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- THE ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF
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- THE ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY OF THE ATLANTIC
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-
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- Volume 5, Number 5 - December 1993
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-
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- The Electronic Journal of the Astronomical Society of the Atlantic
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- (EJASA) is published monthly by the Astronomical Society of the
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- Atlantic, Incorporated. The ASA is a non-profit organization
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- dedicated to the advancement of amateur and professional astronomy
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- and space exploration, as well as the social and educational needs
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- of its members.
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-
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- DETECTABILITY OF EXTRATERRESTRIAL TECHNOLOGICAL ACTIVITIES
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-
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- Guillermo A. Lemarchand [1]
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-
-
- Center for Radiophysics and Space Research
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- Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 14853
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-
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- 1 - Visiting Fellow under ICSC World Laboratory scholarship
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-
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- Present address: University of Buenos Aires,
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- C.C.8-Suc.25,
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- 1425 - Buenos Aires,
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- Argentina
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-
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- This paper was originally presented at the Second United
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- Nations/European Space Agency Workshop on Basic Space Science
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-
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- Co-organized by The Planetary Society in cooperation with
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- the Governments of Costa Rica and Colombia, 2-13 November 1992,
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- San Jose, Costa Rica - Bogota, Colombia
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-
-
- Introduction
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-
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- If we want to find evidence for the existence of extraterrestrial
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- civilizations (ETC), we must work out an observational strategy for
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- detecting this evidence in order to establish the various physical
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- quantities in which it involves. This information must be carefully
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- analyzed so that it is neither over-interpreted nor overlooked and
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- can be checked by independent researchers.
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-
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- Page 1
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-
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-
-
-
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- The physical laws that govern the Universe are the same everywhere,
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- so we can use our knowledge of these laws to search for evidence
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- that would finally lead us to an ETC. In general, the
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- experimentalist studies a system by imposing constraints and
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- observing the system's response to a controlled stimulus.
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-
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- The variety of these constraints and stimuli may be extended at
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- will, and experiments can become arbitrarily complex. In the
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- problem of the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI), as
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- well as in conventional astronomy, the mean distances are so huge
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- that the "researcher" can only observe what is received. He or she
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- is entirely dependent on the carriers of information that transmit
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- to him or her all he or she may learn about the Universe.
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-
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- Information carriers, however, are not infinite in variety. All
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- information we currently have about the Universe beyond our solar
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- system has been transmitted to us by means of electromagnetic
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- radiation (radio, infrared, optical, ultraviolet, X-rays, and gamma
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- rays), cosmic ray particles (electrons and atomic nuclei), and more
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- recently by neutrinos.
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-
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- There is another possible physical carrier, gravitational waves, but
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- they are extremely difficult to detect.
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-
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- For the long future of humanity, there have also been speculations
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- about interstellar automatic probes that could be sent for the
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- detection of extrasolar life forms around the nearby stars.
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-
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- Another set of possibilities could be the detection of
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- extraterrestrial artifacts in our solar system, left here by alien
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- intelligences that want to reveal their visits to us.
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-
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- Table 1 summarizes the possible "information carriers" that may let
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- us find the evidence of an extraterrestrial civilization, according
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- to our knowledge of the laws of physics. The classification of
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- techniques in Table 1 is not intended to be complete in all
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- respects.
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-
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- Thus, only a few fundamental particles have been listed. No attempt
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- has been made to include any antiparticles. This classification,
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- like any such scheme, is also quite arbitrary. Groupings could be
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- made into different "astronomies".
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- Page 2
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- TABLE 1: Information Carriers
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- |-
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- | Radio Waves
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- | Infrared Rays
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- |- | Optical Rays
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- | Photon Astronomy| Ultraviolet Rays
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- | | X-Rays
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- Boson | | Gamma Rays
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- Astronomy | |-
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- | Graviton Astronomy: Gravity Waves
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- |- |-
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- | Neutrinos
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- |- |- Fermions| Electrons |-
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- | Atomic | | Protons | Cosmic
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- | Microscopic| |- | Rays
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- | Particles | Heavy Particles |-
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- Particle | |-
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- Astronomy | |-
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- | Macroscopic Particles| Meteors, meteorites,
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- | or objects | meteoritic dust
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- |- |-
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- |-
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- | Space Probes
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- Direct | Manned Exploration
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- Techniques | ET Astroengineering Activities in the Solar
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- System
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- |-
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- The methods of collecting this information as it arrives at the
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- planet Earth make it immediately obvious that it is impossible to
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- gather all of it and measure all its components. Each observation
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- technique acts as an information filter. Only a fraction (usually
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- small) of the complete information can be gathered. The diversity
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- of these filters is considerable. They strongly depend on the
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- available technology at the time.
