A Big New Step in the Search for ET
The telescope, at Harvard University's Oak Ridge Observatory site in the rural town of Harvard, Massachusetts, is the world's first large telescope designed solely for optical SETI: searching for light signals that might be sent across interstellar space by civilizations as far as several thousand light-years away.
Laser signals, scientists are convinced, could be as efficient and economical as radio for sending messages between the stars. Several optical SETI experiments are already under way, but the Harvard All-Sky Optical SETI Survey inaugurated today is much more ambitious. It will scan not just a few thousand chosen stars, but more than half of the entire celestial sphere, including tens of millions of stars. In terms of sky coverage, it marks a 100,000-times improvement over Horowitz's previous optical SETI project: a search for laser signals in the light of stars that were having their radial velocities measured with a 61-inch Harvard telescope just a few yards away.
Any alien signalers would have two reasons to choose such brief laser pulses. The pulses would be plainly artificial; nothing in nature can do anything like this. And at such a high time resolution, they would stand out like a sore thumb from the background light of the civilization's host star. In fact, using today's largest pulsed laser on today's largest telescope, we ourselves could send pulses that, for a nanosecond, would outshine our Sun by a factor of 10,000 for viewers thousands of light-years away.
The detectors form grids in the telescope's focal plane covering a patch of sky 1.6° tall by by 0.2° wide. This patch will scan a strip of declination continuously around the sky as the Earth's rotation sweeps the telescope in right ascension. The telescope always points to the sky's north-south meridian; it can aim up and down but not side to side.
It should take about 200 clear nights to scan the entire sky between declination +60° and 20°, with each spot on the sky getting about 1 minute of scrutiny. Given New England's weather, that will take 1 to 2 years. After that, says Horowitz, the plan is to repeat the sky scan several times to add more minutes of search time for each sky spot.
Horowitz also hopes to build an identical second copy of the telescope and camera at another site so the two can observe in parallel. This should reduce the expected false-alarm rate to zero, allowing observations to be done at greater sensitivity and quickly nailing as genuine even the weakest actual signal from the stars.
For more on all the world's SETI projects, both optical and radio, see our article SETI Searches Today. Or go directly to its optical SETI page. More on optical versus radio searches is in Seth Shostak's article The Future of SETI.
Alan MacRobert, who read Carl Sagan's Intelligent Life in the Universe at age 15 (and had him as a professor at 17), has maintained Sky & Telescope's SETI Section on the web since 1999.
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