They don't wear coonskin caps,
but they're traipsing the wilderness nonetheless, working the margins of the
Final Frontier.
The
accomplishments, plans, and dreams
of today's space industry are showcased every year at a mammoth event known
as the International Astronautics Congress (IAC). For an entire week,
thousands of rocket engineers, space agency types, and satellite builders swarm
like psychotic ants within the IAC's cavernous convention halls, seeking the
most exciting panels and plenaries. Furry fedoras and Bowie knives are
out, while Italian suits and cell phones are in. Fact is - sartorial
distinctions aside -- exploration today is not much different than when the
pioneers slogged the west: difficult, dangerous, and oddly seductive.
Since 1971, SETI has been
part of the IAC, and is usually celebrated with an entire day of presentations on
the latest data, the technology, and the social implications of the search
for intelligent life beyond Earth. This year's Congress was in Vancouver, a
Canadian city that crouches like a spangled jewel caught hard in the grip of
mountains and sea. Appropriately enough, Vancouver bears the name of one
of the 18th century's most accomplished explorers.
The gamut of the
SETI presentations ran from the latest telescope engineering to the language ET
would use to signal. A comprehensive review of this material would likely exceed
both reader patience and permitted word count, so I have cherry-picked a few
items of note below.
The University of California's
SETI efforts continue to be expansive and ambitious. Graduate student
Aaron Parsons described how the Berkeley group's optical SETI search, which uses
the Leuschner 30 inch telescope (situated on a hill a few dozen miles east of
San Francisco), has so far checked out 7,500 star systems and 132
galaxies. Like other optical projects, the scheme looks for nanosecond
flashes (one-billionth of a second or less) that momentarily outshine the light
from a star.
Another effort to find pulses -
of radio, rather than light -- is being initiated by the Berkeley
team. It's called Astropulse, and will rely on heavy compute power to
correct for the unfortunate fact that the thin, hot gas of interstellar space
smears radio pulses in time, turning them from short, sharp peaks into long,
gentle hills, rendering them less obvious to a receiver.
Berkeley's flagship SETI effort
is SERENDIP V, the project that runs on the large Arecibo radio telescope, and
the one supplying data for the SETI@home screen saver. SERENDIP V's receivers
boast nearly a billion channels (no doubt trumping your local cable service),
and eventually will span 300 MHz of the radio dial. For comparison, that's about
50 times more spectral space than a single TV broadcast.
About 1% of the SERENDIP data
are distributed for number crunching by SETI@home. More than 5 million people
have loaded up their computers with this popular screen saver, and every day two
thousand more join the ranks.SETI@home's collective reckoning power is that of a
65 teraflop machine, making it the biggest computer in the world. The
distributed computer platform underpinning the screen saver is about to be
opened up to other worthy projects such as cancer research, protein folding, and
weather modeling.
Dave DeBoer, of the SETI
Institute, gave an update on the Allen Telescope Array, now under construction
in northern California. Within a few months, the antenna count of the ATA will
grow to 32, a number that is sufficient to start some serious observing
projects. Aside from a short laundry list of important astronomical
studies, the ATA-32 will begin its SETI duties with a scan of the central plane
of the Milky Way. This is where the apparent density of stars is highest
of course, making it an obvious place to check out.
Thanks to its specialized
beam-forming hardware and software, the ATA-32 will be able to look at 16 spots
on the sky simultaneously. In other words, unlike SETI experiments of the
past, this telescope will be able to examine many celestial targets at
once. Eventually, the ATA, grown to hundreds of antennas, will be a
screamer: at least two orders of magnitude faster than previous SETI
searches.
Another approach to finding ET
is to hunt for construction projects rather than signals. An idea that has
intrigued the SETI community for decades is the thought that a truly advanced
society might create a giant solar-cell array around its home star, providing an
incredibly large energy source to fuel the good life. An array that
completely surrounds the star is called a Dyson sphere, as it was physicist
Freeman Dyson who first suggested the idea.
But the point is this: no energy
converter, including solar cells, is ever 100% efficient. The array will
warm up and its back side will disgorge infrared (heat) radiation into
space. If you trip across a star that's putting out more infrared than
normal, well, you may have found a civilization that's living large.
Richard Carrigan, of Chicago's
Fermi Lab, has been searching the data collected years ago by the IRAS infrared
satellite, looking for such stars. He hasn't found any good candidates
yet, but this idea (which has been pursued by others) is obviously both
intriguing and bound to benefit from better infrared telescopes to be launched
in the near future.
The SETI sessions of the IAC
were, as they always are, popular and provocative. But that's no
surprise. After all, what's most alluring about the universe is the
possibility that it's not just 30 million trillion trillion cubic light-years of
sterile real estate.