Humanity’s search for signs of extraterrestrial intelligence has been underway, in one form or another, for decades. But how much searching have we really done?

Single radio dishes and arrays, like the Very Large Array (VLA) pictured here, are often used to carry out searches for signs of extraterrestrial life. What does it really mean that we haven't found any?
NRAO/AUI and NRAO

Where Is Everybody?

The 100-meter Green Bank Telescope has been used to search for radio signals from extraterrestrial civilizations. It was also used to eavesdrop on signals from interstellar asteroid ‘Oumuamua in 2017.
NRAO/AUI/NSF

With the number of known potentially habitable exoplanets increasing every day, it’s easy to feel both optimistic about and overwhelmed by our chances of finding life on other planets. The search for life elsewhere in the universe has led astronomers to carry out highly precise observations of exoplanet atmospheres in the hopes of detecting biosignatures — like the subtle imprint that gaseous oxygen and methane would leave on an exoplanetary spectrum.

The search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI), on the other hand, looks for technosignatures rather than biosignatures. Technosignatures could take many forms, like the excess waste heat emitted by structures designed to harness the energy of a star, but most SETI efforts focus on extraterrestrial radio signals. For all our decades of searching, we’ve yet to find any convincing signals, leading some to believe that there are no signals to be found.

Have we truly plumbed the depths of the cosmic ocean and come up empty-handed, meaning that we should abandon our search? To answer this question, a team led by Jason Wright (The Pennsylvania State University) devised a way to calculate how much of the available parameter space we’ve really searched.

Measuring n-dimensional Volumes

The boundaries for the example haystack used in this work. Click to enlarge.
Wright, Kanodia & Lubar 2018

Wright and collaborators based their calculations on a concept called the cosmic haystack: a volume containing naturally occurring radio signals and (hopefully!) at least one artificial signal from an intelligent extraterrestrial civilization — the proverbial needle that rounds out the metaphor.

But quantifying our progress in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence is more complicated than just considering the fraction of the sky we’ve observed; the spatial volume surveyed is just one of the many dimensions of the cosmic haystack. Just as observing only a few stars would greatly limit the physical volume of your survey, only searching for signals in a narrow frequency range limits yet another dimension of the cosmic haystack.

In addition to the spatial volume, Wright and collaborators also included the sensitivity of the survey, the bandwidth, polarization, and modulation of the signal, and the repetition rate, as dimensions of the haystack. This makes for a searchable haystack with no fewer than nine dimensions! Based on reasonable search parameters, the authors estimate the total volume of the cosmic haystack to be 6.4 × 10116 m5 Hz2 s W-1.

More Than a Drop in the Bucket?

Of that immense volume, we’ve searched a mere 2.4 × 1098 m5 Hz2 s W-1, which amounts to a fraction of 3.8 × 10-19. This is equivalent to a small swimming pool’s worth of water compared to the volume of Earth’s oceans!

Feeling discouraged that after decades of listening, we’ve really only just begun our search? Carefully designed surveys — like those with wide fields of view that make repeated observations of each patch of sky — have the potential to quickly scour large swaths of the cosmic haystack. Hopefully, there are plenty of needles to be found.

Citation

“How Much SETI Has Been Done? Finding Needles in the n-dimensional Cosmic Haystack,” Jason T. Wright, Shubham Kanodia, and Emily Lubar 2018 AJ 156 260. doi:10.3847/1538-3881/aae099


This post originally appeared on AAS Nova, which features research highlights from the journals of the American Astronomical Society.

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SETI

Comments


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Robert-LaPorta

December 13, 2018 at 9:52 am

I believe that while life may be common, intelligent life may be very rare. There has been life on Earth for billions of years, but life capable of sending and receiving radio and other communications for less than a hundred. I recommend the book "Rare Earth'. to look at the possibility of intelligent life.

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Anjreedy

December 14, 2018 at 12:20 pm

I'm not trying to direct my aggression at u just the government but This is complete garbage. Anyone wonder why we literally have not moved up from the car’s and fossil fuels for over a hundred years? Especially after we moved so fast with computer technology and now we are at a stand still. To think that the government just is at a “complete loss” to have us be a better cleaner planet is extremely wrong. They refuse to release the technology that can pull out energy from the vacuum of space and run itself and make our planet cleaner and people wouldn’t need to suffer. Why? Because fossil fuels literally run everything and the price of oil is what our dollar is based off of. That’s why we are occupying the oil in other countries. And p.s. et are real. Rosewell regardless of the conspiracy is an actual thing that happened and to quote Steven Greer “they didn’t come here across the vastness of space just to run out of gas and crash. We shot them down to steal technology we do it all the time and that’s not cool.

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Anjreedy

December 14, 2018 at 12:19 pm

This is complete garbage. Anyone wonder why we literally have not moved up from the car's and fossil fuels for over a hundred years? Especially after we moved so fast with computer technology and now we are at a stand still. To think that the government just is at a "complete loss" to have us be a better cleaner planet is extremely wrong. They refuse to release the technology that can pull out energy from the vacuum of space and run itself and make our planet cleaner and people wouldn't need to suffer. Why? Because fossil fuels literally run everything and the price of oil is what our dollar is based off of. That's why we are occupying the oil in other countries. And p.s. et are real. Rosewell regardless of the conspiracy is an actual thing that happened and to quote Steven Greer "they didn't come here across the vastness of space just to run out of gas and crash. We shot them down to steal technology we do it all the time and that's not cool.

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John

December 15, 2018 at 9:15 am

Any reason they used "m" as the size measurement? PC might be more meaningful.

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george-mastry jr

December 15, 2018 at 6:38 pm

Aliens probably did visit here, they radioed back home "No intelligent life". On another note I visited the VLA, got the tour, very impressive. They still mention the 'Contact" scenes filmed there.

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Clive Hodgson

December 16, 2018 at 9:38 am

Considering that the energy required for radio signals has a cost, would any alien civilization that used radio be sending only point to point signals, as these would be more efficient than an omni-directional signal? Which would mean that we would only pick up these signals if they were pointing directly at us. This would greatly lower the already small probability of detection.

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