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Location: Mothership -> Ufomind Mailing List -> 1997 -> Aug -> SETI: Is the truth really out there?

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SETI: Is the truth really out there?

From: Stig_Agermose@online.pol.dk (Stig Agermose)
Date: Mon, 18 Aug 1997 17:59:42 -0800

Found at:
http://www.flatoday.com:80/space/explore/stories/1997b/081197a.htm


FLORIDA TODAY Space Online


For August 11, 1997

Is the truth really out there?


Copyright © 1997, The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
material may not be published, broadcast or re-distributed directly or
re-directly.



MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (AP) -- Is the truth really out there? A handful
of scientists listening intently for faint radio signals from distant
solar systems are keeping their ears, and minds, open to that
possibility.

Like their Hollywood counterparts in the movie "Contact," scientists at
the SETI Institute hunt for life in space using powerful radio
telescopes.

SETI, short for Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence, is surveying
1,000 stars similar to our sun but light years distant. They hope that
the survey, called Project Phoenix, will help answer a question as old
as mankind: Are we alone?

"This is a question 100,000 civilizations have asked. We are the first
civilization which could hope to answer that," said Seth Shostak, a
scientist and spokesman for SETI. "It would be a shame not to try."

At their offices 35 miles south of San Francisco, SETI scientists
listen for signals between 1,000 and 3,000 megahertz on the radio dial,
where natural background static is at a minimum. After weeding out
earthly and satellite signals, they have been left so far with no
messages from space. But they persevere.

SETI had its efforts cut short four years ago, when Congress trimmed
its funding and booted them out of their offices at the NASA's Ames
Research Center nearby.

At the time, Sen. Richard Bryan, D-Nev., called SETI "The Great Martian
Chase" and added, "I think this money could better be left unspent."

Donors such as Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen and Intel co-founder
Gordon Moore stepped in and rescued SETI, which now receives its
estimated $4 million annual budget through private contributions.

Similar projects have been active since 1960, when radio astronomer
Frank Drake conducted Project Ozma, the first radio scan for
extraterrestrial life. Ozma didn't find anything, but Drake found his
calling.

Now a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at the University of
California at Santa Cruz and SETI's president, Drake continues to
pursue his lifelong passion.

"It's the last great adventure for humans," Drake said. "It's an
adventure which can guide us philosophically as to what we might
become. It drives us all."

If SETI does succeed in detecting a signal, standard protocol is that
they verify it with another observatory, then notify the International
Astronomical Union, Shostak said.

But there remains the hazard that whoever we find may, in turn, find
us. And Shostak is not discounting the notion that the aliens may be as
surly as recent popular culture portrays.

"I don't think that all the advanced critters of the galaxy are going
to be benign. I just can't believe that because there's a big premium
that nature is willing to pay for aggression. Aggression pays," Shostak
said.

The project still represents an unproven endeavor, and fellow
scientists comprise some of SETI's harshest critics. At least one peer
says Project Phoenix is a waste of time -- because aliens already are
here.

"I think they are and have been here since 1947, implementing their
strategy of gradually letting us know," says James Deardorff, who
worked for 10 years as a senior scientist with the National Center for
Atmospheric Research and for eight years as a professor at Oregon State
University.

In 1986, Deardorff published a paper about his alien contact theory in
the Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society.

His work, titled "Possible Extraterrestrial Strategy for Earth," claims
that inconsistencies with SETI-like searches and the public panic that
might ensue if a signal was detected are something aliens would
anticipate and avoid.

Deardorff doesn't think aliens want to be found -- yet.

"They would never be able to trust that their message would get to the
public as a whole," Deardorff said. He surmises aliens are likely to
have a long-term plan to circumvent the scientific and political
communities, and to make their presence known through sporadic human
abductions and UFO sightings over time.

"A UFO witness would have a better idea of what's going on than Frank
Drake would," Deardorff said. "ET wouldn't bother to use 20th-century
science."

Another critic of SETI's reasoning is Ben Zuckerman, a professor of
physics and astronomy at UCLA. If aliens exist, they wouldn't sit back
and send radio waves, they'd be here, Zuckerman maintains.

"We've had life here for billions of years. If they were studying the
Earth, anybody with a modicum of curiosity is going to come," Zuckerman
said.

"They put all their eggs in one basket," Zuckerman said of SETI's
limited search. "For 3 billion years there was life on Earth, it was
just not sending out radio waves. They've closed the door to all this
kind of life."

SETI scientists are undaunted by such peer criticism. And their
diligent work has spawned similar programs at Ohio State University,
the University of California at Berkeley and Harvard.

BETA, or Billion-Channel Extra-Terrestrial Assay, is another radio
telescope sky-survey directed by Harvard physics Professor Paul
Horowitz, who shares Drake's enthusiasm and dreams of success.

"SETI is bound to succeed sooner or later," Horowitz said. How certain
is he that life exists out there?

"Absolutely 100 percent. But you know what they say about
astrophysicists," he said. "Often in error, but never in doubt."



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