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We’re probably not going to find anything by “listening” for extraterrestrials
Hot Air.com ^ | March 17, 2018 | JAZZ SHAW

Posted on 03/17/2018 4:21:03 PM PDT by Kaslin

In the scientific community, there is still a great deal of energy devoted to “listening” for evidence or hints of intelligent, extraterrestrial civilizations out among the stars. Most of you are probably familiar with the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) and their decades of work in this field. They’re still at it and, in fact, are upping their game with a new generation of laser sensors. These projects drew fresh attention after the discovery of Tabby’s Star and the frantic speculation over whether or not some ancient civilization had built a Dyson Sphere around their own sun. This has led one team to train all of their listening sensors directly on the star in hopes of picking up some indication of advanced technology there.

So what is it they’re listening for? Radio waves, for the most part. We’ve been producing them for more than a century ourselves so the traditional thinking is that advanced, potentially space-faring civilizations would as well. But radio wave transmission has a host of problems and challenges which come with it, both for using it ourselves and listening for it from others. First of all, while these waves travel at an impressive clip (the speed of light, actually) that’s still sort of slow in terms of space travel. When we were sending radio commands to New Horizons as it approached the planet Pluto it took 4 hours and 25 minutes for the signal to reach the craft and an equal amount of time for the response to get back to us so we knew if it had worked. That doesn’t exactly allow you to turn on a dime.

Also, since waves propagate outward as well as forward, they weaken over distance. The signal strength coming back from New Horizons was barely above the background static levels. Listening to Tabby’s star means that we’re hoping to “hear” a signal which has been traveling through space for roughly 1,300 years and has faded to nearly nothing.

That’s what got me to thinking about all of these “listening” projects. I’ve been mulling this over for a while now while reading various opinions from experts and, while I find such research projects perpetually exciting, I’ve slowly been coming to the conclusion that there’s one significant downside to all this listening. It’s probably not going to work.

We’ve had technology in the form of being able to at least work metals for barely 3,000 years. That’s a long time in terms of human lifespan, but less than the blink of an eye in galactic or even geological timeframes. We only developed the ability to directly communicate further than line of sight would allow less than two centuries ago. In the relatively short timespan since then, we’ve arrived on the verge of being able to employ faster than light communication using direct counterfactual quantum communication. Using a system such as that, no interception or random discovery of the communications would be possible since you have to be on one end or the other of the conversation. There are no particles or waves being transmitted to intercept and the communications happen instantly no matter how after the participants are.

Despite having come this far in a couple of hundred years, how much further do you think we’d have to advance before we could build a
Dyson Sphere or a ship capable of interstellar travel? If other hypothetical, alien civilizations have mastered such feats, don’t you suppose they’d have figured out quantum communications (or something even more mind-bogglingly advanced) long before now?

The point is, once you are able to conceive of the idea of instantaneous communications over the vastness of space, the idea of sending antiquated old radio waves, laser beams or particle streams of any sort which are clunking along at only the speed of light seems preposterous. If we’re listening for the aliens we suspect might be building Star Wars type empires out there closer to the bustling center of the Milky Way or buzzing our Navy ships when they get bored, we’re probably not going to pick them up because they’re almost certainly using some form of communication beyond our comprehension.

If we are somehow lucky enough to intercept some radio waves from another star which wind up being an interstellar greeting, their version of reality television programming or the latest crossover pop music hit, who do you suppose sent it? Odds are that we’re listening in on some other schmucks who are barely past the point of figuring out how to start a fire without waiting for a lightning storm, and they won’t be sending any ships to deliver the secrets of unlimited, free, clean energy or the secret of anti-gravity to us any time soon.

Does that mean we should give up on SETI and related programs entirely? Not at all. They’re almost entirely privately funded these days
anyway and you never know what sort of fascinating signal they might pick up which could deliver some new scientific breakthrough. Or, if nothing else, we can watch the Alpha Centauri version of the Kardashians.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: astronomy; donaldbrownlee; extraterrestrials; hearnoevil; hotairisright; jazzshaw; ohsomysteriouso; peterward; rareearth; rareearthnonsense; science; seenoevil; seti; space; speaknoevil; telescopes; threemonkeys; ufos
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

We control the horizontal...


101 posted on 03/18/2018 12:37:18 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Verginius Rufus
...and WHY!

We KNOW that they were used to transmit power around the globe; Right?

102 posted on 03/18/2018 12:38:42 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: bruin66

Heck; my little chunk of it tilts about 10 feet from one corner to the next.


