researchers nervous, including famed theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking.
"Such advanced aliens would perhaps become nomads, looking to conquer and colonize whatever planets they could reach," Hawking said in 2010 on
an episode of "Into the Universe with Stephen Hawking," a TV show that
aired on the Discovery Channel. "If so, it makes sense for them to
exploit each new planet for material to build more spaceships so they
could move on. Who knows what the limits would be?"
Astrophysicist and science fiction author David Brin voiced similar
concerns during the AAAS event, saying there's no reason to assume that
intelligent aliens would be altruistic.
"This is an area in which discussion is called for," Brin said. "What
are the motivations of species that they might carry with them into
their advanced forms, that might color their cultures?"
Brin stressed that active SETI shouldn't be done in a piecemeal, ad hoc fashion by small groups of astronomers.
"This is something that should be discussed worldwide, and it should
involve our peers in many other specialties, such as history," he said.
"The historians would tell us, 'Well, gee, we have some examples of
first-contact scenarios between advanced technological civilizations and
not-so-advanced technological civilizations.' Gee, how did all of those
turn out? Even when they were handled with goodwill, there was still
pain."
Vakoch and Shostak agreed that international discussion and cooperation
are desirable. But Shostak said that achieving any kind of consensus on
the topic of active SETI may be difficult. For example, what if polling
reveals that 60 percent of people on Earth are in favor of the
strategy, while 40 percent are opposed?
"Do we then have license to go ahead and transmit?" Shostak said.
"That's the problem, I think, with this whole 'let's have some
international discussion' [idea], because I don't know what the decision
metric is."
Vakoch and Shostak also said that active SETI isn't as big a leap as it
may seem at first glance: Our civilization has been beaming signals out
into the universe unintentionally for a century, since the radio was invented.
"The reality is that any civilization that has the ability to travel
between the stars can already pick up our accidental radio and TV
leakage," Vakoch said. "A civilization just 200 to 300 years more
advanced than we are could pick up our leakage radiation at a distance
of several hundred light-years. So there are no increased dangers of an
alien invasion through active SETI."
But Brin disputed this assertion, saying the so-called "barn door excuse" is a myth.
"It is very difficult for advanced civilizations to have picked us up
at our noisiest in the 1980s, when we had all these military radars and
these big television antennas," he said.
Shostak countered that a fear of alien invasion, if taken too far, could hamper humanity's expansion throughout the solar system, an effort that will probably require the use of high-powered transmissions between farflung outposts.
"Do you want to hamstring all that activity — not for the weekend, not
just shut down the radars next week, or active SETI this year, but shut
down humanity forever?" Shostak said. "That's a price I'm not willing to
pay."
So the discussion and debate continues — and may continue for quite some time.
"This is the only really important scientific field without any subject
matter," Brin said. "It's an area in which opinion rules, and everybody
has a very fierce opinion."
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