I’m enough of a perfectionist that when I get something wrong, I can’t rest easy until I figure out how and why I missed the story. Such a case occurred in an article I wrote for Aeon Magazine called Distant Ruins. The article covered the rise of so-called ‘Dysonian SETI,’ which is adding an entirely new dimension to current radio and optical methods by looking into observational evidence for advanced civilizations in our abundant astronomical data. In the story, I homed in at one point on the work that Jason Wright and his colleagues Matthew Povich and Steinn Sigurðsson are doing with the Glimpsing Heat from Alien Technologies (G-HAT) project at Penn State. Keith Cooper went over the basics of this effort on Friday, putting his own spin on the group’s recent search of 100,000 galaxies. For more background, see Jason Wright’s Glimpsing Heat from Alien Technologies essay. I noted in the Aeon article that the G-HAT team was examining infrared data from the Wide-field Infrared Survey...
Project Dragonfly Design Competition Funded
Andreas Hein recently wrote up the Project Dragonfly design competition, which has been running as a Kickstarter project. Leveraging advances in miniaturization and focusing on laser-beamed lightsail technologies, Project Dragonfly aims to study the smallest possible spacecraft. From the Kickstarter announcement: Project Dragonfly builds upon the recent trend of miniaturization of space systems. Just a few decades ago, thousands of people were involved in developing the first satellite Sputnik. Today, a handful of university students are able to build a satellite with the same capability as Sputnik, which is much cheaper and weighs hundreds of times less than the first satellite. We simply think further. What could we do with the technologies in about 20-30 years from now? Would it be possible to build spacecraft that can go to the stars but are as small as today's picosatellites or even smaller? You can read about the competition in Andreas' post Project Dragonfly: Design...
SETI: The Black Hole Alternative
Our speculations about advanced civilizations invariably invoke Nikolai Kardashev’s scale, on which a Type III civilization is the most advanced, using the energy output of its entire galaxy. Given the age of our universe, a Type III has seemingly had time to emerge somewhere, yet a recent extensive survey shows no signs of them. All of this leads Keith Cooper to consider possible reasons for the lack, including societies that use their energies in ways other than we are imagining and cultures whose greatest interest is less in stars than in their galaxy’s black holes. Keith is an old friend of Centauri Dreams, with whom I’ve conducted published dialogues on interstellar issues in the past (look for these to begin again). A freelance science journalist and contributing editor to Astronomy Now, Keith's ideas in the essay below help to illuminate the new forms of SETI now emerging as we try to puzzle out the enigma of Kardashev Type III. By Keith Cooper It’s not often that SETI turns...
A New Look Inside Enceladus
We can hope that plumes like those found emanating from the south pole of Enceladus happen on other icy worlds. There have been hints of plumes at Europa but they've proven elusive to pin down. However, we're learning a great deal about the water inside Enceladus through Cassini flybys, using models based on mass spectrometry data the spacecraft has gained from the ice grains and gases in the moon's plumes. A similar approach on other icy moons, if possible, could save us from having to drill through kilometers of ice. What Christopher Glein (Carnegie Institution for Science) and team have done is to construct a chemical model that uses the Cassini observational data to determine the pH of the Enceladan ocean. It's an important reading because pH tells us how acidic the water is, which gives us a look into the geochemical processes occurring inside the moon. What the new work shows is that the plume is salty, with an alkaline pH of about 11 or 12. This Carnegie Institution news...
Thoughts on Voyager’s Closest Stars
Not long ago I looked at the future of the Voyager spacecraft and noted a possibility once suggested by Carl Sagan. Give the Voyagers one last 'empty the tank' burn and both could be put on a trajectory that would take them near, if not through, another star's system (see Voyager to a Star). It would be little more than a symbolic act, for even with heroic measures to conserve power, neither Voyager will be able to communicate past the mid-2020s. With a little luck, perhaps 2030. So we would be sending two spacecraft off to a star as a final act, turning them into markers, or monuments, that show humans are capable of producing something that will eventually reach (or come close to) another stellar system. Given their current trajectories, each Voyager passes interestingly close to another star in about 40,000 years, or roughly the amount of time since the extinction of homo neanderthalensis. The mere act of relating objects created by our species and launched in 1977 to time frames...
