By Macy Huston, Penn State and Jason Wright, Penn State
If an alien were to look at Earth, our human technology – from cell towers to fluorescent light bulbs – could be a beacon signifying the presence of life.
We are two astronomers who work on the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, or SETI. In our research, we try to characterize and detect signs of technology – or technosignatures – originating from beyond Earth. Scanning the sky for a TV broadcast of some extraterrestrial Olympics may sound straightforward. But searching for signs of distant, advanced civilizations is a much more nuanced and difficult task than it might seem.
Saying ‘hello’ with technology like radios and lasers
The modern scientific search for extraterrestrial intelligence began in 1959 when astronomers Giuseppe Cocconi and Philip Morrison showed that radio telescopes at interstellar distances could detect radio transmissions from Earth. The same year, Frank Drake launched the first SETI search, Project Ozma, by pointing a large radio telescope at two nearby sun-like stars. He was checking to see if he could detect any radio signals coming from them. Following the invention of the laser in 1960, astronomers detected visible light from distant planets.
These were the first foundational attempts to detect radio or laser signals. They were looking for alien technology or powerful signals that another civilization intentionally sent to the solar system, meaning for them to be found.
Given the technological limitations of the 1960s, astronomers did not give serious thought to searching for broadcast signals – like television and radio broadcasts on Earth – that would leak into space. But a beam of a radio signal, with all its power focused toward Earth, could be detectable from much farther away. Just picture the difference between a laser and a weak light bulb.
SETI looks for radio and laser signals
The search for intentional radio and laser signals is still one of the most popular SETI strategies today. However, this approach assumes that extraterrestrial civilizations want to communicate with other technologically advanced life. Humans very rarely send targeted signals into space. And some scholars argue that intelligent species may purposefully avoid broadcasting their locations. The SETI Paradox is the search for signals that no one may be sending.
Leaking radio waves
Humans don’t transmit many intentional signals out to the cosmos. But many technologies people use today produce a lot of radio transmissions that leak into space. Some of these signals would be detectable if they came from a nearby star.
The worldwide network of television towers constantly emits signals in many directions that leak into space. And they can accumulate into a detectable, though relatively faint, radio signal. Research is ongoing as to whether current emissions from cell towers in the radio frequency on Earth would be detectable using today’s telescopes. But the upcoming Square Kilometer Array radio telescope will be able to detect even fainter radio signals. Because it will have 50 times the sensitivity of current radio telescope arrays.
Not all human-made signals are so unfocused, though. Astronomers and space agencies use beams of radio waves to communicate with satellites and spacecraft in the solar system. Some researchers also use radio waves for radar to study asteroids. These radio signals are more focused and pointed out into space. Any extraterrestrial civilization in the line of sight of these beams could likely detect these unambiguously artificial signals.
Finding megastructures
Aside from finding an actual alien spacecraft, radio waves are the most common technosignatures featured in sci-fi movies and books. But they are not the only signals that could be out there.
In 1960, astronomer Freeman Dyson theorized that, since stars are by far the most powerful energy source in any planetary system, a technologically advanced civilization might collect a significant portion of the star’s light as energy with what would essentially be a massive solar panel. Many astronomers call these megastructures, and there are a few ways to detect them.
After using the energy in the captured light, the technology of an advanced society would re-emit some of the energy as heat. Astronomers have shown that this heat could be detectable as extra infrared radiation coming from a star system.
Another possible way to find a megastructure would be to measure its dimming effect on a star. Specifically, large artificial satellites orbiting a star would periodically block some of its light. This would appear as dips in the star’s apparent brightness over time. Astronomers could detect this effect similarly to how scientists discover distant planets today.
A whole lot of technology pollution
Another technosignature that astronomers have thought about is pollution.
On Earth, chemical pollutants – like nitrogen dioxide and chlorofluorocarbons – are almost exclusively the product of human industry. It is possible to detect these molecules in the atmospheres of exoplanets with the same method the James Webb Space Telescope is using to search distant planets for signs of biology. If astronomers find a planet with an atmosphere filled with chemicals only produced by technology, it may be a sign of life.
Finally, scientists could also detect artificial light or heat from cities and industry with large optical and infrared telescopes. They could also detect a large number of satellites orbiting a planet. But a civilization would need to produce far more heat, light and satellites than Earth does to be detectable across the vastness of space using technology humans currently possess.
Which technology signal is best?
No astronomer has ever found a confirmed technosignature, so it’s hard to say what will be the first sign of alien civilizations. While many astronomers have thought a lot about what might make for a good signal, ultimately, nobody knows what extraterrestrial technology might look like and what signals are out there in the universe.
Some astronomers support a generalized SETI approach which searches for anything in space that current scientific knowledge cannot naturally explain. Some, like us, continue to search for both intentional and unintentional technosignatures. The bottom line is that there are many avenues for detecting distant life. Since no one knows what approach is likely to succeed first, there is still a lot of exciting work left to do.
Macy Huston, PhD Candidate in Astronomy and Astrophysics, Penn State and Jason Wright, Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Penn State
Bottom line: If aliens looked at Earth, our human technology – from cell towers to fluorescent light bulbs – could signal the presence of life. Can we find life in the universe from alien technologies?
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Read more: A Dyson sphere harvests the energy of stars
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