| Subject: Re: How common are "interesting" results? |
| From: "Bob" <bobk4000@JUNKJUNKJUNKyahooJUNK.com> |
| Date: 08/09/2003, 13:04 |
Jason,
I had 4 "interesting" work units in the ~1700+ that I've crunched that
SetiSpy reported. And one of the reobservation WU's from earlier this year
either was at or very near one of my "interesting" spots, since the green
dot is now yellow in the sky map.
Bob.
"Jason" <jasonbryan@cox.net> wrote in message
news:3YQ6b.49474$nf3.46600@fed1read07...
I've been using SetiSpy and KSetiSpy and have recently accumulated 1,000
WU's... of these, a singe work unit pops up on my SetiSpy sky map as an
"interesting" little green dot (gaussian signal ratio was 4.102 at a drift
rate of -10.5292 Hz/s). Although I don't believe this is ET, I'm curious
of
how common these results are. Is one in a thousand on par?
Coincidentally,
this result was a reobs. on source from March 24, 03.
Jason Bryan
Results Received: 1024
Total CPU Time: 3907 hr 01 min
Average CPU Time per work unit: 3 hr 48 min 55.6 sec
Ranked 189668 of 4658364 at 95.925%