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- In this paper a review of the advantages and disadvantages of each
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- "physical carrier" is examined, including the case that the possible
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- ETCs are using them for interstellar communication purposes, as well
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- as the possibility of detection activities of extraterrestrial
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- technologies.
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- Classification of Extraterrestrial Civilizations
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- The analysis of the use of each information carrier are deeply
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- connected with the assumption of the level of technology of the
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- other civilization.
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-
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- Kardashev (1964) established a general criteria regarding the types
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- of activities of extraterrestrial civilizations which can be
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- detected at the present level of development. The most general
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- parameters of these activities are apparently ultra-powerful energy
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- sources, harnessing of enormous solid masses, and the transmission
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- of large quantities of information of different kinds through space.
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- According to Kardashev, the first two parameters are a prerequisite
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- for any activity of a supercivilization. In this way, he suggested
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- Page 3
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- the following classification of energetically extravagant
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- civilizations:
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- TYPE I: A level "near" contemporary terrestrial civilization
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- with an energy capability equivalent to the solar
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- insolation on Earth, between 10exp16 and 10exp17 Watts.
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-
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- TYPE II: A civilization capable of utilizing and channeling the
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- entire radiation output of its star. The energy
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- utilization would then be comparable to the luminosity
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- of our Sun, about 4x1026 Watts.
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-
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- TYPE III: A civilization with access to the power comparable
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- to the luminosity of the entire Milky Way galaxy,
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- about 4x10exp37 Watts.
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-
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- Kardashev also examined the possibilities in cosmic communication
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- which attend the investment of most of the available power into
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- communication. A Type II civilization could transmit the contents
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- of one hundred thousand average-sized books across the galaxy, a
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- distance of one hundred thousand light years, in a total
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- transmitting time of one hundred seconds. The transmission of the
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- same information intended for a target ten million light years
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- distant, a typical intergalactic distance, would take a transmission
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- time of a few weeks.
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- A Type III civilization could transmit the same information over a
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- distance of ten billion light years, approximately the radius of the
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- observable Universe, with a transmission time of just three seconds.
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-
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- Kardashev and Zhuravlev (1992) considered that the highest level of
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- development corresponds to the highest level of utilization of solid
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- space structures and the highest level of energy consumption.
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- For this assumption, they considered the temperature of solid space
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- structures in the range 3 Kelvin s T s 300 K, the consumption of
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- energy in the range 1 Luminosity (Sun) s L s 10exp12 L(Sun),
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- structures with sizes up to 100 kiloparsecs (kpc), and distances up
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- to Dw 1000 mega-parsecs (mpc). One parsec equals 3.26 light years.
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-
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- Searching for these structures is the domain of millimeter wave
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- astronomy. For the 300 Kelvin technology, the maximum emission
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- occurs in the infrared region (15-20 micrometers) and searching is
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- accomplished with infrared observations from Earth and space. The
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- existing radio surveys of the sky (lambda = 6 centimeters (cm) on
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- the ground and lambda = 3 millimeters (mm) for the Cosmic Background
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- Explorer (COBE) satellite) place an essential limit on the abundance
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- of ETC 3 Kelvin technology. The analyzes of the Infrared
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- Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) catalog of infrared sources sets
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- limitations on the abundance of 300 Kelvin technology.
