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Biggest-ever search for alien life launched

Scientist Stephen Hawking attends a press conference in London yesterday where he and Russian entrepreneur and co-founder of the Breakthrough Prize, Yuri Milner, announced the launch of Breakthrough Initiative, a new project to attempt to detect life in the cosmos.

Reuters/San Francisco/London

Scientists are about to embark on the biggest search yet for alien life, sweeping the skies for signals of civilisations beyond our solar system with $100mn from a Russian billionaire and the backing of physicist Stephen Hawking.
Whether we are alone in the universe has engaged minds down the ages, and the recent discovery that there may be tens of billions of habitable planets in our galaxy alone has added urgency to finding an answer.
“There is no bigger question. It’s time to commit to finding the answer - to search for life beyond Earth,” Hawking told reporters at the programme’s launch in London yesterday.
Some of the world’s largest radio telescopes will be used to scan for distinctive radio signals that could indicate the existence of intelligent life.
Astronomers will listen to signals from the million star systems nearest to Earth and the 100 closest galaxies, although they do not yet plan to send messages back into space.
Hawking said some form of simple life on other worlds seemed very likely, but the existence of intelligence was another matter, and humankind needed to think hard about making contact.
“A civilisation reading one of our messages could be billions of years ahead. If so, they will be vastly more powerful and may not see us as any more valuable than we see bacteria,” he said.
The 10-year project, dubbed Breakthrough Listen, is funded by Russian Internet entrepreneur Yuri Milner, himself a physicist by training, who made his fortune from savvy early investments in startups such as Facebook Inc.
He said he aimed to bring a Silicon Valley approach to “the most interesting technological question of our day”.
Milner became fascinated by the notion of extraterrestrial life after reading astrophysicist Carl Sagan’s “Intelligent Life in the Universe” as a 10-year-old in Moscow.
He believes other civilisations could teach us how to handle challenges such as allocating natural resources, he said in an interview. And if we don’t find them, we can learn other lessons.
“If we’re alone, we need to cherish what we have,” he said. “The message is, the universe has no backup.”
The new project dwarfs anything else in the field, known by the acronym SETI for the “search for extraterrestrial intelligence”. Globally, less than $2mn annually is spent on SETI, said Dan Werthimer, an adviser to Milner’s project who directs the SETI@home programme affiliated with the University of California in Berkeley, which asks volunteers to run software on their home computers to analyse data.
Today, due to technology improvements, including in computing power and telescope sensitivity, $100mn will go much farther than in the early 1990s, the last time SETI had significant funding.
The advances allow scientists to monitor several billion radio frequencies at a time, instead of several million, and to search 10 times more sky than in the early 1990s.
Any signals the scientists detect will have been created years ago, perhaps even centuries or millennia earlier. Radio signals take four years simply to travel between Earth and the nearest star outside our solar system.
Breakthrough Listen will book time at radio telescopes, including at Australia’s Parkes Observatory in New South Wales and the Radio Astronomy Observatory in Green Bank, West Virginia. Milner plans to book about two months a year at each site, a boon to scientists who normally might get two days a year on the telescopes.
The team, led by scientists such as Peter Worden, who until earlier this year directed the NASA Ames Research Centre, will organise the radio signals they find, make the data public, and examine it for patterns.
The goal lies less in understanding the signals than in establishing whether they were created by intelligent life rather than natural phenomena.
Scientists say the fact that humans have developed radio signalling makes it a good bet that others may use it as well.
“It doesn’t tell you anything about the civilisation, but it tells you a civilisation is there,” said Frank Drake, another of the project’s supporters.


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