Spazio: ultima frontiera. Credere che si sia soli nell'universo è come credere che la Terra sia piatta. Come disse l'astrofisico Labeque al palazzo dell'UNESCO, durante il congresso mondiale del SETI di Parigi del Settembre 2008, " SOMETHING IS HERE", "Qualcosa è qui", e I TEMPI SONO MATURI per farsene una ragione. La CIA, l'FBI, la NSA, il Pentagono, e non solo, lo hanno confermato!
Statistiche
Friday, September 11, 2020
NASA sent a map to space to help aliens find Earth. Now it needs an update.
The map that NASA launched in 1972 could
lead extraterrestrials to Earth. A new map, nearly 50 years later,
provides even better directions.
A half century ago
astronomers designed a map that would point to Earth from anywhere in
the galaxy. Then they sent it into space, reasoning that any aliens
smart enough to intercept a spacecraft could decode the map and uncover
its origin. Many movies and TV shows have used variations on this theme
as a plot point, but we didn’t borrow it from science fiction. It’s
reality.
Truth is, this tale has been part of my family’s lore since before I
was born. Growing up, I’d heard stories about the map and seen its
depiction on multiple interstellar spacecraft, and several years ago, I
found the original, penciled-in pathway to Earth where my parents had
stashed it. (More on this later.)
That was an exciting find! Then came the buzzkill: This original map
won’t be good for much longer, cosmically speaking. The signposts it
uses will disappear within tens of millions of years, and even if they
don’t, the map would point toward our home for only a fraction of the
200 to 250 million years it takes the sun and other nearby stars to spin
once around the Milky Way.
Sure, the chances of aliens intercepting the map are astronomically
improbable—but if that did happen, an outdated map would be useless
rather than helpful. And that wasn’t the goal.
PIONEER 10
Pioneer
10 is carrying a message from humanity into the stars. Etched onto a
six-by-nine inch, gold-anodized aluminum plate, the message commemorates
the spacecraft’s home world—and tells whoever finds it how to find us.
Why on Earth does this map even exist?
It was December 1971, and NASA was getting ready to launch Pioneer 10, a spacecraft that would sweep by Jupiter
and make the first reconnaissance of the solar system’s biggest planet.
More stunningly, though, Pioneer 10’s brush by Jupiter would sling it
onto an interstellar trajectory, making it the first ever human-made
object destined to leave the solar system.
With a little help from his friends, the astronomer Carl Sagan
decided that the craft ought to carry a greeting from humanity—a
message identifying and commemorating Pioneer’s makers that would be
interpretable by anyone who found it. NASA agreed and gave Carl less
than a month to design the message.
This is when Carl’s friend, the astronomer Frank Drake,
enters the story. Frank is also my dad, and among other notable
accomplishments, he is credited with conducting the first scientific
search for noisy aliens and with formalizing a framework for estimating
the number of detectable alien civilizations in the Milky Way galaxy. (Read more about how Frank Drake changed astronomy.)
Carl asked Dad for help crafting the message while the two of them were in San Juan, Puerto Rico, for a meeting of the American Astronomical Society.
Dad recalls that, in the lobby of the San Gerónimo Hilton, he and Carl
quickly came up with ideas about what to include: line drawings
depicting humans, a rendering of the spacecraft—and then, “in the next
moment, we hit on the idea of a galactic map that would pinpoint the
location of the Earth in space.”
Dad designed that map, and in 1972 it flew into space aboard Pioneer
10. The next year Pioneer 11 launched, ultimately carrying the map past
Saturn and now on to the stars. Then in 1977 both Voyager spacecraft left Earth carrying Dad’s guide to finding our planet, which is etched onto the cover of the “golden record.”
The way Dad designed the map means that it points back to Earth both in
space and in time, making it a galactic positioning system (a different
kind of GPS) in four dimensions.
At the time, Dad and Carl didn’t really worry that the aliens who
found their message in a bottle might be of the more malevolent variety.
How the map was made
Our galactic neighborhood has no obvious street signs, and crafting a
map pointing to one planet among the billions (and billions) of worlds
populating the Milky Way is no simple feat.
Finding Earth means finding the solar system,
and the sun is rather unremarkable. There’s really no way to
distinguish it from the other several hundred billion stars in the
galaxy, each of which is tracing its own path around the galactic center
and slowly shifting in location relative to its neighbors. That stellar
jostling means the constellations spangling Earth’s skies won’t be the
same in our near future—nor do the stars align in the same recognizable
configurations from anywhere other than the solar neighborhood. In fact,
in about 2,000 years, Polaris will no longer be the North Star, just as
it was not the polestar for ancient Egyptian, Babylonian, and Chinese
sky-watchers.
So, what to do? Though normal stars with churning nuclear engines in
their cores might not have distinctive fingerprints, Dad realized that
pulsars—the corpses of stars that once were much larger than the sun—are
potentially uniquely identifiable. Discovered in 1967, pulsars spin
very rapidly, often hundreds of times per second. Using powerful radio
telescopes, astronomers can measure with extreme precision how quickly
pulsars rotate, meaning that each of these spinning stellar relics
writes its own signature in space. Dad selected 14 pulsars that could
triangulate Earth’s position, and he coded information about their
rotation rates into the map.
