There's a
small difficulty with SETI that reminds me of a situation I often encounter in
European restaurants. I call it the "synchronicity problem."
Imagine
that I've spent two hours savoring the restaurant's house special (usually some
species of fish known only to ichthyologists), and want to get the bill and get
out. What is the probability that when I stare at the waiter to signal my
intentions, he'll be looking at me?
Not high.
This is a
SETI problem too. Since we observe a star system, at any particular frequency,
for only a few seconds or minutes, can we reasonably expect that during that
brief scrutiny the extraterrestrial transmitters are "looking" at us?
After all, an alien society will surely be too distant to have picked up our
television or radar and thereby know we're here, scanning the skies for signs
of life. So why would they be sending messages to us now?
An obvious
response is that the extraterrestrials could be beaming a non-stop signal to
the entire galaxy. Their strategy for pinging unknown neighbors may
simply be "all alien, all the time."
The obvious
appeal of a continuous, pan-galactic broadcast has prompted some scientists to
invent unconventional schemes for omnidirectional signaling. For example,
fifteen years ago G. M. Beskin and A. V. Sannikov, of the Russian Academy of
Sciences, figured that advanced societies might co-opt big stars as billboards
that would grab the notice of just about anyone in the Milky Way.
Their
suggestion was this: Aliens with a yen to yak could set up powerful generators
to fire a beam of hard X-rays at so-called super-supergiant stars. These bulky
suns, also called hypergiants, are the galaxy's heftiest stellar inhabitants:
millions of times brighter than Sol, and considerably larger. Indeed, if the
sun were suddenly swapped for the most voluminous of these hypergiants, YV
Canis Majoris, the solar system would be stuffed with star all the way to
Saturn.
Every
astronomically literate society will know of hypergiants, and would undoubtedly
burden grad students with their study. Consequently, sooner or later someone
would notice if the beam from an alien race lit up the outer layers of a
hypergiant, causing it to develop an unnatural X-ray glow. The observer could
quickly deduce that advanced aliens were trying to get his attention.
This idea
is like the bat signal used by the Gotham City police whenever they need Batman
backup. The desperate gendarmes use a powerful searchlight to project a bat
logo onto a cloud layer, producing a simple call sign that would be noticed,
one presumes, everywhere in the city (including suburban and stately Wayne
Manor).
The Bat
Signal is a one-bit signaling device, but the X-ray generator lighting up a
hypergiant could pulse on and off to send Morse-code style a message. Of
course, the bandwidth is low because scattered rays from the edges of the star
will arrive at the receiver later than those from the center, blurring the
pulses. The maximum data rate, even for a star only ten times the diameter of the
sun, would be about one bit per minute. That's worse than dial-up.
The limited
bandwidth of this scheme is a problem, but there's more bad news. Lighting up a
star for signaling purposes takes a lot of power. Beskin and Sannikov estimated
that their scheme would require an X-ray generator that was at least 0.01% of
the star's light output, which even for a fairly dim hypergiant is 1025
watts. For comparison, that's about a million times more power than required
for an all-galaxy radio beacon that could be easily detected by today's SETI
experiments! X-raying stars seems like a hard way to get out your message.
Starlight,
star bright
Recently,
astronomers in Hawaii and France have come up with other ideas for turning
stars into beacons schemes that, once again, advanced aliens might use to get
the attention of galactic inhabitants.
John
Learned (University of Hawaii) and his colleagues propose something reminiscent
of the Russian approach. They suggest that aliens could fire neutrinos into the
incandescent innards of a Cepheid variable star, thereby inducing it to
slightly change the rate at which it brightens and dims.
Cepheid
variables are massive stars (albeit not hypergiants) that pulsate regularly,
and are routinely used to calibrate the distances to galaxies. They're useful
to astronomers the way lab rats are to medical researchers, and will be noticed
and studied by scientists on any world. In addition, they can be seen at
intergalactic distances. So causing a Cepheid to change its pulse period is
akin to projecting a bat signal, not on some low-lying stratocumulus, but on
the moon!
Lamentably,
once again the bit rate will be low, and the utility bills high. The former
won't exceed one bit per second, and the latter will spin your electric meter
at the not-inconsiderable burn rate of 1023 watts. That's somewhat
less pricey than the hypergiant scheme, but still nowhere near the much lower
cost of an all-galaxy radio beacon.
Finally,
there's the scenario proposed by French astronomer Luc Arnold, who suggests
that the aliens will build giant, odd-shaped shadow puppets to orbit their own
sun, occasionally blocking some of its light. In our search for planets that
transit their suns, we might notice one of these artificial occulters. The
dimming would be different from that of a round planet if the object is, for
example, a giant triangle, or a louvered screen. If we saw one of these strange
mini-eclipses, we'd know that someone was at home in that solar system.
But again,
this is really slow signaling the transit would occur for a few hours every
year (whatever their year might be), and would only convey a single bit of
information: "Aliens are here." And while there's no operating
expense (the occulter needn't fire either X-rays or neutrinos. It merely orbits
its star), there's the not-inconsiderable expense of building a Christmas tree
ornament roughly the size of Earth.
While
admirably clever, these schemes to take advantage of stars for signaling strike
me as impractical. They're all cursed by high costs and extremely low
bandwidth. Radio transmitters or pulsed lasers do enormously better on both
counts.
So sure,
it's possible that the aliens are tickling stars to get our attention. But
looking at it from a cost-benefit point of view, I think these ideas are akin
to using smoke signals instead of cell phones. Slow and inefficient, not to
mention being a severe annoyance in restaurants.