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-
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- Information Carriers and the Manifestations of Advanced
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- Technological Civilizations
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- Boson and Photon Astronomy
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- Electromagnetic radiation carries virtually all the information on
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- which modern astrophysics is built. The production of
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- electromagnetic radiation is directly related to the physical
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- Page 4
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-
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- conditions prevailing in the emitter. The propagation of the
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- information carried by electromagnetic waves (photons) is affected
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- by the conditions along its path. The trajectories it follows
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- depend on the local curvature of the Universe, and thus on the local
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- distribution of matter (gravitational lenses), extinction affecting
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- different wavelengths unequally, neutral hydrogen absorbing all
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- radiation below the Lyman limit (91.3 mm), and absorption and
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- scattering by interstellar dust, which is more severe at short
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- wavelengths.
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-
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- Interstellar plasma absorbs radio wavelengths of kilometers and
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- above, while the scintillations caused by them become a very
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- important effect for the case of ETC radio messages (Cordes and
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- Lazio, 1991).
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-
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- The inverse Compton effect lifts low-energy photons to high energies
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- in collisions with relativistic electrons, while gamma and X-ray
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- photons lose energy by the direct Compton effect. The radiation
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- reaching the observer thus bears the imprint of both the source and
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- the accidents of its passage though space.
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-
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- The Universe observable with electromagnetic radiation is five-
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- dimensional. Within this phase, four dimensions - frequency
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- coverage plus spatial, spectral, and temporal resolutions - should
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- properly be measured logarithmically with each unit corresponding to
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- one decade (Tarter, 1984). The fifth dimension is polarization,
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- which has four possible states: Circular, linear, elliptical, and
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- unpolarized.
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-
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- This increases the volume of logarithmic phase space fourfold.
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-
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- It is useful to attempt to estimate the volume of the search space
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- which may need to be explored to detect an ETC signal. For the case
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- of electromagnetic waves, we have a "Cosmic Haystack" with an eight-
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- dimensional phase space. Three spatial dimensions (coordinates of
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- the source), one dimension for the frequency of emission, two
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- dimensions for the polarization, one temporal dimension to
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- synchronize transmissions with receptions, and one dimension for the
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- sensitivity of the receiver or the transmission power.
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-
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- If we consider only the microwave region of the spectrum (300
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- megahertz (MHz) to 300 gigahertz (GHz)), it is easy to show that
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- this Cosmic Haystack has roughly 10exp29 cells, each of 0.1 Hz
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- bandwidth, per the number of directions in the sky in which an
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- Arecibo (305-meter) radio telescope would need to be pointed to
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- conduct an all-sky survey, per a sensitivity between 10exp(-20) and
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- 10exp(-30) [W m-2], per two polarizations. The temporal dimension
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- (synchronization between transmission and reception) was not
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- considered in the calculation. The number of cells increase
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- dramatically if we expand our search to other regions of the
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- electromagnetic spectrum. Until now, only a small fraction of the
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- whole Haystack has been explored (w 10exp(-15) - 10exp(-16)).
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- Page 5
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- TABLE 2: Characteristics of the Electromagnetic Spectrum
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- (All the numbers that follows each 10 are exponents.)
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- ==================================================================
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- Spectrum Frequency Wavelength Minimum Energy
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- Region Region [Hz] Region [m] per photon [eV]
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-
-
- ==================================================================
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- Radio 3x106-3x1010 100-0.01 10-8 - 10-6
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- Millimeter 3x1010-3x1012 0.01-10-4 10-6 - 10-4
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- Infrared 3x1012-3x1014 10-4-10-6 10-4 - 10-2
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- Optical 3x1014-1015 10-6-3x10-7 10-2 - 5
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- Ultraviolet 1015-3x1016 3x10-7-10-8 5 - 102
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- X-rays 3x1016-3x1019 10-8-10-11 102 - 105
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- Gamma-rays r3x1019 s10-11 r105
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- ==================================================================
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-
-
- Radio Waves
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-
-
- In the last thirty years, most of the SETI projects have been
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- developed in the radio region of the electromagnetic spectrum. A
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- complete description of the techniques that all the present and
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- near-future SETI programs are using for detecting extraterrestrial
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- intelligence radio beacons can be found elsewhere (e.g., Horowitz
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- and Sagan, 1993). The general hypothesis for this kind of search is
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- that there are several civilizations in the galaxy that are
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- transmitting omnidirectional radio signals (civilization Type II),
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- or that these civilizations are beaming these kind of messages to
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- Earth. In this section we will discuss only the detectability of
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- extraterrestrial technological manifestations in the radio spectrum.