It’s not your typical map
Appropriately, Dad’s pulsar map looks like a fancy asterisk, a radial
explosion of hatched lines that intersect at our solar system’s
location. Briefly, here’s how his map works:
Each of the lines connect Earth to a pulsar. The hatch marks are
binary numbers that reveal the pulsar’s rotation rate (at the time the
map was designed), and line lengths are roughly proportional to
distance. Some of the pulsars parked on Dad’s map—for example, the Crab
and Vela—sit in the centers of beautiful nebulae created during the
pulsars’ violent formations. Presumably, any civilizations sharp enough
to detect and snare a quiet interstellar spacecraft would know about
pulsars. And by matching the rotation periods on the map with stellar
signposts in the sky, aliens could find their way to Earth relatively
easily.
In addition, because the energy we see from pulsars comes from their
spin and they slow down over time, Dad’s map also points to Earth in the
fourth dimension. By calculating the difference between the observed
and coded rotation periods—a difference that will be apparent after
thousands of years—aliens could figure out how long ago the map was
made.
Perhaps somewhat surprisingly, Dad’s map became lodged in the popular
imagination and is now commonly found on everything from T-shirts to
tattoos. I guess there’s something captivating about always being able
to find your way home, even in the most cosmic sense imaginable.
Keeping it in the family: A love story
Several years ago, two significant things happened. I found the
original, penciled-in pulsar map, folded away and casually tucked into a
tomato box in my parents’ closet. And I linked up with a rock climber
named Scott Ransom, one of the world’s more prolific pulsar astronomers.
Scott had been thinking
about the Voyagers, the “golden record,” and the pulsar map since he was
a 10-year-old in Mansfield, Ohio, watching Carl’s Cosmos
television show. Some years and an astronomy Ph.D. later, he realized
that Dad’s map has a near-future expiration date. Its Achilles’ heel is
the same property that lets it pinpoint Earth in time: Pulsars slow
down, and the ones Dad had chosen (from the few known at the time) would
fade and disappear within several million years, give or take a few
millennia.
Coincidentally, Scott had set out to make a new, more precise, and
longer-lived pulsar map even before we moved in together and
portmanteau’d ourselves into the Dranksomes. Now I write the words that
tell our stories, and Scott does the important cartographic stuff such
as choosing pulsars and deriving their binary codes. He occasionally
drafts some text passages, but you’ll never catch me committing academic
acts of astronomy.
A newer, better map to Earth
Scott’s new map is a GPS for the ages. It navigates to Earth using pulsars both inside and outside the Milky Way, with a twist.Instead of the more
ordinary pulsars Dad selected, the new map employs millisecond pulsars
that spin faster, last longer, and have also-dead orbital companions.
These binary pulsars afford a second set of identifiers: the orbital
period of the system, which does not change over billions of years. And,
crucially, millisecond pulsars age much more slowly than the ones in
Dad’s map, meaning that it takes thousands of times longer for their
spins to become unrecognizable.
In addition, Scott included another layer of signposts: pulsars in
globular clusters orbiting the Milky Way. Ancient clumps of stars that
predate the Milky Way, globular clusters are gorgeous and mysterious,
and they are veritable millisecond pulsar factories.
By including signposts in these hard-to-miss stellar globs outside
the galaxy, Scott’s map allows Earth to be discoverable for billions of
years, even after the Milky Way’s stars have trekked around the galactic
core multiple times, shuffling their positions and obliterating
constellations.
And Dad, for the record, thinks that’s spectacular.
But first, someone has to read it
Dad’s map, of course, is still out there—but chances are slim to zero
that the Pioneers or Voyagers carrying it will be intercepted. Though
all four spacecraft are on interstellar trajectories, space is big, and
the next stellar systems on the horizon are many thousands of years
away. Plus, the spacecraft are tiny and will be completely quiet within
the next couple of decades, making them extremely hard to detect.
As for sending the new map: There’s no Voyager-like space probe
scheduled for launch anytime soon. But if this map did hitch a ride
beyond our solar system, and if it got scooped up by intelligent space
aliens, the map should be quite easy for them to read and follow.
That raises all sorts of questions: Would extraterrestrial beings at
those distances have the means to reach Earth? If so and they head our
way, what if they don’t come in peace? What if they’re hangry? And what
if they’re not vegetarians?
Here’s the fundamental question that didn’t stop Carl and Dad: Is it a
good idea to randomly send our address into the cosmos? Today, some
folks would have no reservations, given that earthly transmissions
already are leaking into space and, traveling at the speed of light, are
detectable by anyone with a decent radio telescope living within a
hundred light-years of us. Other folks, perhaps more cautiously, would
hold off on announcing our presence until we know if ETs have honorable
intentions. (This is what a Martian looks like—according to Carl Sagan.)
As for the Dranksomes:
We’d gladly send out the new map to Earth, as a bid to ensure that our
presence as a species would live on in some form. If that message in a
bottle were finally picked up, after bobbing and drifting through the
galactic ocean for millions or billions of years, someone would know
that Earthlings did exist—or, with luck, still do.
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