$100 MILLION INITIATIVE TO DRAMATICALLY ACCELERATE SEARCH FOR INTELLIGENT LIFE

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Winston

Lorenzo von Matterhorn
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https://www.breakthroughinitiatives.org/News/1

10-year, Multi-disciplinary Search Effort Will Harness World’s Largest Telescopes to Mine Data from Nearest Million Stars, Milky Way and 100 Galaxies

London, UK – Monday, July 20, 2015 – Yuri Milner was joined at The Royal Society today by Stephen Hawking, Martin Rees, Frank Drake, Geoff Marcy, Pete Worden and Ann Druyan to announce the unprecedented $100 million global Breakthrough Initiatives to reinvigorate the search for life in the universe.
The first of two initiatives announced today, Breakthrough Listen, will be the most powerful, comprehensive and intensive scientific search ever undertaken for signs of intelligent life beyond Earth. The second, Breakthrough Message, will fund an international competition to generate messages representing humanity and planet Earth, which might one day be sent to other civilizations.
Breakthrough Listen

Biggest scientific search ever undertaken for signs of intelligent life beyond Earth.
Significant access to two of the world’s most powerful telescopes – 100 Meter Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia, USA (“Green Bank Telescope”)1 and 64-metre diameter Parkes Telescope in New South Wales, Australia (“Parkes Telescope”).
50 times more sensitive than previous programs dedicated to SETI research.
Will cover 10 times more of the sky than previous programs.
Will scan at least 5 times more of the radio spectrum – and 100 times faster.
In tandem with a radio search, Automated Planet Finder Telescope at Lick Observatory in California, USA (“Lick Telescope”)2 will undertake world’s deepest and broadest search for optical laser transmissions.
Initiative will span 10 years.
Financial commitment is $100,000,000.
Unprecedented scope

The program will include a survey of the 1,000,000 closest stars to Earth. It will scan the center of our galaxy and the entire galactic plane. Beyond the Milky Way, it will listen for messages from the 100 closest galaxies. The telescopes used are exquisitely sensitive to long-distance signals, even of low or moderate power:
If a civilization based around one of the 1,000 nearest stars transmits to us with the power of common aircraft radar, Breakthrough Listen telescopes could detect it.

If a civilization transmits from the center of the Milky Way, with any more than 12 times the output of interplanetary radars we use to probe the Solar System, Breakthrough Listen telescopes could detect it.
From a nearby star (25 trillion miles away), Breakthrough Listen’s optical search could detect a 100-watt laser (energy output of normal household light bulb).
Open Data, Open Source, Open Platform

The program will generate vast amounts of data. All data will be open to the public. This will likely constitute the largest amount of scientific data ever made available to the public. The Breakthrough Listen team will use and develop the most powerful software for sifting and searching this flood of data. All software will be open source. Both the software and the hardware used in the Breakthrough Listen project will be compatible with other telescopes around the world, so that they could join the search for intelligent life. As well as using the Breakthrough Listen software, scientists and members of the public will be able to add to it, developing their own applications to analyze the data.

Crowdsourced processing power

Breakthrough Listen will also be joining and supporting SETI@home, University of California, Berkeley’s ground breaking distributed computing platform, with 9 million volunteers around the world donating their spare computing power to search astronomical data for signs of life. Collectively, they constitute one of the largest supercomputers in the world.

International competition to create digital messages that represent humanity and planet Earth.
The pool of prizes will total $1,000,000.
Details on the competition will be announced at a later date.
This initiative is not a commitment to send messages. It’s a way to learn about the potential languages of interstellar communication and to spur global discussion on the ethical and philosophical issues surrounding communication with intelligent life beyond Earth.
 
If we do hear something and it turns out to be footage of their Olympic Games, let's amplify the signal, send it back, and include encrypted instructions on how to build a Rubic's Cube.
 
This is absolutely wonderful and amazing..
Space exploration is where all of humanity belongs putting the vast majority of it's resources...
Not just 100 million dollars...

If we humans didn't spend so much globally on petty childish bickering
how much closer would we be to a human on Mars ???

Teddy
 
Search for intelligent life?

They should start with Washington DC; if their instruments are good enough to find intelligent life there, they should be good enough to find it throughout the Milky Way.
 
Search for intelligent life?

They should start with Washington DC; if their instruments are good enough to find intelligent life there, they should be good enough to find it throughout the Milky Way.

hahahahahahahahah...
hahahahahahahahahahahahah....

Tank you very much.....

Teddy
 
Another report on the same news story is here.

https://www.economist.com/news/scie...ed-silicon-valley-tycoon-will-revitalise-hunt

Winston's source is nice because it has easy to read bullets. Just think, if civilization was relatively nearby, like a thousand light-years, it would take at least 2,000 years to ask a question and get a reply. It would be very difficult for a civilization like ours to hold a conversation. Many generations would pass before the answer came back assuming that the civilization was still around to hear the answer.
 
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