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-
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- Domestic Radio Signals
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-
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- Sullivan et al (1978) and Sullivan (1981) considered the possibility
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- of eavesdropping on radio emissions inadvertently "leaking" from
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- other technical civilizations. To better understand the information
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- which might be derived from radio leakage, the case of our planet
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- Earth was analyzed. As an example, they showed that the United
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- States Naval Space Surveillance System (Breetz, 1968) has an
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- effective radiated power of 1.4x10exp (10) watts into a bandwidth of
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- only 0.1 Hz. Its beam is such that any eavesdropper in the
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- declination range of zero to 33 degrees (28 percent of the sky) will
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- be illuminated daily for a period of roughly seven seconds. This
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- radar has a detectability range of leaking terrestrial signals to
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- sixty light years for an Arecibo-type (305-meter) antenna at the
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- receiving end, or six hundred light years for a Cyclops array (one
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- thousand dishes of 100-meter size each).
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-
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- Recently Billingham and Tarter (1992) estimated the maximum range at
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- which radar signals from Earth could be detected by a search similar
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- to the NASA High Resolution Microwave Survey (HRMS) assumed to be
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- operating somewhere in the Milky Way galaxy. They examined the
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- transmission of the planetary radar of Arecibo and the ballistic
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- missile early warning systems (BMEWS). For the calculation of
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- maximum range R, the standard range equation is:
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-
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- R=(EIRP/(4PI PHImin))exp(1/2)
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- Page 6
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- Where PHImin is the sensitivity of the search system in [W m-2].
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- For the NASA HRMS Target Search PHImin = 10exp (-27) and for the
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- NASA HRMS Sky Survey PHImin w 10exp(-23) (f)exp(1/2), where f is the
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- frequency in GHz. Table 3 shows the distances where the Arecibo and
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- BMEWS transmissions could be detected by a similar NASA HRMS
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- spectrometer.
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-
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- TABLE 3: HRMS Sensitivity for Earth's Most Powerful Transmissions:
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-
-
- ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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-
-
- ARECIBO PLANETARY RADAR
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-
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- (1) TARGETED SEARCH MAXIMUM RANGE (light years)
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-
-
- Unswitched
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- With CW detector 4217
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- With pulse detector 2371
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- Switched
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- With CW detector 94
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- With pulse detector 290
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- (2) SKY SURVEY
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-
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- Unswitched
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- CW detector 77
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- Switched
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- CW detector 9
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-
-
-
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- BMEWS
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-
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- (1) TARGETED SEARCH
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- Pulse transmit CW detector 6
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- Pulse transmit pulse detector 19
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-
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- (2) SKY SURVEY
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- Pulse transmit CW detector 0.7
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-
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- ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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-
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- All these calculations assumed that the transmitting civilization is
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- at the same level of technological evolution as ours on Earth.
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-
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- Von Hoerner (1961) classified the possible nature of the ETC signals
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- into three general possibilities: Local communication on the other
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- planet, interstellar communication with certain distinct partners,
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- and a desire to attract the attention of unknown future partners.
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- Thus he named them as local broadcast, long-distance calls, and
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- contacting signals (beacons). In most of the past fifty SETI radio
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- projects, the strategy was with the hypothesis that there are
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- several civilizations transmitting omnidirectional beacon signals.
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-
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- Unfortunately, no one has been able to show any positive evidence
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- of this kind of beacon signal.
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-
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- Another possibility is the radio detection of interstellar
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- communications between an ETC planet and possible space vehicles.
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- Vallee and Simard-Normandin (1985) carried out a search for these
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- Page 7
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-
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-
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- kind of signals near the galactic center. Because one of the
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- characteristics of artificial transmitters (television, radar, etc.)
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- is the highly polarized signal (Sullivan et al, 1978), these
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- researchers made seven observing runs of roughly three days each in
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- a program to scan for strongly polarized radio signals at the
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- wavelength of lambda=2.82 cm.
