Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




SPACE SCOPES
New ET Detection Method Calls for World's Largest Telescope
by Michael Bakich for Astronomy magazine
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 02, 2013


Artistic rendering of the Colossus telescope, a 77m wide telescope capable of detecting the near-infrared light resulting from a technologically advanced civilization living on an exoplanet located at 60 light-years. (c) http://www.innovativeoptics.ca/

Until recently, one of the ultimate mysteries of the universe -- how many civilizations may exist on planets orbiting other stars in the Milky Way Galaxy -- relied on the possibility of detecting intelligent beings by radio signals. Now a team of astronomers, engineers, and physicists from the University of Hawaii, the University of Freiburg, and elsewhere has proposed a new and powerful technique to search for intelligent life.

The revolutionary method is described by four of the team's astronomers in the June 2013 issue of Astronomy magazine, the world's largest magazine on the subject, with a print and web readership of half a million each month.

The story, "How to Find ET with Infrared Light," was written by Jeff R. Kuhn of the University of Hawaii's Institute for Astronomy, Svetlana V. Berdyugina of the University of Freiburg and the Kiepenheuer Institute for Solar Physics in Germany, David Halliday of Dynamic Structures, Ltd., in British Columbia, and Caisey Harlingten of the Searchlight Observatory Network in The Grange, Norwich, England.

Rather than looking for radio waves, the team suggests searching for the heat signatures of nearby planets, which requires a giant telescope that could detect infrared radiation directly from an exoplanet, thus revealing the presence of a civilization.

"The energy footprint of life and civilization appears as infrared heat radiation," says Kuhn, the project's lead scientist. "A convenient way to describe the strength of this signal is in terms of total stellar power that is incident on the host planet."

The technique arises from the fact that a civilization produces power that adds to the heat on a planet, beyond the heat received from its host star. A large enough telescope, idealized for infrared detection, could survey planets orbiting stars within 60 light-years of the Sun to see whether or not they host civilizations.

The Colossus Telescope
The quest for direct infrared detection of extraterrestrial civilizations, along with many other research possibilities, has led the team to the funding and building of a giant telescope. Currently planned large infrared telescopes, the Giant Magellan Telescope, the Thirty Meter Telescope, and the European Extremely Large Telescope, would not be large enough.

Instead, a telescope (dubbed Colossus) with a primary mirror about 250 feet (77 meters) in diameter could find hundreds of Earth-sized or larger planets in habitable zones, and perhaps dozens of extraterrestrial civilizations, by using a sensitive coronagraph -- and the technology to build such an instrument exists.

The international team thus seeks funding to build a 77-m telescope, which would be constructed from revolutionary thin-mirror slumping and polishing technologies developed by the Innovative Optics team. The telescope would consist of approximately sixty 8-m mirror segments, and would operate at a high-altitude site.

Colossus's field of view would be optimized for star-like sources. It would be the world's best high-resolution infrared telescope and would excel at the study of stellar surfaces, black holes, and quasars, objects that appear smaller than 1 arcsecond on the sky.

.


Related Links
Astronomy magazine
Space Telescope News and Technology at Skynightly.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SPACE SCOPES
Herschel Space Observatory Finds Galaxy Mega Merger
Pasadena CA (JPL) May 27, 2013
A massive and rare merging of two galaxies has been spotted in images taken by the Herschel space observatory, a European Space Agency mission with important NASA participation. Follow-up studies by several telescopes on the ground and in space, including NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and Spitzer Space Telescope, tell a tale of two faraway galaxies intertwined and furiously making stars. E ... read more


SPACE SCOPES
Improving 'crop per drop' could boost food and water security

Researchers help threatened wheat crops in Asia

Pork takeover shows China hunger for foreign feasts

Asia concerns spread due to rogue US wheat

SPACE SCOPES
Milwaukee-York researchers forward quest for quantum computing

New Technique May Open Up an Era of Atomic-scale Semiconductor Devices

Bright Future For Photonic Quantum Computers

New magnetic graphene may revolutionize electronics

SPACE SCOPES
Airline industry calls for single emissions standard

Boeing's first 787 arrives in China: media

Slow progress on Unasur plans for a joint trainer aircraf

EADS sweetens KF-X offering

SPACE SCOPES
Volvo chief acknowledges errors, says to stay in US

Monitoring system can detect dangerous fatigue in mine truck driver

Electric cars slow to gain traction in Germany

Space drives e-mobility

SPACE SCOPES
Mexico hopes China leader's visit can narrow trade gap

US manufacturing lobby presses Obama on China

China's Xi in Trinidad to boost Caribbean trade

China opens dumping probe into EU, US chemical sales

SPACE SCOPES
Indonesia on right path to saving forests: Greenpeace

UN mourns slain Costa Rica environmentalist

More at-risk bird species in Brazilian forest than previously thought

Study explores 100 year increase in forestry diseases

SPACE SCOPES
Elevated carbon dioxide making arid regions greener

Landsat 8 Satellite Begins Watch

NASA Ships Sensors for Seafaring Satellite to France

NASA's Landsat Satellite Looks for a Cloud-Free View

SPACE SCOPES
Shape-shifting nanoparticles flip from sphere to net in response to tumor signal

Gold nanocrystal vibration captured on billion-frames-per-second film

Understanding freezing behavior of water at the nanoscale

Kinks and curves at the nanoscale




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement