Alien mega-structures found?
I'm a Hard Science guy. This isn't flying saucer stuff.
Could be nothing - almost certainly nothing - but could be the biggest news in human history.
All eyes now turn to KIC 8462852.
Could be nothing - almost certainly nothing - but could be the biggest news in human history.
All eyes now turn to KIC 8462852.
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I have triplet sisters who are friends who have the telepathic
think going on -- the 2 who are identical, that is. . the3rd sister,
whom I dated, was envious as hell. -- j
.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/world...
Jan, future is here
to your door in half an hour, with the cheese sauce and Sprite,
as you ordered telepathically. == grandsonJohn's delivery
.
.
Jan
My first answer to the Fermi Paradox is the 'bongo drum' metaphor I explained above.
I doubt that alien civilizations have the Star Trek Prime Directive of non-interference (which never made sense to me, other than as a plot device). They may have policies against initiating contact with any civilization below a certain threshold. We don't know what that threshold might be, but if we flew up to their planet and knocked on their door, I suspect we would have made the grade.
Jan, liked the cat emo
Now reverse that. what if WE are the "gnat aliens" to every other species in the multiverses?
Maybe the reason we don't hear them is because they aren't transmitting in cycles per second, but cycles per century.
And that doesn't even come close to the phenomenon that we, as a sapient species, have been around for how many dozen thousand years - out of 13 billion? What if - the "interstellar age" has already come - and gone - before there was anything more than greyish-bluish-greenish mucas-ey lichen on our swelteringly steamy proto-planet, and we are truly extreme latecomers - too late to even be latecomers - perhaps the last of intelligent life.
After all, it wasn't that very long ago on OUR scale that we thought the universe revolved around our big blue marble...
Jan
We have been transmitting radio signals for about a century; I suspect that before another century is done we will have different methods of transmission and even we will not be transmitting bongo drum signals any more.
We don't know what an interstellar society uses for communication, because we are not there yet.
Jan
Maybe it would be something like this in 500 years: https://www.galtsgulchonline.com/post...
Freeman Dyson suggested that mega-structures could be a detectable characteristic of a class 2 Kardashev civilization. Maybe that is what we are seeing or maybe it is something very different. But what ever it is it's bound to be interesting.
European explorers - well, yeah there's the rub. Just as Hawking warns.
This line of thinking makes it actually seem more likely ships could turn up in orbit like European explorers.
And with real-time tele-presence (using entangled-particle technologies) you never even have to say good bye.
Exploration is in our genes. Really.
We'll go.
Sure, it'll probably be disproved but that never stopped them before!
Now if it was about eating ice cream as diet food, or how breathing causes cancer....
Therefore, regardless of the facts, it will be reported as ... nothing.
While I think humanoid is the likely life-form we'll eventually encounter, the idea that we could have already observed life and written off as "nature" is a bit humbling.
Link budget arithmetic ends up being surprising simple. Power out + TX antenna gain - loss in the cable going to the antenna - FSPL - attenuation due to objects in the way + RX antenna gain - loss in that cable = the signal the receiver sees. The minimum signal required is the receiver's sensitivity. A typical Wi-Fi card needs -75dBm to connect, and -50dBm to get high rates. A GPS goes down to -130dBm, but it sends much less data per second.
I think it's so cool that inexpensive receivers can pull 1Mbps of information from -90dBm (one trillionth of a watt) of signal.
That makes it travel much farther - but also makes it much harder to intercept.
I'm winging this - way off base?
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