Changing Conditions on 55 Cancri e
Roughly twice the radius and eight times as massive as Earth, 55 Cancri e is a ‘super-Earth’ in the interesting five-planet system some 41 light years away in the constellation Cancer. No habitable conditions here, at least not for anything remotely like the kind of life we understand: 55 Cancri e orbits its G-class primary every 18 hours (55 Cancri is actually a binary, accompanied by a small red dwarf at a separation of 1000 AU). The closest super-Earth we’ve yet found, this is a tidally locked world that, helpfully for our purposes, transits its host. What we find in a just announced study of the planet’s thermal emissions out of the University of Cambridge is an almost threefold change in temperature over a two year period. Although we’ve done it before with gas giant atmospheres, this is the first time any variability in atmosphere has been observed on a rocky planet outside our own Solar System. No other super-Earth has yet given us signs of possible surface activity, and...
A Stagecoach to the Stars
Imagine the kind of spaceship we'll need as we begin to expand the human presence into the nearby Solar System. We'd like something completely reusable, a vessel able to carry people in relative comfort everywhere from Mars to Venus, and perhaps as far out as the asteroid belt, where tempting Ceres awaits. Capable of refueling using in situ resources, these are ships not crafted for a single, specific mission but able to operate on demand without entering a planetary atmosphere. Brian McConnell, working with Centauri Dreams regular Alex Tolley, has been thinking about just such a ship for some time now. A software/electrical engineer, pilot and technology entrepreneur based in San Francisco, Brian here explains the concept he and Alex have come up with, one that Alex treated in a previous entry in these pages. The advantages of their 'spacecoach' are legion and Brian also offers a sound way to begin testing the concept. The author can be reached at bsmcconnell@gmail.com. by Brian...
Pluto/Charon: Surface Features Emerging
One of the more memorable moments from yesterday's teleconference on the New Horizons mission was Alan Stern's comment that the latest pixelated images of Pluto/Charon constituted his 'meet Pluto moment.' If anyone has an interest in meeting Pluto, it's Stern (Southwest Research Institute), who serves as principal investigator and whose unflagging efforts made it possible. As for those pixelated views, well, they're a glimpse of what is to come, but even now, they're telling us helpful things about the target. The animation below speaks volumes, with the first showing Charon's rotation with the center of Pluto fixed in the frame. The images were acquired with the Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) camera. Image: A series of LORRI images of Pluto and Charon taken at 13 different times spanning 6.5 days, from April 12 to April 18, 2015. During that time, the spacecraft's distance from Pluto decreased from about 111 million kilometers to 104 million kilometers. Pluto and Charon...
HD 7924: Planets with a Robotic Assist
We've found a lot of planets far away from the Sun but know comparatively little about what may be circling nearby stars. The rationale is clear: The Kepler mission's field of view was carefully chosen to provide a large sample (over 145,000 main sequence stars) that could be studied for transits by the spacecraft's photometer. Looking out along the Cygnus arm of the Milky Way, far enough from the ecliptic plane to avoid the Sun, the Kepler stars have been providing statistical data to help us understand how common planets actually are in the galaxy. But as we saw with the announcement of a candidate planet around Alpha Centauri B, the news of planets closer to home excites interest. These are places close enough to us that they could conceivably be the targets of future interstellar probes. As we continue to look at the Kepler inflow, we're also anticipating missions like TESS (Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite), scheduled for a 2017 launch, and PLATO (PLAnetary Transits and...
DSAC: Paradigm Changer for Deep Space Navigation?
We need to improve the way we handle data tracking and deep space navigation. While the near term is always uncertain because of budgetary issues, we can still take the long view and hope that we're going to see a steadily increasing number of robotic and human spacecraft in the Solar System. That puts a strain on our existing facilities, and a premium on any methods we can find to make data return more precise and navigation more autonomous. With these ideas in mind, keep your eye on the Deep Space Atomic Clock (DSAC). It's a NASA technology demonstrator mission being built to validate a miniaturized, ultra-high precision mercury-ion atomic clock that researchers believe will be 100 times more stable than today's best navigation clocks. Managed at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the DSAC has been tweaked and improved to the point where it allows drift of no more than a single nanosecond in ten days. Image: Drawing of the DSAC mercury-ion trap showing the traps and the titanium vacuum...