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-
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- Radar Warning Signals
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-
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- Assuming that there is a certain number N of civilizations in the
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- galaxy at or beyond our own level of technical facility, and
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- considering that each civilization is on or near a planet of a Main
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- Sequence star where the planetoid and comet impact hazards are
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- considered as serious as here, Lemarchand and Sagan (1993)
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- considered the possibility for detecting some of these "intelligent
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- activities" developed to warn of these potentially dangerous
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- impacts.
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-
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- Because line-of-sight radar astrometric measurements have much finer
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- intrinsic fractional precision than their optical plane-of-sight
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- counterparts, they are potentially valuable for refining the
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- knowledge of planetoid and comet orbits. Radar is an essential
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- astrometric tool, yielding both a direct range to a nearby object
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- and the radial velocity (with respect to the observer) from the
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- Doppler shifted echo (Yeomans et al, 1987, Ostro et al, 1991, and
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- Yeomans et al, 1992).
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-
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- Since in our solar system, most of Earth's nearby planetoids are
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- discovered as a result of their rapid motion across the sky, radar
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- observations are therefore often immediately possible and
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- appropriate.
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-
-
- A single radar detection yields astronomy with a fractional
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- precision that is several hundred times better than that of optical
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- astrometry.
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-
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- The inclusion of radar with the optical data in the orbit solution
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- can quickly and dramatically reduce future ephemeris uncertainty.
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- It provides both impact parameter and impact ellipse estimates.
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-
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- This kind of radar research gives a clearer picture of the object to
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- be intercepted and the orientation of asymmetric bodies prior to
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- interception. This is particularly important for eccentric or
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- multiple objects.
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- Radar is also the unique tool capable for making a survey of such
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- small objects at all angles with respect to the central star. It
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- can also measure reflectivity and polarization to obtain physical
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- characteristics and composition.
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- For this case, we can assume that each of the extraterrestrial
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- civilizations in the galaxy maintains as good a radar planetoid
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- and/or comet detection and analysis facility as is needed, either on
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- the surface of their planet, in orbit, or on one of their possible
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- moons.
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- The threshold for the Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) of
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- the radar signal could be roughly estimated by the size of the
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- object (D) that they want to detect (according to the impact hazard)
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- Page 8
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- and the distance to the inhabited planet (R), in order to have
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- enough time to avoid the collision.
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- One of the most important issues for the success of SETI
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- observations on Earth is the ability of an observer to detect an ETC
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- signal. This factor is proportional to the received spectral flux
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- density of the radiation. That is, the power per unit area per unit
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- frequency interval. The flux density will be proportional to the
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- EIRP divided by the spectral bandwidth of the transmitting radar
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- signals B.
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-
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- The EIRP is defined as the product of the transmitted power and
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- directive antenna gain in the direction of the receiver as EIRP =
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- PT.G, where PT is the transmitting power and G the antenna gain.
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- This quantity has units of [W/Hz].
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-
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- According to the kind of object that the ETC wants to detect (nearby
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- planetoids, comets, spacecraft, etc.), the distance from the radar
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- system and the selected wavelength, a galactic civilization that
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- wants to finish a full-sky survey in only one year, will arise from
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- a modest "Type 0" (w10exp13 W/Hz, Rw0.4 A.U., Dw5000 m, and lambdaw1
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- m) to the transition from "Type I" to "Type II" (w2x10exp24 W/Hz,
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- Rw0.4 A.U., Dw10 m, lambdaw1 mm).
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-
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- Lemarchand and Sagan (1993) also presented a detailed description of
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- the expected signal characteristics, as well as the most favorable
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- positions in the sky to find one of these signals. They also have
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- compared the capability of detection of these transmissions by each
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- present and near future SETI projects.
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-
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- Infrared Waves
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-
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- There have been some proposals to search in the infrared region for
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- beacon signals beamed at us (Lawton, 1971, and Townes, 1983).
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-
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- Basically, the higher gain available from antennas at shorter
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- wavelengths (up to 10exp14 Hz) compensates for the higher quantum
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- noise in the receiver and wider noise bandwidth at higher
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- frequencies.
