SETI Live Invites You to Help Scientists Find Space Aliens

Hevva

Shipwrecked, comatose, newsie
Aug 2, 2011
1,500
0
0
SETI Live Invites You to Help Scientists Find Space Aliens




All the frequency-scanning drama of Contact from the comfort of your own home.

Astronomers have been engaged in various SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) projects for many years. For the most part, these efforts have focussed on giant terrestrial dishes which use radiowaves to scan the starry sky for any signals launched into the cosmos by potential space-friends for the humans of Earth. Now, you too can become involved in helping scientists search for radio patterns which might indicate galactic alien-chatter.

Dubbed SETILive [http://setilive.org/], the website asks you to sign up and then set about investigating packets of data which contain too many signals for SETI's computers to deal with on their own. The data you'll be rifling through will be gathered by the Allen Telescope Array, a group of 42 radio telescopes tuned to a variety of frequencies in Northern California.

"There are parts of the spectrum where our sophisticated signal processing system is overwhelmed because there are so many signals," commented Jill Tarter, director of the SETI Institute's Center for SETI Research, in an interview with space.com [http://www.space.com/14723-seti-live-search-extraterrestrials-public.html]. "I'm hoping to put together this army of citizen scientists to help figure out which signals to follow up on."

"The people that will do the best at this are going to be people whose pattern skills are such that they can ignore the bright pattern that's so easy to detect and look to see that there's something else there, something fainter, and see if they can in fact discover this needle that's buried under the hay," added Tarter.

"It could well be a long search," Tarter conludes. "It's a big cosmos out there."

So, that's that. The array is currently scanning the Kepler Field (which I hear is pretty big), so if you'd like to find some friends on 22b or thereabouts now is the time to get started. I wonder if the aliens have ever heard of Eleanor Arroway? We could have so much to talk about. (I heard you on the radio, I couldn't help but smile... [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=teElNB0WuDI]).


Source: space.com [http://www.space.com/14723-seti-live-search-extraterrestrials-public.html]

Permalink
 

ph0b0s123

New member
Jul 7, 2010
1,689
0
0
Isn't this just an new version of seti@home? What is the difference between Seti Live and Seti @home?

Edit: Ok, got it. Whereas Seti @home was for people to donate the processing power of their PC's. Seti Live is about people donating their ears to listen to signals and crowdsourcing, if their is anything interesting there.
 

Adam Jensen_v1legacy

I never asked for this
Sep 8, 2011
6,651
0
0
Of course I'm going to help. What if I end up being the first human to discover alien transmission? Some government agency would probably kill me actually. But that's irrelevant at this point.
 

BehattedWanderer

Fell off the Alligator.
Jun 24, 2009
5,237
0
0
Finding patterns that might not exist behind a foreground pattern...

Reminds me distinctly of those people who inexplicably found codes in the printings of the Bible, or in Pi, or, even more baffling, Dan Brown novels.

Seems a wonderful way to detect alien life, though.

I've got fifty of your choice of currency that says the first message we find is something along the lines of "First!", immediately followed by a message saying the first messenger was banned/suspended/warned for such silly actions.

Also, two hundred of your choice to be the star in the first "Alien/Human" video on your choice of Porn site.
 

Juan Regular

New member
Jun 3, 2008
472
0
0
Man, I love that song. Hell of a songwriter, that Pecknold.

And yeah, cool stuff. Pretty sure I´d be awful at it though. Looking at patterns like that for too long hurts my eyes.
 

Antari

Music Slave
Nov 4, 2009
2,246
0
0
Interesting ... I thought this would be another rendition of Seti@home. This approach demands a close look.
 

Farther than stars

New member
Jun 19, 2011
1,228
0
0
I heard about something like this five or so years ago. I guess it's nothing new, but the cause is still scientific, if not a noble one.