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SETI’s Colossus (Huge 77-meter infrared telescope)
Centauri Dreams ^ | 5/31/13 | Paul Gilster

Posted on 05/31/2013 5:41:01 PM PDT by LibWhacker

SETI’s Colossus

by Paul Gilster on May 31, 2013

For the most part, the focus of SETI since Project Ozma has been directed at intercepting signals deliberately sent our way. It doesn’t have to be so, of course, because extraneous signals from a civilization going about its business would also be profoundly interesting, and even a civilization not much more advanced than ours might be throwing off powerful evidence of its existence through the planetary radars it uses to detect potential impactors in its own system.

Whether or not the Ohio State WOW! signal was a SETI detection remains unresolved, but I always think back to the original Cocconi and Morrison paper “Searching for Interstellar Communications,” published in Nature in 1959. Neither man could know in that year whether exoplanets even existed, but it was a reasonable supposition, and technology had advanced to the point where detecting SETI signals was consistent with all we knew. And as the duo wrote: “The probability of success is difficult to estimate, but if we never search, the chance of success is zero.”

Again I’m reminded of Freeman Dyson’s dictum ‘look for what’s detectable, not for what’s probable,’ which reminds us not to bring too many assumptions into the mix. Thus today we’re seeing the growth of interest in interstellar artifacts, perhaps in the form of gigantic engineering projects that would be observable across light years. And now we have a new proposal, one that would use a gigantic telescope housed here on Earth to look for infrared signatures around other stars. These would not be beacons but the infrared excess inevitably generated by a civilization going about its business. We needn’t, in other words, wait for them to send to us.

The Largest of All Telescopes

Four researchers have outlined the prospect in How to Find ET with Infrared Light, an article appearing in the June, 2013 issue of Astronomy. Jeff Kuhn (University of Hawaii), Svetlana V. Berdyugina (University of Freiburg), David Halliday (Dynamic Structures, Ltd., in British Columbia), and Caisey Harlingten (Searchlight Observatory Network, Norwich, England) believe that a survey out to 60 light years using their methods could make a definitive call on the existence of any civilizations there. The attempt revolves around the use of power.

Consider that Earth’s current terrestrial power production is 15 terawatts, which turns out to be 0.04 percent of the total solar power received on Earth from the Sun. The authors designate the ratio of a civilization’s power production to the amount of solar power it receives as Ω. The article points out that the total power used by photosynthesis on Earth is 0.2 percent of the total light falling on the planet from the Sun — it’s interesting to see that our civilization consumes only 20 percent as much power as the biology that supports us. But let’s carry this forward:

As Earth-like civilizations evolve, they use more power. For example, in Roman times, we estimate Ω was about 1/1000 what it is today. Humans’ global power consumption is growing by about 2.5 percent per year, even though the world’s population is growing at less than half this rate. In contrast, our knowledge base (the combined total of all recorded information) doubles in just two years. As cultures advance, their information content also must grow, and the power required to manipulate this knowledge eventually dominates a civilization’s total power use.

Finding a civilization through its waste heat radiation thus appears possible, given the right equipment, and what equipment it is. Right now the three largest infrared telescopes being planned are the Giant Magellan Telescope, the Thirty Meter Telescope and the European Extremely Large Telescope. But Kuhn and his colleagues need to go bigger. They’re talking about an instrument with a primary mirror of 77 meters, fittingly called Colossus.

colossus pic - small

Image: The Colossus Telescope, a high-resolution, multiple-mirror giant instrument, will have the ability to directly image the heat generated by other civilizations on planets orbiting stars near us in the Milky Way. Credit: Innovative Optics/Colossus Corporation.

A huge collecting area and an adaptive optics system to correct for the effects of Earth’s atmosphere are essential, as are techniques of ‘thin-mirror slumping’ and polishing technologies being developed by the team through their company Innovative Optics, which operates its research and development out of the University of Hawaii’s Institute for Astronomy in Maui as well as at the National University of Mexico in Ensenada. I pulled this from the Innovative Optics website in a section describing the team’s methodology:

Our proprietary processes drastically reduce the time and cost of production of precision optics. Our optics are produced by fire polishing flat glass (which avoids time-consuming abrasion techniques and leaves a smoother, optically-superior mirror surface), then “slumping” the hot glass under controlled conditions to the desired final shape; no grinding or rough polishing step is required.

The site goes on to describe what it calls ‘Live Mirror’ technologies that provide the adaptive optics needed to eliminate atmospheric distortion. Innovative Optics claims its mirrors can be very thin (2.5 cm thick for an 8-meter diameter Live Mirror) and therefore lightweight, at roughly 70 kg per square meter of surface area, a significant reduction over conventional mirrors. Colossus is envisioned as comprising approximately sixty of these 8-meter mirror segments, with a field of view that would take in only a few arcseconds of the sky at any time, allowing the designers to optimize for star-like sources even as the design holds down costs.

Using a sensitive coronagraph to remove scattered light that would obscure an exoplanet, Colossus would be able to find hundreds of Earth-sized or larger planets in the habitable zone including any civilizations on their surfaces. Innovative Optics is working with Dynamic Structures (Vancouver, BC) on design and construction issues, although issues of funding and location remain to be resolved. Backed by ‘a group of physicists, engineers, telescope builders, philanthropists, and businessmen,’ the team believes the technology exists to make Colossus a reality. “The Colossus would give us insight into whether civilization is a fragile development or if it is common,” the article concludes. “And we’d learn this without announcing ourselves.”



