Jill Tarter’s Wish Blog

Jill Tarter Answers a Student’s Questions

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Beyond her scientific leadership at NASA and the SETI Institute, Jill Tarter is deeply committed to science education.  She has been involved in developing curriculum for children including the Life in the Universe series, science teaching guides for grades 3-9, and Voyages Through Time, an integrated high school science curriculum on the fundamental theme of evolution in six modules: Cosmic Evolution, Planetary Evolution, Origin of Life, Evolution of Life, Hominid Evolution and Evolution of Technology.

Occasionally she corresponds with young students via e-mail.  If the student demonstrates that s/he has worked to find his/her own answers, Jill will respond as she did with 8th grade student, Oliver.

Here is a segment of their exchange:

Dear Dr. Tarter,

I am very interested in SETI and the possibility of life on other planets and feel very informed with the subject after spending time on the SETI website and doing other research. I am an 8th grade student…and I am studying SETI and the possibility of life on other planets for a long-term research project. I am very interested in Astronomy and find your work at SETI very exciting. In this project, we are encouraged to contact experts in our field and find out about their interests and experience…

Thank you very much.

Sincerely,

Oliver

*Questions:* (Answers from Jill in blue)

1.  How do you sort through and read all the “noises” and radio waves that you pick up every day./

We don’t do this, our computers do.  We’ve programmed them to find patterns in the noise, the sorts of patterns that we don’t think nature can produce, but technologies can.  Of course if we are wrong about this, and haven’t selected the correct pattern, then we might miss signals that are really there.  That’s why I am excited about working with the TED community to build an environment where smart people around the world can access some of our data and create programs of their own to see if they can find complex patterns that our current signal detectors may be missing.

2.   How much of the night sky has SETI searched for possible signs of intelligent life over the past 40 years?

Forty years is a lot more than your life time, but it isn’t very long in cosmic time.  During those forty years SETI experiments have mostly been off the air, waiting for their turn on the telescope, or they’ve been piggy-backing on other astronomical search programs with limited ability to explore many frequencies.  So the bottom line is NOT MUCH OF THE SKY has been searched.  Optical and radio SETI programs have looked deliberately at a few thousand stars (our own Milky Way Galaxy has about 100 billion stars, and there are another 100 billion galaxies in the universe!).  There are about 10 billion radio channels that we’d like to explore at radio frequencies for every star in the galaxy.  We’ve sampled about 2 billion frequency channels while pointing at 1000 nearby stars, and others have piggybacked a survey of maybe 20% of the sky, but have only explored 2.5 million frequency channels. There’s a lot to do, that’s why we are building the Allen Telescope Array (ATA), to do SETI faster, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and it will do innovative radio astronomy at the same time.

3. How did you first become interested in your current field? What is most exciting about your work?

The most exciting part of my work is actually using the signal detection instruments that we built on the first sections of the new telescope we’ve built (the ATA) to search the skies for signs of someone else’s technology.  The least exciting part of my job is having to constantly ask people for money to fund this work.  answering questions from kids like you is a pretty cool piece of my job too.  I studied engineering as an undergraduate engineering student, got my PhD degree in astrophysics, and along the way I learned to program an ancient PDP-8/S computer that allowed me to become part of the first piggyback SETI searches at the Hat Creek Radio Observatory, which is where we’re building the ATA today.  It was a lucky accident that I had learned to program that old mini-computer – it allowed me to understand that I lived in the very first generations of humans that could try to do an experiment to try to answer the question ‘Are we alone?’.  All that previous generations could do was to ask some wise people what they _should_ believe. With radio and optical telescopes and digital signal processing hardware, it’s now possible to observe the skies and try to find the answer.  As a young graduate student, I couldn’t think of a more exciting way to spend a career as a scientist, and I still feel that way!

Searching for Habitable Planets

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

Photo credit: NASA/Tony Gray

Photo credit: NASA/Tony Gray

This past Friday night at 10:49 p.m. Eastern time the Kepler Space Telescope successfully launched from Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.  The telescope will be able to detect other Earth-like planets in orbit around sun-like stars.  For at least the next three and a half years, the Kepler Space Telescope will be observing the universe, serving as a tool to help the world come one step closer to determining if there is life in universe beyond our planet.

