New Telescope to Hunt for Aliens

New Telescope to Hunt for Aliens
A typical galaxy like the Milky Way contains as many stars as there are grains of sand on all the worlds beaches. Most of these stars have planetary systems and many will have the right conditions for life to flourish. LOFAR can potentially search for artificial radio signals from intelligent civilisations in nearby stellar systems. (Image credit: Femke Boekhorst/LOFAR)

Perhaps ET is just a solar system away, and perhaps all weneed is one more telescope to find him. That's the hope, at least, of somescientists who say a new radio observatory being built in Europe may hold achance of finding alien life beyond our planet.

The Low Frequency Array, or LOFAR,is a network of up to 25,000 small antennae beingbuilt in the Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, France and the United Kingdom. Thedistributed radio arrays will collectively scan the universe in the low radiofrequency of light when they are completed in 2009.

"LOFAR can extend the searchfor extraterrestrial intelligence to an entirely unexplored part of the low-frequencyradio spectrum, an area that is heavily used for civil and militarycommunications here on Earth," said Michael Garrett, general director ofASTRON, the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy and professor of radiotechniques in astronomy at Leiden University in the Netherlands. "Inaddition, LOFAR can survey large areas of the sky simultaneously ? an importantadvantage if SETI signals are rare or transient in nature."

 

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Clara Moskowitz
Assistant Managing Editor

Clara Moskowitz is a science and space writer who joined the Space.com team in 2008 and served as Assistant Managing Editor from 2011 to 2013. Clara has a bachelor's degree in astronomy and physics from Wesleyan University, and a graduate certificate in science writing from the University of California, Santa Cruz. She covers everything from astronomy to human spaceflight and once aced a NASTAR suborbital spaceflight training program for space missions. Clara is currently Associate Editor of Scientific American. To see her latest project is, follow Clara on Twitter.