Exoplanet Spectrum in Visible Light
It's the twentieth anniversary of the discovery of 51 Pegasi b, a 'hot Jupiter' that was the first planet to be discovered around a normal star. I always have to throw in that 'normal' qualifier because it was in 1992 that Aleksander Wolszczan and Dale Frail announced their discovery of planets around the pulsar PSR 1257+12, the first extrasolar planets ever found, and an extraordinary discovery in themselves. Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz announced the 51 Pegasi b discovery in 1995, and it was quickly confirmed by Geoff Marcy and Paul Butler. 51 Pegasi b, some 50 light years from Earth in the constellation Pegasus, is the prototypical 'hot Jupiter,' a gas giant orbiting in tight proximity to its star. A new paper from Jorge Martins (Universidade do Porto, Portugal) and team announces another first for this world, the first detection of the spectrum of visible light reflected off an exoplanet. The detection was made by painstakingly removing the host star's spectrum to reveal the...
Habitable Worlds Around Tau Ceti?
Yesterday's look at NExSS (the Nexus for Exoplanet System Science), NASA's new 'virtual institute,' focused on the multidisciplinary nature of the effort. The work I'm looking at today, an analysis of the planets around Tau Ceti performed at Arizona State University, only emphasizes the same point. To get a read on whether two planets that are possibly in Tau Ceti's habitable zone are likely to be terrestrial worlds like Earth, the ASU team brought the tools of Earth science into play, in particular the work of Sang-heon Shim. Shim is a mineral physicist who worked with astrophysicists Michael Pagano, Patrick Young and Amanda Truitt in the Tau Ceti analysis. His perspective was vital because early work had already suggested that Tau Ceti has an unusual balance between the rock-forming minerals magnesium and silicon. In fact, the ratio of magnesium to silicon here is 1.78, about 70% more than we find in the Sun. That casts long-standing views of Tau Ceti as Sol's twin into doubt, and...
NExSS: A ‘Virtual Institute’ for Deep Space
The Nexus for Exoplanet System Science, or NExSS, is a collaborative initiative from NASA to draw on the collective talent of researchers from ten universities, three NASA centers and two research institutes. Conceived as a 'virtual institute,' the effort is both geographically diverse and multidisciplinary in nature, focusing not only on the search for exoplanets but the attempt to analyze planetary environments and find life. Jim Green, NASA's Director of Planetary Science, explains the concept: "This interdisciplinary endeavor connects top research teams and provides a synthesized approach in the search for planets with the greatest potential for signs of life. The hunt for exoplanets is not only a priority for astronomers, it's of keen interest to planetary and climate scientists as well." NExSS draws on the collective expertise of its participants in the areas of Earth science, planetary science within our Solar System, heliophysics and astrophysics to create what NASA is...
Project Dragonfly: Design Competitions and Crowdfunding
by Andreas Hein Centauri Dreams readers most likely know Andreas Hein as the head of Project Hyperion, an effort for Icarus Interstellar to examine the prospects for manned interstellar flight, but he has also written in these pages about the uploading of consciousness. Now working on his PhD at the Technical University of Munich, Andreas today tells us about a new Kickstarter campaign in support of Project Dragonfly. Developing under the auspices of the Initiative for Interstellar Studies (of which Andreas is deputy director), Dragonfly explores interstellar flight at the small scale, and as he explains below, leverages the advances in computing and miniaturization that designers can use to change the paradigm of deep space missions. Humanity has existed for over 200,000 years. It is only about 200 years since we entered the age of industrialization, and in the last 50 years, we have discovered ways of going to the stars [1]. However, the approaches conceived required spaceships the...
Voyager to a Star?
The latest imagery from New Horizons has me wondering what it must be like to be on the team for this mission. Although released a week ago, the photo at left was taken by the Ralph color imager aboard the spacecraft on April 9. The distance from Pluto and Charon in the shot is about 115 million kilometers. This is the first color image ever made of Pluto/Charon by an approaching spacecraft, one that gives us a sense of what lies ahead as the distance continues to diminish. Imagine being part of this long effort and seeing a new world and its system of moons swimming into focus, unveiling landscapes never before seen. New Horizons takes me back to the Voyager days, and in the context of the approach to Pluto/Charon, the publication of Jim Bell's The Interstellar Age (Dutton, 2015) is truly apropos (I'm sure the publishers had exactly this in mind). Subtitled "Inside the Forty-Year Voyager Mission," the book lets us glimpse what it was like inside JPL when the planetary encounters...
