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2 - One Attempt to Find Where They Are: NASA's High Resolution Microwave Survey

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 October 2009

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Summary

Introduction

Cocconi and Morrison (1959) closed their seminal paper on SETI with a statement that still well characterizes our current situation: ‘The probability of success is difficult to estimate, but if we never search the chance of success is zero.’ This chapter is a brief summary of how and why NASA has shaped the High Resolution Microwave Survey (HRMS), which it inaugurated on 12 October 1992. Some of the alternative search strategies that were considered are also noted, since these may well form the basis for the next generation of searches, should the HRMS fail to detect a signal.

Although this endeavor is often referred to as SETI (the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence), as it is implemented today, and into the foreseeable future, individual search projects are actually seeking evidence of extraterrestrial technology. Thus for scientists and engineers engaged in this exploration, a species' ability to technologically modify its local environment in ways that can be detected over interstellar distances has become a pragmatic substitute for the overly complex and convoluted definitions of ‘intelligence’ offered by researchers in other fields. Far in the future lies the promise of being able to detect indirect, but compelling, evidence of life itself on a distant planet. The coexistence of highly reactive gases (such as methane and oxygen) in the atmosphere of a planet, orbiting at an appropriate distance from its host star (so that liquid surface water might be possible) would suggest a continuous biological source at the base of that atmosphere.

Type
Chapter
Information
Extraterrestrials
Where Are They?
, pp. 9 - 19
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1995

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