TOPICS: Astronomy; Science
KEYWORDS: colossus; infrared; seti; telescope; xplanets
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1 posted on 05/31/2013 5:41:01 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker

Call it stupidity or ignorance, but I fail to see how emissions not directly aimed at something, projected to a very fine point with incredible power behind it, won’t simply fuzz out into nothingness in a short distance (relatively speaking). We communicate with our probes because the math was done on their trajectories, so we have a good idea of where they are in space. Also, since it seems the heliosphere is actually a circular, real-thing in space, how would extraneous emissions reach distant solar systems if they aren’t directed?


2 posted on 05/31/2013 5:52:58 PM PDT by wastedyears (I'm a gamer not because I choose to have no life, but because I choose to have many.)
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To: LibWhacker

The Forbin Project?


3 posted on 05/31/2013 6:02:59 PM PDT by sima_yi ( Reporting live from the far North)
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To: wastedyears

The extraneous emissions from a planet reach us without being directed just as light from the star reaches us without being directed. The problem is it’s an extremely weak signal by the time it gets here. Thus the need for a giant telescope.


4 posted on 05/31/2013 6:07:54 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: wastedyears

Our Planed transmits a 24 hour cycle of 50HZ-60Hz from our power lines that is ten times brighter than the sun in that spectrum. As the planet turns from North America (60Hz) to Europe (50Hz) the tone changes.

Kinda like a low frequency European siren, BeeeeBaaaaBeeeeBaaaa.

Kinda cool. It’s like a giant “come Nuke us” signal we have been sending to the stars for years.


5 posted on 05/31/2013 6:15:57 PM PDT by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: American in Israel

Our “Planet”...


6 posted on 05/31/2013 6:17:05 PM PDT by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: American in Israel

That’s cool, thanks. Never thought of that.


7 posted on 05/31/2013 6:25:19 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: American in Israel

Hopefully the time lag will mean that we will have the means to repel said nukes.

Improvements in communication facilitate centralized control.


8 posted on 05/31/2013 6:31:18 PM PDT by hoosierham (Freedom isn't free)
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To: sima_yi
The Forbin Project?

WE ARE COMING. DO NOT TOUCH COLOSSUS. WE ARE COMING. DO NOT TOUCH COLOSSUS.

9 posted on 05/31/2013 6:36:31 PM PDT by Steely Tom (If the Constitution can be a living document, I guess a corporation can be a person.)
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To: American in Israel
Our Planed transmits a 24 hour cycle of 50HZ-60Hz from our power lines that is ten times brighter than the sun in that spectrum. As the planet turns from North America (60Hz) to Europe (50Hz) the tone changes.

That's interesting where it is possible aliens can detect us by the frequency used in our power mains. What's confusing is Japan, the northern part uses 50 cycle power and the southern half runs on 60 cycle. I think there is 25 cycle power still being used at Niagara Falls and some motors that drain water in New Orleans still use 25 cycle power as well.
10 posted on 05/31/2013 6:38:51 PM PDT by Nowhere Man (I miss you Whitey! (4-15-2001 - 10-12-2012). Take care, pretty girl!)
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To: American in Israel

That was the best explanation I have seen yet.


11 posted on 05/31/2013 6:39:43 PM PDT by gfbtbb (Ladies and Gentlemen, we are on our own.)
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Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: LibWhacker

What a colossal waste of time, effort and money. This makes me sick and I’m a scientist.


14 posted on 05/31/2013 7:16:35 PM PDT by slouper (LWRC M6A2)
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To: American in Israel

So so little as our power lines are traveling light years across space without being stopped by anything electromagnetic, like the heliosphere?


15 posted on 05/31/2013 7:31:19 PM PDT by wastedyears (I'm a gamer not because I choose to have no life, but because I choose to have many.)
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To: KevinDavis; annie laurie; Knitting A Conundrum; Viking2002; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Mmogamer; ...

Thanks LibWhacker.
 
X-Planets
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16 posted on 05/31/2013 7:51:18 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Romney would have been worse, if you're a dumb ass.)
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To: American in Israel

Cool.

I’ve always thought the assumption that sending signals to aliens would be a good thing extremely odd.


17 posted on 05/31/2013 8:17:28 PM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Sherman Logan

I always wondered why people assumed an advanced extraterrestrial civilization would be benevolent or even benign in its conduct toward us. It might simply scrape us off the planet as we would a pest from a nice piece of fruit.


18 posted on 05/31/2013 9:13:50 PM PDT by Trod Upon (Every penny given to film and TV media companies goes right into enemy coffers. Starve them out!)
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To: LibWhacker
I was at a start up company a while back and the interest was in looking for evidence of either:

1). Nuclear fallout

or

2) Atmospheric pollution

as evidence of advance civilization

19 posted on 05/31/2013 10:03:40 PM PDT by spokeshave (The only people better off today than 4 years ago are the Prisoners at Guantanamo.)
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To: spokeshave

How long did that startup company last?


20 posted on 06/01/2013 12:17:52 AM PDT by wastedyears (I'm a gamer not because I choose to have no life, but because I choose to have many.)
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