103 posted on 03/18/2018 12:40:00 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
The new James Webb Telescope will not produce the awesome color images that Hubble did,

Sorry; but Hubble did NOT create color images; Man did, by post processing the data.

Much like the rain 'colors' one sees on the evening weatherman's little gig.

104 posted on 03/18/2018 12:44:00 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Thibodeaux
drivel, totally unsubstantiated drivel

Oh?

You have some evidence that PROVES otherwise?

105 posted on 03/18/2018 12:45:00 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Seruzawa
Because there is life here.

So; you have no data.

Ok

106 posted on 03/18/2018 12:45:46 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: minnesota_bound

Friendship Seven saw fireflies


107 posted on 03/18/2018 12:46:47 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: RinaseaofDs

Disagree about what?


108 posted on 03/18/2018 12:47:45 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Elsie

No, the color fidelity of the Hubble instrumentation was extremely good. It just had more sensitivity and a longer gaze than a human eye.


109 posted on 03/18/2018 12:54:31 PM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets (Psephomancers for Hillary!)
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
 



COS - Ultraviolet Eye



The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, which breaks ultraviolet radiation into components that can be studied in detail, is used to examine galaxy evolution, the formation of planets and the rise of the elements needed for life, and the "cosmic web" of gas between galaxies.

 

 



ACS - Super Sightseer



The Advanced Camera for Surveys conducts surveys of the universe and studies the nature and distribution of galaxies. It studies ultraviolet emissions from stars, takes pictures of other planets in our solar system, and is used to search neighboring stars for planets.

 



NICMOS - Dust Buster



The Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer is Hubble's heat sensor. Its sensitivity to infrared light makes it useful for observing objects obscured by interstellar gas and dust (such as stellar birthsites and planetary atmospheres) and for peering into deepest space.

TOP





The Full Story
Release date: Nov 2, 1995
News Release number: STScI-1995-44
 
http://hubblesite.org/news_release/news/1995-44
 
Embryonic Stars Emerge from Interstellar "Eggs"

Eerie, dramatic new pictures from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope show newborn stars emerging from "eggs" - not the barnyard variety - but rather dense, compact pockets of interstellar gas called evaporating gaseous globules (EGGs). Hubble found the "EGGs," appropriately enough, in the Eagle nebula, a nearby star-forming region 6,500 light- years away in the constellation Serpens.

"For a long time astronomers have speculated about what processes control the sizes of stars - about why stars are the sizes that they are," said Jeff Hester of Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ. "Now in M16 we seem to be watching at least one such process at work right in front of our eyes."

Striking pictures taken by Hester and co-investigators with Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) resolve the EGGs at the tip of finger-like features protruding from monstrous columns of cold gas and dust in the Eagle nebula (also called M16 - 16th object in the Messier catalog). The columns - dubbed "elephant trunks" - protrude from the wall of a vast cloud of molecular hydrogen, like stalagmites rising above the floor of a cavern. Inside the gaseous towers, which are light-years long, the interstellar gas is dense enough to collapse under its own weight, forming young stars that continue to grow as they accumulate more and more mass from their surroundings.

Hubble gives a clear look at what happens as a torrent of ultraviolet light from nearby young, hot stars heats the gas along the surface of the pillars, "boiling it away" into interstellar space - a process called "photoevaporation. "The Hubble pictures show photoevaporating gas as ghostly streamers flowing away from the columns. But not all of the gas boils off at the same rate. The EGGs, which are denser than their surroundings, are left behind after the gas around them is gone.

"It's a bit like a wind storm in the desert," said Hester. "As the wind blows away the lighter sand, heavier rocks buried in the sand are uncovered. But in M16, instead of rocks, the ultraviolet light is uncovering the denser egg-like globules of gas that surround stars that were forming inside the gigantic gas columns."

Some EGGs appear as nothing but tiny bumps on the surface of the columns. Others have been uncovered more completely, and now resemble "fingers" of gas protruding from the larger cloud. (The fingers are gas that has been protected from photoevaporation by the shadows of the EGGs). Some EGGs have pinched off completely from the larger column from which they emerged, and now look like teardrops in space.

By stringing together these pictures of EGGs caught at different stages of being uncovered, Hester and his colleagues from the Wide Field and Planetary Camera Investigation Definition Team are getting an unprecedented look at what stars and their surroundings look like before they are truly stars.

"This is the first time that we have actually seen the process of forming stars being uncovered by photoevaporation," Hester emphasized. "In some ways it seems more like archaeology than astronomy. The ultraviolet light from nearby stars does the digging for us, and we study what is unearthed."