The SETI Institute has been deeply involved in this mission, including Jill Tarter as a member of the Kepler Mission Science Working Group.

Here are five quick facts about the Kepler, courtesy of NASA:

Kepler is the world’s first mission with the ability to find true Earth analogs — planets that orbit stars like our sun in the “habitable zone.” The habitable zone is the region around a star where the temperature is just right for water — an essential ingredient for life as we know it — to pool on a planet’s surface.

By the end of Kepler’s three-and-one-half-year mission, it will give us a good idea of how common or rare other Earths are in our Milky Way galaxy. This will be an important step in answering the age-old question: Are we alone?

Kepler detects planets by looking for periodic dips in the brightness of stars. Some planets pass in front of their stars as seen from our point of view on Earth; when they do, they cause their stars to dim slightly, an event Kepler can see.

Kepler has the largest camera ever launched into space, a 95-megapixel array of charge-coupled devices, or CCDs, like those in everyday digital cameras.

Kepler’s telescope is so powerful that, from its view up in space, it could detect one person in a small town turning off a porch light at night.

Learn more about Kepler here, here and hereFollow the Kepler on twitter.

An exclusive interview with Jill Tarter

Friday, February 20th, 2009

Astronomer Jill Tarter, 2009 TED Prize winner, wished that the TED community would “empower Earthlings everywhere to become active participants in the ultimate search for cosmic company.” (Her talk on why the search for alien intelligence matters is now online.)

Our friends at the TED Blog interviewed Tarter yesterday over the phone about her TED Prize wish. She talked about some of the challenges and practicalities of SETI research, her new plans to help bring the world into the search for cosmic company, and a few new ideas about extraterrestrial intelligence that intrigue her. It’s a fascinating look at the pragmatic thinking that goes into this “stellar” project.

Transcript of interview with TED Prize-winner Jill Tarter of SETI (2/20/09):

You’ve said the Allen Telescope Array can augment the search for signals by orders of magnitude. Expand on that.

Right away, the Allen Telescope Array is almost a factor of 1,000 improvement of what we could do.

In the past, we’ve used other people’s telescopes for the real-time targeted searching. And if we’re lucky we get maybe five percent of their time. In theory, if we get this all working correctly, we can be on the air almost 100 percent of the time. We can do our SETI targeted searches at the same time that radio astronomers are doing their traditional astronomical surveys. So that’s a factor of 20.

We have the opportunity to build more back-end processing hardware and look at multiple stars at the same time. In the past, using the single-dish telescopes that we’ve used, you can only look one direction in the sky. Now, with an array built out of a lot of small telescopes, you look at a huge patch of the sky. You go from looking through a soda straw at a teeny piece of the sky to looking through a wide-angle camera. And in that piece of the sky there are many stars that I would like to look at.

I can actually build my equipment at the back end of the telescope such that it takes the data from all of the separate antennas and adds the signal together with different time delays and different phase shifts — it’s as if I were picking out up to eight individual pixels in this large field of view. I can look at up to eight different stars at the same time. So there was the factor of 20, and then there’s this other factor of eight.

And then I have another factor of almost 10 in terms of building more compute power to increase the amount of the spectrum that I can look at at any moment. So I can build more signal processing equipment. Hopefully for the first time we can do it with commodity servers in real time because until now we’ve built our own signal processing equipment. It looks like the industry has now made your standard cluster fast enough to do the signal processing. So all it means is, buying more of that, we can expand the bandwidth.

That’s what I can do in real time. Altogether, that’s at least a factor of 1,000.

What else is going to help augment the search?

I think about the other resources TED can potentially bring to the process — that is, getting the rest of the world involved, and not just doing the search with the equipment that we currently have in real time in Hat Creek.

