 
 
The Bay Area-based SETI Institute, dedicated to the search for alien life, is asking space enthusiasts around the world to think about what we should say if we ever get a cosmic phone call.
What's the proper conversation starter when greeting an alien? How about, "This is Earth speaking. We would like to know you. Please reply."
Less  graciously but perhaps more honestly, you might offer, "Down here we are  all confused." And by the way, if you do come for a visit, please  "don't kidnap us and poke us. We hate that."
These are all authentic, if occasionally crack-brained, suggestions for how we  might go about opening a dialogue with an alien civilization. During the last  few decades, the search for life beyond our planet has focused almost  exclusively on trying to find a signal in space from an intelligent  civilization. Such searches are becoming increasingly sophisticated.
The SETI Institute, the world's best-known organization dedicated to the search  for alien life, recently unveiled plans to scan a million stars over 10 billion  communication channels at its Hat Creek radio telescope facility north of Sacramento.
Now, the private Bay Area organization has launched a companion project called  Earth Speaks that asks space enthusiasts around the world to think about what  we should say when, or if, we finally get that cosmic phone call.
"Most conversations about this subject until now have been among academics,"  said Douglas Vakoch, who is heading up the new effort at SETI, which stands for  the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence. "We want to really expand  the discussion."
Center director Jill Tarter, a lifelong alien hunter on whom the Ellie Arroway  character from the movie "Contact" was based, said there is no simple  answer. But it is vital, she said, that there be a global consensus on what we  say and do before it happens.
Based on the first few hundred suggestions collected by the Earth Speaks website, that consensus  might be elusive. So far, the messages break down into a few distinct  categories. Some people want to throw a block party to welcome the aliens to  the neighborhood. Others, less trusting, would warn the aliens that we've got  guns and know how to use them.
Another group, possibly influenced by having seen too many movies, would have  us hide under the bed until they go away. "If we discover intelligent life  beyond Earth, we should not reply -- we should freeze and play dead,"  wrote one contributor.
There is a fourth category of people who refuse to take the whole idea  seriously. One tongue-in-cheek writer suggests we broadcast, "There's nothing  to see here. Move along." SETI has no plans to actually send the messages  into space. Vakoch said that before anything like that is undertaken, it should  be subject to international discussion.
The first serious effort to contact intelligent life outside Earth was made in  1974, using the big radio telescope at Arecibo, Puerto Rico. The three-minute transmission by a group at Cornell University attempted to describe Earth  and its inhabitants in binary code.
Over the last few years, a Russian group has sent greetings in Russian and  English to targeted stars in our galactic neighborhood, generating a major  dust-up in the small but passionate SETI community. Critics say the Russians  are acting out of turn, without asking permission to open what would amount to  diplomatic relations with another civilization. The problem is that nobody has  the authority to grant permission.
Some observers say there is no need for us to broadcast a message. We're  already doing that in the form of leakage into space of our radio and  television signals. Those signals, however, are much too weak to travel far. A  coordinated communications effort would require a powerful transmitter, a  highly focused beam and a receiver pointed in the right direction.
Tarter acknowledged that there is plenty of reason to be cautious about  replying to an alien signal. "We're in an asymmetric position," she  said. "We don't know if there are other civilizations out there, but if  there are, we can be pretty sure we are the youngest." And, therefore, the  most vulnerable.
Earthlings have had the technology to broadcast and receive electromagnetic  waves for about a century. But the galaxy has been around for billions of  years. Any civilization that contacts us is likely to be much older.
"As the new kids on the block, we should listen first" and reply later, Tarter said.
Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-sci-aliens7-2009jun07,0,500345.story
Tags: SETI, Douglas Vakoch, Russia, Intelligent life, Hat Creek radio telescope facility north of Sacramento, Globa blog network blogspot,
 
 

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