2020-04-02_Science_Illustrated

(WallPaper) #1

NEIGHBOURING STAR


RECEIVES SIGNAL


2 The reach of the laser is up to 20,000
light years, but it is most
accurate over distances
such as to Proxima
Centauri 4.2 light years
from Earth. The laser
could hit the Proxima b
exoplanet very accurately.

COSMIC CHAT


BEGINS


3 The first aim is to send a flash
that is captured and
then responded to
as a handshake that
confirms a connection.
Subsequently, we could
send messages back and
forth with laser pulses.

Laser opens chat window


to foreign worlds


Across long distances, powerful lasers are better at maintaining signal strength than
radio waves. Scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have shown
that we can use existing technology to build a laser telescope that can outshine
the Sun like a lighthouse, and be observed by aliens on remote planets.

Dictionary decodes signal
If an alien civilisation has the technology to
pick up radio signals, it is surely also able to
understand mathematics. So METI uses the
binary numbering system of 0s and 1s to
encode messages into small pictures known
as bitmaps of a few pixels. The binary code
is converted into radio waves, by which a
specific basic frequency represents a zero
and a slightly higher frequency represents a
one. The changes between the two frequen-
cies produce the small bitmap pixel by pixel.
When METI sent its first message via the
EISCAT telescope in Tromsø, Norway, the
contents were small music bites coded as
bitmaps of curves of different sound
frequencies, which the aliens might piece
together into music bites. The message was
intended to portray music as a type of
universal language.
The message also included a small inter-
stellar dictionary to help the receivers
decode the contents. The dictionary explains


basic knowledge about life on Earth, such as
the numbers 0-9, calculations, information
about elements, and physical units such as
metres and seconds. The complexity
increases gradually, until the receivers can
understand the meaning of the curves. The
METI scientists are trying to teach, in the
way an adult teaches a child.

New messages with short reach
The major challenge involved in contacting
alien worlds is the huge distances of space.
Although earlier messages travel at the
speed of light, most are still hundreds of
light years from their destinations. One light
year is the distance that light and other elec-
tromagnetic radiation (such as radio waves)
travel in one year. Our answer to the ‘Wow!’
signal is still 15,500 light years from its desti-
nation, the M55 star cluster, and at least
another 31,000 years will pass before any
reply can make it back to Earth – always
assuming somebody picks up the signal.

DOUGLAS VAKOCH
PRESIDENT, METI

It is too late
to conceal
ourselves in the universe,
so we should decide how we
want to represent ourselves.”

LASER LIGHT SENT


FROM EARTH


1 A 2MW infrared laser fires light
onto a small mirror.
The beam is reflected onto
a 30m telescope that
sends a signal which is
10 times more powerful
than the infrared radiation
from the Sun.

Outgoing signal

CentauriProxima

Signal returns

Mirror

1

2

3

CLA
US
LUN
AU/
SHU
TTE
RST
OCK

scienceillustrated.com.au | 55
Free download pdf