In the field of planet hunting, Geoff
Marcy is a star. After all, the astronomer at the University of
California at Berkeley found nearly three-quarters of the first 100
planets discovered outside our solar system. But with the hobbled
planet-hunting Kepler telescope having just about reached the end of its
useful life and reams of data from the mission still left
uninvestigated, Marcy began looking in June for more than just new
planets. He’s sifting through the data to find alien spacecraft passing
in front of distant stars.
He’s not kidding — and now he has the
funding to do it. Last fall, the Templeton Foundation, a philanthropic
organization dedicated to investigating what it calls the “big
questions” — which, unsurprisingly, include “Are we alone?” — awarded
Marcy $200,000 to pursue his search for alien civilizations.
As far as Marcy, an official NASA
researcher for the Kepler mission, is concerned, that question has a
clear answer: “The universe is simply too large for there not to be
another intelligent civilization out there. Really, the proper question
is: ‘How far away is our nearest intelligent neighbor?’ They could be 10
light-years, 100 light-years, a million light-years or more. We have no
idea.”
To answer that question Marcy has begun to
sift through the Kepler data and to search the heavens for a galactic
laser Internet that might be in use somewhere out there. Launched in
2009, Kepler was designed as a four-year mission to detect planets
around distant stars by measuring the dimming of those stars as orbiting
bodies pass in front of them. In May, a component of the spacecraft
designed to keep it pointing precisely failed, dealing a crushing blow
to Marcy and his colleagues who last year convinced NASA to extend
funding for the mission into 2016.
“It’s a heartbreaker,” he says. “People
are reacting a little bit as if a close family member died. There’s this
combination of severe depression and confusion, coupled with denial.”
Kepler has been wildly successful in its
four years. To date, it has found 132 exoplanets — that is, planets
outside our solar system — and possibly 3,216 more that await
confirmation. Researchers have extrapolated from Kepler data that our
Milky Way galaxy alone contains at least 100 billion exoplanets, as many
planets as there are stars. Marcy hopes that hiding within it will be
hints about intelligent life abroad.
While the movie “Contact,” based on Carl
Sagan’s book of the same name, popularized the idea of aliens dozens of
light-years away picking up an old telecast of the 1936 Berlin Olympics
that was unintentionally transmitted into space, our civilization has
become quieter to any outside observers in recent decades.
As our civilization makes the jump from
analog to digital, communication is increasingly carried by fiber-optic
cables and relatively weak cellphone repeaters rather than powerful
broadcast transmitters. Rather than spilling out messy radio
transmissions, Marcy posits that alien civilizations would use something
much more precise and efficient than radio waves to stay connected, and
lasers fit the bill. At the Keck Observatory in Hawaii, he hopes to spy
an errant beam flashing from a distant star system, an observation that
would be strikingly obvious on a spectrum.
This shift to new ways for finding E.T. is
in part due to the failure of traditional SETI (Search for
Extraterrestrial Intelligence) to pick up radio signals from deep space.
Federal funding for SETI projects ended in 1995, but private
benefactors have stepped up to support the search for alien radio
transmissions, including Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, who has sunk
more than $30 million into a giant radio telescope array now under
construction northeast of San Francisco.
Nevertheless, the silence underscores the
question once posed by Nobel Prize-winning physicist Enrico Fermi: If
intelligent life is common in the galaxy, “where is everybody?”
Marcy admits that this poses a powerful
counterargument to the prospect of success for any search for
extraterrestrial intelligence. But what if, even if the chances are
vanishingly remote, he is successful? More disturbingly, what if (as
some respected physicists fear) he finds a Death Star? “The first thing
we do is transmit a message to them that says, ‘We taste bad.’ ”
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