Interstellar Hunt for Extraterrestrial Technology Commences: A Radio Antenna Array in Australia Takes the Lead
Tue Aug 27 2024
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In a groundbreaking initiative, astronomers have embarked on the inaugural search for signals from extraterrestrial technology in galaxies beyond our own, utilizing a vast radio antenna array nestled in rural Australia.
The SETI Institute, the Berkeley SETI Research Center, and the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research have joined forces for this pioneering endeavor.
The Murchison Widefield Array, a 4,096-antenna radio observatory situated in Western Australia, was employed to carry out the observations. Despite its modest appearance, resembling metal spiders strategically positioned in grids, the array proves to be an ideal instrument for deep-space radio observations.
The team's study, accessible on the preprint server arXiv, capitalized on the array's expansive field of view to monitor 2,800 galaxies in a single observation. This approach sets it apart from previous searches, which primarily centered on radio sources within the Milky Way. While stars within the Milky Way can be situated between 4 and 100,000 light-years away, nearby galaxies can extend up to 30 million light-years away, highlighting the significant differences in scale.
The researchers acknowledged the challenge of observing the sky at a rapid pace in their paper. They emphasized that dedicated experiments conducted on shared-use instruments limit the extent of the sky covered and the frequency of revisiting the same sources.
According to a SETI Institute release, an extraterrestrial civilization hailing from a different galaxy would need advanced technology to transmit a detectable message on Earth. This classification is based on the Kardashev scale, which categorizes the advancement of intelligent life into three base classes, determined by the energy at their disposal.
The Western Australian array has a history of involvement in searches for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI). In 2020, a comprehensive search for alien signatures yielded negative results. However, the recent search did not uncover any technosignatures, indicators of extraterrestrials employing their technology.
The researchers highlighted that current and upcoming telescopes, such as the Very Large Array and the MeerKAT telescope, will enhance the search for alien signals at radio at radio wavelengths.
https://localnews.ai/article/interstellar-hunt-for-extraterrestrial-technology-commences-a-radio-antenna-array-in-australia-takes-the-lead-685e5066
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