Transient Listening: A Caution
by James Benford Searching for the faintest of signals in hopes of detecting an extraterrestrial civilization demands that we understand the local environment and potential sources of spurious signals. But we've also got to consider how signals might be transmitted, the burden falling on SETI researchers to make sense out of the physics (and economics) that constrain distant beacon builders. James Benford, CEO of Microwave Sciences and a frequent Centauri Dreams contributor, now looks at the problem in light of recent transients and discusses how we should move forward. The recent activity on Perytons leads us to a major lesson. We have a vast microwave network all around us that can interfere with transient radio astronomy. Our cell phones, though not powerful, influence the stronger transmitters and antennas of the cell phone towers. Add to that the many Internet hubs, microwave ovens, wireless equipment and extensive communication webs. All these may have fast transients with...
Exomoons: A Data Search for the Orbital Sampling Effect and the Scatter Peak
Exomoons continue to be elude us, though they're under intense study. One detection strategy is called Orbital Sampling Effect, as explained in the article below. I'll let Michael Hippke describe it, but the intriguing fact is that we can work with these methods using existing datasets to refine our techniques and actively hunt for candidates. Michael is a researcher based in Düsseldorf, Germany. With a background in econometrics, statistics and IT, he mastered data analysis at McKinsey & Company, a multinational management consulting firm. These days he puts his expertise to work in various areas of astrophysics, and most recently appeared here in our discussion of his paper on Fast Radio Bursts (see Fast Radio Bursts: SETI Implications?). by Michael Hippke Our own Solar System hosts 8 planets (plus Pluto and other "dwarf planets"), but 16 large moons with radii over 1,000km. And we have detected thousands of exoplanets - planets orbiting other stars - but not a single exomoon. The...
G-HAT: Searching For Kardashev Type III
A new paper out of the Glimpsing Heat from Alien Technologies search (G-HAT) at Penn State is packed with fascinating reading, and I’m delighted to send you in its direction (citation below) for a further dose of the energizing concepts of ‘Dysonian SETI.’ Supported by a New Frontiers in Astronomy and Cosmology grant funded by the John Templeton Foundation, G-HAT has been studying whether highly advanced civilizations are detectable through their waste heat at mid-infrared wavelengths, a tell-tale signature posited by Freeman Dyson in the 1960s. We now have the highly useful dataset of some 100 million entries gathered by WISE, the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer mission, to work with. G-HAT researcher Roger Griffith, lead author of the paper on this work, went through these data, culling out 100,000 galaxies that could be seen with sufficient detail, and searching for any that produced an unusually strong mid-infrared signature. Fifty galaxies do show higher levels of...
Perytons: A Microwave Solution
Radio bursts scant milliseconds long that have been reported at the Parkes radio telescope in New South Wales -- so-called ‘perytons’ -- turn out to be the product of microwave ovens. The Case of the Puzzling Perytons, as Earl Stanley Gardner might have titled it, appeared in these pages earlier, with alliteration intact, when Jim Benford tackled it in Puzzling Out the Perytons. You’ll recall that Benford thought microwave ovens were involved, and now we learn that the Parkes team had independently reached the same conclusion before he arrived. Moreover, the authors of the Parkes paper had already embarked upon an investigation that now yields positive results. Make no mistake, this is a useful finding, even if it has generated a certain degree of understandable banter. After all, we’re looking for emissions from deep space but fending off spurious signals generated by staff lunching on the grounds of the observatory itself. The larger picture, though, is that the kind of signals our...
New Horizons Message Update
If you want to send a message to the stars, Jon Lomberg is the man to consult. A gifted artist and creator of the gorgeous Galaxy Garden in Kona, Hawaii, Lomberg may be most famous for his frequent work with Carl Sagan, including the celebrated Cosmos series. But it’s his involvement with the Voyager Interstellar Record, a project for which he served as design director, that makes him so uniquely qualified to embark on a new messaging effort, the One Earth: New Horizons Message project. Let’s talk about Voyager and how the new message differs. 115 images and 27 musical selections went into the Voyager record, along with abundant audio of the life and natural sounds of our planet. The 12-inch gold-plated copper disk included spoken greetings in fifty-five languages beginning with Akkadian (a language of ancient Sumer) and ending with Wu, a modern Chinese dialect. The ninety minutes of music can be played at 16 ? revolutions per minute using a cartridge and needle enclosed within the...