"In a few cases we can see the stars in the EGGs directly in the WFPC2 images," says Hester. "As soon as the star in an EGG is exposed, the object looks something like an ice cream cone, with a newly uncovered star playing the role of the cherry on top."

Ultimately, photoevaporation inhibits the further growth of the embyronic stars by dispersing the cloud of gas they were "feeding" from. "We believe that the stars in M16 were continuing to grow as more and more gas fell onto them, right up until the moment that they were cut off from that surrounding material by photoevaporation," said Hester.

This process is markedly different from the process that governs the sizes of stars forming in isolation. Some astronomers believe that, left to its own devices, a star will continue to grow until it nears the point where nuclear fusion begins in its interior. When this happens, the star begins to blow a strong "wind" that clears away the residual material. Hubble has imaged this process in detail in so-called Herbig-Haro objects.

Hester also speculated that photoevaporation might actually inhibit the formation of planets around such stars. It is not at all clear from the new data that the stars in M16 have reached the point where they have formed the disks that go on to become solar systems," said Hester, "and if these disks haven't formed yet, they never will."

Hester plans to use Hubble's high resolution to probe other nearby star-forming regions to look for similar structures. "Discoveries about the nature of the M16 EGGs might lead astronomers to rethink some of their ideas about the environments of stars forming in other regions, such as the Orion Nebula," he predicted.


110 posted on 03/18/2018 1:06:18 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Elsie

I think that was the er... waste that was disposed of floating around the ship. There was a report I read once by an engineer named Howard Wolowitz about this.
Here are some test video and explanation of the problem.

Doesn’t hit the fan
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zBZrXuHmrtM

Not enough breadcrumbs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aXJgXPxTzRg


111 posted on 03/18/2018 1:32:50 PM PDT by minnesota_bound
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
In Huckleberry Finn, Huck and Jim are floating down the Mississippi on their raft and wondering about the stars--were they made or did they just happen? One of them, probably Huck, allows that they might have been laid by the moon.

19th-century American philosophers in the Mississippi Valley (before it was fly-over country).

112 posted on 03/18/2018 3:47:52 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: minnesota_bound
I think that was the er... waste that was disposed of floating around the ship.

I doubt it.

DEPENDS would have made a LOT more sense and been a LOT cheaper to implement; too.

113 posted on 03/18/2018 4:16:11 PM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: RinaseaofDs

Oh what a joke. why?


114 posted on 03/18/2018 5:58:54 PM PDT by raiderboy ( "...if we have to close down our government, weÂ’re building that wall" DJT)
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To: Elsie
Sure we do...

Yes, those dimensions have been proven to exist.

A Universe of at Least 10 Dimensions

Einstein's Intuition : Quantum Space Theory

What's Einstein's 11 dimensions of reality? How does it relate to the string theory for the evidence of God?

So, no need to get snarky.

115 posted on 03/18/2018 7:05:15 PM PDT by rdb3 (Hi! I'm worthless to one, but priceless to two. Who am I?)
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To: rdb3
From the first; just two to begin with...
 
 
String theory requires at least six extra spatial dimensions tightly curled-up to microscopic size. Here we see two such dimensions, curled-up into tiny spheres.
No; we do not 'see' anything other than a CONCEPT of tiny spheres - no 'proof'.  (Just gotta LOVE 'theories'!)
 
 
If the sun were to explode, would you feel the gravitational impact on the Earth’s orbit before you saw the explosion eight minutes later?
Probably not; as the sun's center of mass would STILL be in the same location as before the 'explosion'.

116 posted on 03/19/2018 4:03:39 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: rdb3

Number 2 seems to be a web site to sell books.


117 posted on 03/19/2018 4:08:39 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: rdb3

As for #3; well...
 
 
 
 
 
What's Einstein's 11 dimensions of reality? How does it relate to the string theory for the evidence of God?

Update: How can atheists rely on science when they don't even know the 11 dimensions of reality and the string theory?
Update 2: Hey, Ipg? Proof please. If you can't provide proof , then remove yourself from Yahoo Answers!, as you just have being considered a superficial spawn.
Update 3: It's virtually impossible to provide any tangible proof on a written forum such as Yahoo Answers!, however, meet me in person and I'll show you all of the tangible proofs there are to God's existence.
 
 
 

118 posted on 03/19/2018 4:11:48 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: rdb3
So, no need to get snarky.

I'm merely trying to emulate Tyson.

119 posted on 03/19/2018 4:14:38 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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