SETI back in business after funding from US military. Focus now on 'Earth twin'

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MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA – The Allen Telescope Array (ATA) is once again searching planetary systems for signals that would be evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence. Among its first targets are some of the exoplanet candidates recently discovered by NASA’s Kepler space telescope.

“This is a superb opportunity for SETI observations,” said Jill Tarter, the Director of the Center for SETI Research at the SETI Institute. “For the first time, we can point our telescopes at stars, and know that those stars actually host planetary systems – including at least one that begins to approximate an Earth analog in the habitable zone around its host star. That’s the type of world that might be home to a civilization capable of building radio transmitters.”

The ATA had been placed in hibernation mode last April as the result of the withdrawal of the SETI Institute’s former partner, U.C. Berkeley, due to budgetary shortfalls. Berkeley was the operator of the Hat Creek Observatory in northern California where the ATA is located. With new funding recently acquired for observatory operations, the ATA can resume SETI observations where it left off: examining the thousands of new candidate planets found by Kepler. Highest priority will be given to the handful of worlds discovered so far that are located in their star’s habitable zone: the range of orbital radii where temperatures are neither too hot nor too cold for liquid water to exist. Most astrobiologists consider that liquid water is the sine qua non for life.

“In SETI, as with all research, preconceived notions such as habitable zones could be barriers to discovery,” adds Tarter. “So, with sufficient future funding from our donors, it’s our intention to examine all of the planetary systems found by Kepler.”

Observations over the next two years will allow a systematic exploration of these Kepler discoveries across the entire, naturally-quiet 1 to 10 GHz terrestrial microwave window. The ATA is unique in providing ready access to tens of millions of channels at any one time, anywhere in this 9 billion channel range (each channel is 1 Hz wide). Until recently many SETI searches focused on limited frequency ranges, including a small number of observations at the 8.67 GHz spin-flip transition of the 3He+ ion, proposed by the team of Bob Rood (University of Virginia) and Tom Bania (Boston University). In memory of Rood, who died November 2, the initial ATA search of Kepler targets this week will focus around the 8.67 GHz band, before moving on to examine the billions of channels available for observation at the ATA.

The restart of SETI work at the ATA has been made possible thanks to the interest and generosity of the public who supported SETI research via the www.SETIStars.org web site. Additional funds necessary for observatory re-activation and operations are being provided by the United States Air Force as part of a formal assessment of the instrument’s utility for Space Situational Awareness (see www.seti.org/afspc for more information).

“Kepler’s success has created an amazing opportunity to focus SETI research. While discovery of new exoplanets via Kepler is backed with government monies, the search for evidence that some of these worlds might be home to intelligence falls to SETI alone. And our SETI exploration depends entirely on private donations, for which we are deeply grateful to our donors,” notes Tarter.

“The year-in and year-out fundraising challenge we tackle in order to conduct SETI research is an absolute human and organizational struggle, yet it is well worth the hard work to help Jill’s team address what is one of humanity’s most profound research questions,” says Tom Pierson, CEO of the SETI Institute.

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Money for SETI? Hell fucking yes! I was pretty bummed out when I heard they were downsizing and shutting stuff off, but this is excellent news!
 
Is such a thing even possible?

It just isn't funny in this context.
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US military pays SETI to check Kepler-22b for aliens

'Space situational awareness' cash for Allen Array
By Lewis Page • Get more from this author

Posted in Government, 6th December 2011 13:14 GMT

The Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI) has announced that it is back in business checking out the new habitable exoplanets recently discovered by NASA's Kepler space telescope to see if they might be home to alien civilisations. The cash needed to restart SETI's efforts has come in part from the US Air Force Space Command, who are interested in using the organisation's detection instruments for "space situational awareness".

"This is a superb opportunity for SETI observations," said Jill Tarter, the Director of the Center for SETI Research, in a statement issued yesterday. "For the first time, we can point our telescopes at stars, and know that those stars actually host planetary systems - including at least one that begins to approximate an Earth analog in the habitable zone around its host star. That's the type of world that might be home to a civilization capable of building radio transmitters."

Crazy rationalization but I'll take it. It is a better use of their money than the $1 Trillion looking for magical 'stockpiles of WMDs' in Iraq.
 
About time. Hopefully they'll continue to get the funding they need because it would be a damn waste to have shit ton of money spent on defense/military/CEO bonuses and not even a tiny fraction to organizations like SETI.
 
Crazy rationalization but I'll take it. It is a better use of their money than the $1 Trillion looking for magical 'stockpiles of WMDs' in Iraq.

Somehow I don't care if scientist or military are funding : SETI lives and it's good for science, therefore, humankind.

Plus, military always have more fancy scifi things getting done than scientists because of their unlimited budget
 
There is a book series were aliens come to earth to get humans to fight their war because we are crazy as hell compared to the rest of the galactic community.

I have a very hard time believing any species that evolved to the point that they developed space travel wouldn't also be as violent as we are. But I like the basic message.
 
There is a book series were aliens come to earth to get humans to fight their war because we are crazy as hell compared to the rest of the galactic community.

There's also a series about humans joining the galactic community and being seen as the most hell-bent, tenacious dudes out there because we developed advanced space travel and high technology on our own instead of having it given to us by a more advanced civilization like most of the major interstellar powers. Uplift, I think?
 
What if we get there and we take over whatever civilization is there? That would make us the alien invaders.
 
Correct me if I'm wrong, but SETI listens for radio communications coming from different parts of space depending upon what they are pointing the dishes at?

So if a radio signal came from a slightly different angle than where SETI (or other similar dish laboratories of course) were pointing, we wouldn't know?
 
I don't mind 2.5 million being spent on SETI, but I'd be lying if I said I think it will ever amount to shit. It's highly unlikely it will ever find anything, but I do think it's worth that 2.5 million just in case.....
 
We must stop:

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From invading Earth.

Our only hope is:

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And if this is going to be successful we must make sure that Daniel Jackson has:

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Before I die, I would like to be witness to radio signals being received from another planet with intelligent life.

This is the closest I'll get, in my lifetime, I believe, to witnessing proof of intelligent extra-terrestrial life.
 
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