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-
-
- One concludes that for the same transmitter powers and directed
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- transmission which takes advantage of the high gain, the detectable
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- signal-to-noise ratio is comparable at 10 micro-m and 21 cm. Since
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- non-thermal carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions have been detected in the
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- atmospheres of both Venus and Mars (Demming and Mumma, 1983), Rather
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- (1991) suggested the possibility that an advanced society could
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- construct transmitters of enormous power by orbiting large mirrors
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- to create a high-gain maser from the natural amplification provided
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- by the inverted atmospheric lines.
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-
-
- An observation program around three hundred nearby solar-type stars
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- has just begun (Tarter, 1992) by Albert Betz (University of
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- Colorado) and Charles Townes (University of California at Berkeley).
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-
-
- These observations are currently being made on one of the two 1.7-
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- meter elements of an IR interferometer at Mount Wilson observatory.
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-
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- On average, 21 hours of observing time per month is available for
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- searching for evidence of technological signals.
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- Page 9
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- Dyson (1959, 1966) proposed the search for huge artificial
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- biospheres created around a star by an intelligent species as part
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- of its technological growth and expansion within a planetary system.
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-
-
- This giant structure would most likely be formed by a swarm of
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- artificial habitats and mini-planets capable of intercepting
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- essentially all the radiant energy from the parent star.
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-
-
- According to Dyson (1966), the mass of a planet like Jupiter could
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- be used to construct an immense shell which could surround the
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- central star, having a radius of one Astronomical Unit (A.U.). The
-
- volume of such a sphere would be 4cr2S, where r is the radius of the
-
- sphere (1 A.U.) and S the thickness. He imagined a shell or layer
-
- of rigidly built objects Dw10exp6 kilometers in diameter arranged to
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- move in orbits around the star. The minimum number of objects
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- required to form a complete spherical shell [2] is about N=4
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- PIrexp2/Dexp2w2x10exp5 objects.
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-
-
- This kind of object, known as a "Dyson Sphere", would be a very
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- powerful source of infrared radiation. Dyson predicted the peak of
-
- the radiation at ten micrometers.
-
-
-
- The Dyson Sphere is certainly a grand, far-reaching concept. There
-
- have been some investigations to find them in the IRAS database (V.
-
- I. Slysh, 1984; Jugaku and Nishimura, 1991; and Kardashev and
-
- Zhuravlev, 1992).
-
-
-
- ==================================================================
-
- 2 - The concept of this extraterrestrial construct was first
-
- described in the science fiction novel STAR MAKER by Olaf
-
- Stapledon in 1937.
-
- ==================================================================
-
-
-
- Optical Waves
-
-
-
- In the radio domain, there have been several proposals to use the
-
- visible region of the spectrum for interstellar communications.
-
- Since the first proposal by Schwartz and Townes (1961), intensive
-
- research has been performed on the possible use of lasers for
-
- interstellar communication.
-
-
-
- Ross (1979) examined the great advantages of using short pulses in
-
- the nanosecond regime at high energy per pulse at very low duty
-
- cycle.
-
-
-
- This proposal was experimentally explored by Shvartsman (1987) and
-
- Beskin (1993), using a Multichannel Analyzer of Nanosecond Intensity
-
- Alterations (MANIA), from the six-meter telescope in Russia. This
-
- equipment allows photon arrival times to be determined with an
-
- accuracy of 5x10exp(-8) seconds, the dead time being 3x10exp(-7)
-
- seconds and the maximum intensity of the incoming photon flux is
-
- 2x10exp4 counts/seconds.
-
-
-
- In 1993, MANIA was used from the 2.15-meter telescope of the
-
- Complejo Astronomico El Leoncito in Argentina, to examine fifty
-
- nearby solar-type stars for the presence of laser pulses (Lemarchand
-
- et al, 1993).
-
-
-
- Other interesting proposals and analysis of the advantages of lasers
-
-
-
- Page 10
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- for interstellar communications have been performed by Betz (1986),
-
- Kingsley (1992), Ross (1980), and Rather (1991).
-
-
-
- The first international SETI in the Optical Spectrum (OSETI)
-
- Conference was organized by Stuart Kingsley, under the sponsorship
-
- of The International Society for Optical Engineering, at Los
-
- Angeles, California, in January of 1993.
