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- From: yergeau@phy.ulaval.ca (Francois Yergeau)
- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Subject: Re: Question about SETI
- Message-ID: <1993Jan8.041048.12423@cerberus.ulaval.ca>
- Date: 8 Jan 93 04:10:48 GMT
- References: <C0Ho0o.H4G.1@cs.cmu.edu>
- Sender: news@cerberus.ulaval.ca
- Distribution: sci
- Organization: Universite Laval, Quebec
- Lines: 76
- Nntp-Posting-Host: 132.203.76.4
-
- In article <C0Ho0o.H4G.1@cs.cmu.edu> PHARABOD@FRCPN11.IN2P3.FR writes:
- >From "New Scientist", 12 December 1992:
- >
- >WHEN WILL EARTHLINGS SEE THE LIGHT?
- >
- >Nigel Henbest believes that NASA's search for ET is on the wrong wavelength
-
- [ long discussion of SETI at radio frequencies deleted ]
-
- > And if you want to send an interstellar message, radio, as a medium,
- >has one overriding drawback. Its frequencies are so low that you can
- >transmit information only at quite a slow rate.
-
- Using the 21 cm line of hydrogen, you can transmit about 100 Mbits/s.
- Not bad. Other factors are going to limit you to much, much lower
- speed, especially over interstellar distances.
-
- >So let me rewrite the
- >history books a bit. Suppose the idea of SETI had come along a decade
- >later than it did. The leading edge of technology is now the laser.
- >Scientists regard the laser as the ideal mean of communication.
-
- In a fiber, it's pretty good. But it doesn't go through clouds.
-
- > But surely a laser's light would be overwhelmed by the brilliance of
- >starlight - especially by the light from the sun of the civilisation
- >sending the message? In fact, that is not a problem either. A laser
- >crams all its energy into just one specific wavelength. If you are
- >receiving the signal, you split the light into a spectrum. Now stretch
- >out the spectrum. The whitish light from the star is diluted more and
- >more as it is stretched, while the single narrow spectral line from the
- >laser keeps its intensity. With enough stretching of the spectrum, the
- >laser will eventually stand out clearly.
-
- Wrong. No laser has an infinitely narrow linewidth. Even if you could
- build one, you would induce a finite linewidth by modulating it to
- carry your message. Thus spectral dispersion stops being beneficial at
- some point, and if you haven't recovered your signal by then, you're
- dead.
-
- > Laser communication has two great advantages. Due to its high
- >frequency, you can send a lot of information very quickly.
-
- Only if you have enough power available. To transmit a bit of
- information, you need _at least_ a few photons to overcome the shot
- noise. But photons in the near IR have about 100,000 more energy than
- photons at 21 cm, so much more power needs to reach the receiver for
- _the same_ bit rate.
-
- > Laser beams
- >are also narrow: whereas a radio signal spreads out as it travels
- >through space, diluting its power all the way, you can use comparatively
- >little power with a laser because it does not spread out.
-
- Completely bogus. All electromagnetic beams diffract. In fact, you
- can make a radio beam just as well collimated as a given laser beam;
- you just need a much larger antenna.
-
- > For these reasons, NASA spacecraft engineers are planning to use
- >lasers to communicate on its future missions to the outer parts of the
- >Solar System. Lasers are small, too, so spacecraft will not need large
- >radio antennas to communicate with Earth.
-
- It will need a sizeable, delicate and precisely figured focusing mirror
- instead. And downlinks will be cut off when it's cloudy. But lasers
- have advantages for satellite-to-satellite communications.
-
- >This will avoid some
- >embarrassing debacles: the Galileo spacecraft, for example, on its way
- >to Jupiter, is gagged because its umbrella-like antenna has not
-
- --
- Francois Yergeau (yergeau@phy.ulaval.ca) | De gustibus et coloribus
- Centre d'Optique, Photonique et Laser | non disputandum
- Departement de Physique | -proverbe scolastique
- Universite Laval, Ste-Foy, QC, Canada |
-