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City lights could reveal E.T. civilization

Scientists suggest future generations of telescopes could look for the change in light from an exoplanet as one half reaches night and employs artificial light.
By Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts Published: November 4, 2011
Alien city lights
If an alien civilization builds brightly-lit cities like those shown in this artist's conception, future generations of telescopes might allow us to detect them. This would offer a new method of searching for extraterrestrial intelligence elsewhere in our galaxy. Credit: David A. Aguilar (CfA)
In the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, astronomers have hunted for radio signals and ultra-short laser pulses. In a new paper, Avi Loeb from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Edwin Turner from Princeton University, New Jersey, suggest a new technique for finding aliens: look for their city lights.

“Looking for alien cities would be a long shot, but wouldn’t require extra resources,” said Loeb. “And if we succeed, it would change our perception of our place in the universe.”

As with other SETI methods, they rely on the assumption that aliens would use Earth-like technologies. This is reasonable because any intelligent life that evolved in the light from its nearest star is likely to have artificial illumination that switches on during the hours of darkness.

How easy would it be to spot a city on a distant planet? Clearly, this light will have to be distinguished from the glare from the parent star. Loeb and Turner suggest looking at the change in light from an exoplanet as it moves around its star.

As the planet orbits, it goes through phases similar to those of the Moon. When it’s in a dark phase, more artificial light from the night side would be visible from Earth than reflected light from the day side. So the total flux from a planet with city lighting will vary in a way that is measurably different from a planet that has no artificial lights.

Spotting this tiny signal would require future generations of telescopes. However, the technique could be tested closer to home, using objects at the edge of our solar system.

Loeb and Turner calculate that today’s best telescopes ought to be able to see the light generated by a Tokyo-sized metropolis at the distance of the Kuiper Belt — the region occupied by Pluto, Eris, and thousands of smaller icy bodies. So if there are any cities out there, we ought to be able to see them now. By looking, astronomers can hone the technique and be ready to apply it when the first Earth-sized worlds are found around distant stars in our galaxy.

“It’s very unlikely that there are alien cities on the edge of our solar system, but the principle of science is to find a method to check,” Turner said. “Before Galileo, it was conventional wisdom that heavier objects fall faster than light objects, but he tested the belief and found they actually fall at the same rate.”

As our technology has moved from radio and TV broadcasts to cable and fiber optics, we have become less detectable to aliens. If the same is true of extraterrestrial civilizations, then artificial lights might be the best way to spot them from afar.

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3 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
Talk about a stretch! There is so much empty space out there, finding another civilization would be a one in a billion shot. Sure, there are trillions of total planets, but all the conditions coming together just right for intelligent life to emerge on any of them will be a very rare occurrence. Look at Earth. The Sun has to be right. The atmosphere has to be right. The temperature and pressure has to be right. You have to get lucky with impacts. You have to have FUEL available to develop and sustain a technological civilization. (Watch what happens on this one, if we don't plan for the depletion of the fossil fuels that run nearly everything. A bunch of apes aren't going to run an electric grid out there by burning grass.) Take away our oil, gas, and coal, and we will soon end up roaming around in forests dressed in animal skins carrying spears. Try keeping a nuclear power plant running for long without gasoline and diesel.
I have no doubt whatsoever that intelligent creatures are out there. But finding them is highly unlikely. The universe is too big, and getting bigger at an increasing rate.
And if we do ever find any within travelling distance, we had better hope that they are friendlier to us, than we are to each other. Some of the most complex and expensive machines we make are to kill each other, or try to dissuade others from killing us.
But giant telescopes are always good because as time passes, astronomy might become critical to test the best new theories in physics. Physics can be put to use right here to help actual people.
That would be a better way to get funding than a 'talking to the aliens' approach.
5 stars
BRYAN NEWBERRY from WEST VIRGINIA said:
Thank you frederick martello we need more teleoscope in he public
4 stars
FREDERICK MARTELLO from NEW JERSEY said:
This is why public funding of space telescopes is so important.
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