-
-
-
- There have also been independent suggestions by Drake and Shklovskii
-
- (Sagan and Shklovskii, 1966) that the presence of a technical
-
- civilization could be announced by the dumping of a short-lived
-
- isotope, one which would not ordinarily be expected in the local
-
- stellar spectrum, into the atmosphere of a star. Drake suggested an
-
- atom with a strong, resonant absorption line, which may scatter
-
- about 10exp8 photons sec -1 in the stellar radiation field. A
-
- photon at optical frequencies has an energy of about 10exp(-12) erg
-
- or 0.6 eV, so each atom will scatter about 10exp(-4) erg sec-1 in
-
- the resonance line. If we consider that the typical spectral line
-
- width might be about 1 ^O, and if we assume that a ten percent
-
- absorption will be detectable, then this "artificial smog" will
-
- scatter about (1A/5000A)x10exp(-1) = 2x10exp(-5) of the total
-
- stellar flux.
-
-
-
- Sagan and Shklovskii (1966) considered that if the central star has
-
- a typical solar flux of 4x10exp33 erg sec-1, it must scatter about
-
- 8x10exp28 erg sec-1 for the line to be detected. Thus, the ETC
-
- would need (8x10exp28)/10exp(-4) = 8x10exp32 atoms. The weight of
-
- the hydrogen atom (mH) is 1.66x10exp(-24) g, so the weight of an
-
- atom of atomic weight n is nxmH grams.
-
-
-
- Drake proposed the used of Technetium (Tc) for this purpose. This
-
- element is not found on Earth and its presence is observed very
-
- weakly in the Sun, in part because it is short-lived. Tc's most
-
- stable form decays radioactively within an average of twenty
-
- thousand years. Thus, for the case of Tc, we need to distribute
-
- some 1.3x10exp11 grams, or 1.3x10exp5 tons, of this element into the
-
- stellar spectrum. However, technetium lines have not been found in
-
- stars of solar spectral type, but rather only in peculiar ones known
-
- as S stars. We must know more than we do about both normal and
-
- peculiar stellar spectra before we can reasonably conclude that the
-
- presence of an unusual atom in an stellar spectrum is a sign of
-
- extraterrestrial intelligence.
-
-
-
- Whitmire and Wright (1980) considered the possible observational
-
- consequences of galactic civilizations which utilize their local
-
- star as a repository for radioactive fissile waste material. If a
-
- relatively small fraction of the nuclear sources present in the
-
- crust of a terrestrial-type planet were processed via breeder
-
- reactors, the resulting stellar spectrum would be selectively
-
- modified over geological time periods, provided that the star has a
-
- sufficiently shallow outer convective zone. They have estimated
-
- that the abundance anomalies resulting from the slow neutron fission
-
- of plutonium-239 and uranium-233 could be duplicated (compared with
-
- the natural nucleosynthesis processes), if this process takes place.
-
-
-
- Since there are no known natural nucleosynthesis mechanisms that can
-
- qualitatively duplicate the asymptotic fission abundances, the
-
- predicted observational characteristics (if observed) could not
-
- easily be interpreted as a natural phenomenon. They have suggested
-
-
-
- Page 11
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- making a survey of A5-F2 stars for (1) an anomalous overabundance of
-
- the elements of praseodymium and neodymium, (2) the presence, at any
-
- level, of technetium or plutonium, and (3) an anomalously high ratio
-
- of barium to zirconium. Of course, if a candidate star is
-
- identified, a more detailed spectral analysis could be performed and
-
- compared with the predicted ratios.
-
-
-
- Following the same kind of ideas, Philip Morrison discussed
-
- (Sullivan, 1964) converting one's sun into a signaling light by
-
- placing a cloud of particles in orbit around it. The cloud would
-
- cut enough light to make the sun appear to be flashing when seen
-
- from a distance, so long as the viewer was close to the plane of the
-
- cloud orbit. Particles about one micron in size, he thought, would
-
- be comparatively resistant to disruption. The mass of the cloud
-
- would be comparable to that of a comet covering an area of the sky
-
- five degrees wide, as seen from the sun. Every few months, the
-
- cloud would be shifted to constitute a slow form of signaling, the
-
- changes perhaps designed to represent algebraic equations.
