Aliens?
Interesting article in
The New Scientist regarding some signals from the SETI project.
Their website is being hit with a lot of traffic so I copied the entire text to the "Continue Reading - Aliens?" link below.
This would be really cool. Of course, it's a scam by Bush and all the other NeoCons to steal the election again. No war for oiiiiilllllllllllllllll!!!!!!!!!!!!!
In February 2003, astronomers involved in the search for
extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) pointed the massive radio
telescope in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, at around 200 sections of the sky.
The same telescope had previously detected unexplained radio signals at
least twice from each of these regions, and the astronomers were trying
to reconfirm the findings. The team has now finished analysing the
data, and all the signals seem to have disappeared. Except one, which
has got stronger.
This radio signal, now seen on three separate occasions, is an enigma.
It could be generated by a previously unknown astronomical phenomenon.
Or it could be something much more mundane, maybe an artefact of the
telescope itself.
But it also happens to be the best candidate yet for a contact by
intelligent aliens in the nearly six-year history of the SETI@home
project, which uses programs running as screensavers on millions of
personal computers worldwide to sift through signals picked up by the
Arecibo telescope.
Absorb and emit
“It’s the most interesting signal from SETI@home,” says Dan Werthimer,
a radio astronomer at the University of California, Berkeley (UCB) and
the chief scientist for SETI@home. “We’re not jumping up and down, but
we are continuing to observe it.”
Named SHGb02+14a, the signal has a frequency of about 1420 megahertz.
This happens to be one of the main frequencies at which hydrogen, the
most common element in the universe, readily absorbs and emits energy.
Some astronomers have argued that extraterrestrials trying to advertise
their presence would be likely to transmit at this frequency, and SETI
researchers conventionally scan this part of the radio spectrum.
SHGb02+14a seems to be coming from a point between the constellations
Pisces and Aries, where there is no obvious star or planetary system
within 1000 light years. And the transmission is very weak.
“We are looking for something that screams out ‘artificial’,” says UCB
researcher Eric Korpela, who completed the analysis of the signal in
April. “This just doesn’t do that, but it could be because it is
distant.”
Unknown signature
The telescope has only observed the signal for about a minute in total,
which is not long enough for astronomers to analyse it thoroughly. But,
Korpela thinks it unlikely SHGb02+14a is the result of any obvious
radio interference or noise, and it does not bear the signature of any
known astronomical object.
That does not mean that only aliens could have produced it. “It may be
a natural phenomenon of a previously undreamed-of kind like I stumbled
over,” says Jocelyn Bell Burnell of the University of Bath, UK.
It was Bell Burnell who in 1967 noticed a pulsed radio signal which the
research team at the time thought was from extraterrestrials but which
turned out to be the first ever sighting of a pulsar.
There are other oddities. For instance, the signal’s frequency is
drifting by between eight to 37 hertz per second. “The signal is moving
rapidly in frequency and you would expect that to happen if you are
looking at a transmitter on a planet that’s rotating very rapidly and
where the civilisation is not correcting the transmission for the
motion of the planet,” Korpela says.
This does not, however, convince Paul Horowitz, a Harvard University
astronomer who looks for alien signals using optical telescopes. He
points out that the SETI@home software corrects for any drift in
frequency.
Fishy and puzzling
The fact that the signal continues to drift after this correction is
“fishy”, he says. “If [the aliens] are so smart, they’ll adjust their
signal for their planet’s motion.”
The relatively rapid drift of the signal is also puzzling for other
reasons. A planet would have to be rotating nearly 40 times faster than
Earth to have produced the observed drift; a transmitter on Earth would
produce a signal with a drift of about 1.5 hertz per second.
What is more, if telescopes are observing a signal that is drifting in
frequency, then each time they look for it they should most likely
encounter it at a slightly different frequency. But in the case of
SHGb02+14a, every observation has first been made at 1420 megahertz,
before it starts drifting. “It just boggles my mind,” Korpela says.
The signal could be an artefact that, for some reason, always appears
to be coming from the same point in the sky. The Arecibo telescope has
a fixed dish reflector and scans the skies by changing the position of
its receiver relative to the dish.
When the receiver reaches a certain position, it might just be able to
reflect waves from the ground onto the dish and then back to itself,
making it seem as if the signal was coming from space.
“Perhaps there is an object on the ground near the telescope emitting
at about this frequency,” Korpela says. This could be confirmed by
using a different telescope to listen for SHGb02+14a.
Possible fraud
There is also the possibility of fraud by someone hacking the SETI@home
software to make it return evidence for an extraterrestrial
transmission. However, SHGb02+14a was seen on two different occasions
by different SETI@home users, and those calculations were confirmed by
others.
Then the signal was seen a third time by the SETI@home researchers. The
unusual characteristics of the signal also make it unlikely that
someone is playing a prank, Korpela says. “As I can’t think of any way
to make a signal like this, I can’t think of any way to fake it.”
David Anderson, director of SETI@home, remains sceptical but curious
about the signal. ”It’s unlikely to be real but we will definitely be
re-observing it.” Bell Burnell agrees that it is worth persisting with.
“If they can see it four, five or six times it really begins to get
exciting,” she says.
It is already exciting for IT engineers Oliver Voelker of Logpoint in
Nuremberg, Germany and Nate Collins of Farin and Associates in Madison,
Wisconsin, who found the signal.
Collins wonders how his bosses will react to company computers finding
aliens. “I might have to explain a little further about just how much I
was using [the computers],” he says.
Posted by DaveH at September 1, 2004 10:29 PM