-
-
-
- Reeves (1985) speculated on the origin of mysterious stars called
-
- blue stragglers. This class of star was first identified by Sandage
-
- (1952). Since that time, no clear consensus upon their origins has
-
- emerged. This is not, however, due to a paucity of theoretical
-
- models being devised. Indeed, a wealth of explanations have been
-
- presented to explain the origins of this star class. The essential
-
- characteristic of the blue stragglers is that they lie on, or near,
-
- the Main Sequence, but at surface temperatures and luminosities
-
- higher than those stars which define the cluster turnoff.
-
-
-
- Reeves (1985) suggested the intervention of the inhabitants that
-
- depend on these stars for light and heat. According to Reeves,
-
- these inhabitants could have found a way of keeping the stellar
-
- cores well-mixed with hydrogen, thus delaying the Main Sequence
-
- turn-off and the ultimately destructive, red giant phase.
-
-
-
- Beech (1990) made a more detailed analysis of Reeves' hypothesis and
-
- suggested an interesting list of mechanisms for mixing envelope
-
- material into the core of the star. Some of them are as follows:
-
-
-
- o Creating a "hot spot" between the stellar core and surface
-
- through the detonation of a series of hydrogen bombs. This
-
- process may alternately be achieved by aiming "a powerful,
-
- extremely concentrated laser beam" at the stellar surface.
-
-
-
- o Enhanced stellar rotation and/or enhanced magnetic fields.
-
- Abt (1985) suggested from his studies of blue stragglers that
-
- meridional mixing in rapidly rotating stars may enhance their
-
- Main Sequence lifetime.
-
-
-
- If some of these processes can be achieved, the Main Sequence
-
- lifetime may be greatly extended by factors of ten or more. It is
-
- far too early to establish, however, whether all the blue stragglers
-
- are the result of astroengineering activities.
-
-
-
- Editor's Note: References to this paper will be published in Part 2
-
- in the January 1994 issue of the EJASA.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 12
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Related EJASA Articles -
-
-
-
- "Does Extraterrestrial Life Exist?", by Angie Feazel
-
- - November 1989
-
-
-
- "Suggestions for an Intragalactic Information Exchange System",
-
- by Lars W. Holm - November 1989
-
-
-
- "Radio Astronomy: A Historical Perspective",
-
- by David J. Babulski - February 1990
-
-
-
- "Getting Started in Amateur Radio Astronomy",
-
- by Jeffrey M. Lichtman - February 1990
-
-
-
- "A Comparison of Optical and Radio Astronomy",
-
- by David J. Babulski - June 1990
-
-
-
- "The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) in the
-
- Optical Spectrum, Parts A-F",
-
- by Dr. Stuart A. Kingsley - January 1992
-
-
-
- "History of the Ohio SETI Program", by Robert S. Dixon
-
- - June 1992
-
-
-
- "New Ears on the Sky: The NASA SETI Microwave Observing Project",
-
- by Bob Arnold, the ARC, and JPL SETI Project - July 1992
-
-
-
- "First International Conference on Optical SETI",
-
- by Dr. Stuart A. Kingsley - October 1992
-
-
-
- "Conference Preview: The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
-
- (SETI) in the Optical Spectrum",
-
- by Dr. Stuart A. Kingsley - January 1993
-
-
-
- The Author -
-
- ==================================================================
-
- Guillermo A. Lemarchand
-
- Universidad de Buenos Aires
-
- POSTAL ADDRESS: C.C.8 - Suc.25,
-
- 1425-Buenos Aires,
-
- ARGENTINA
-
- E-MAIL: lemar@seti.edu.ar
-
-
-
- PHONE: 54-1-774-0667 FAX: 54-1-786-8114
-
- ==================================================================
-
- THE ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF THE ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY OF THE ATLANTIC
-
-
-
- December 1993 - Vol. 5, No. 5
-
- Copyright (c) 1993 - ASA
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
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-
- as this paper covers, please upload to KeelyNet or send to the
-
- Vangard Sciences address as listed on the first page.
-
- Thank you for your consideration, interest and support.
-
- Jerry W. Decker.........Ron Barker...........Chuck Henderson
-
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-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
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-
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-
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