There’s the idea of being able to record data, and having signal processing experts and open source developers around the world help us to build new algorithms. Because when I say if I put more compute power at the back end of this thing I can do more searching, I’m talking about the limited class of signals that we now look for in real time. And these are basically signals that are compressed in frequency. They’re narrow-band signals. They’re artifacts. They’re relatively easy to find. They’re certainly quite distinct from astrophysical signals. But there might be other classes of information-bearing signals. Information-rich encoded signals that will also propagate well through the interstellar medium.

We have not done much exploration of this class of signals because we haven’t had the compute power to go looking for them. But if we could start out by recording data and having people develop algorithms for this class of signals in higher dimensions for us, then we could take the best algorithms and see if we can get them made efficient enough to run real time and put those on the telescope as well. And now you open up a whole universe of looking for something completely different — something we weren’t sensitive to before. So I’m eager to do that, and ultimately we don’t know how this development process will work and whether the algorithms will ever be quite efficient enough to do in real time.

Hopefully, then, we’ve gotten smart people around the world and we’ve got them thinking about this search for more complex signals. But what about the folks that don’t have that technological know-how? Can we get them involved too, if they’re passionate and eager to participate? We thought, “Well, the eye is just a fabulous pattern-detection machine. A lot of years of evolution to make that work well.” And so perhaps what we could do is involve people in using their eyeballs to find these complex signals.

Crowd-sourcing.

Right. If we can push the technology and get a big enough data pipe in and out of the observatory, maybe that could actually impact the real-time observing so that people could see a pattern, compare it with known patterns of interfering signals that we’ve seen before, and impact the next observation that gets made. Say, “No algorithm found this yet, but I think there’s something there, and I think you ought to go back and follow up on it in the next observing path.” And we don’t know if that will work yet because there’s a lot of unknowns about how much data you can get in and out of this remote site. It’s a long way up I-5. Perhaps that’s too ambitious.

Perhaps the piece we’ll be able to do is sort through data offline and say, “Gee, there’s a pattern here. Gee, there’s a pattern there.” And act kind of like a human TiVo. So they could go through a lot of data and then build a new data set which is signal rich so that the developers wouldn’t be working on just the run-of-the-mill, raw, recorded data, but would have a set of recorded data that was chock full of complex patterns to try their algorithms on.

So, say I’m looking at this data, as one of your crowd-sourced eyeballs. What does the data look like? Something like static on a television screen?

If you’re working in the frequency and time dimensions looking for the kinds of signals that we’re now searching for, it would look like a snowy TV screen. In two dimensions, frequency, usually, we display horizontally, and time vertically. And then the kinds of signals that we look for now are straight lines through that two-dimensional slice. Narrow straight lines. And sometimes the lines are interrupted because they’re actually pulsed. They’re narrow-band pulses. And again, we’ve honed our skills to be pretty good, and our algorithms now can find that kind of artifact when your eye can no longer see it beneath the noise.

If you take the complex signals, the kinds of things that actually contain a lot of information, like what we generate today with our telcom, those algorithms can find that kind of signal if it’s really strong because enough bits and pieces of the signal in the frequency and time dimensions will put extra energy to some straight line somewhere that it will pull it up.

But usually the information and the energy in the signal was spread over other dimensions of chirp, repetition space, dispersion — all kinds of different ways you can encode signals. These are the higher dimensions I was talking about. And they become much more efficient for data transfer. When we use them on Earth, we have a particular encoding scheme, and the transmitter and the receiver both know what that scheme is, and you can build optimum detectors for any kind of signal. So the different schemes used for spacecraft communication or for cell phone technology are all different ways of putting information into the spectrum most effectively. And they wouldn’t look the same. When you looked at frequency and time, you might see absolutely nothing. But if you looked in other dimensions, you might actually see a pattern.

Are we talking about incidental signals or intentional, broadcast signals?

It’s always easier to find something that’s broadcast. If it’s incidental, there’s only enough power in it to serve the audience for which it’s intended. Our television transmitters leak out from the Earth. And actually, there’s a sphere surrounding the Earth from the earliest television signals, maybe 70 years ago, that’s going out one light year per year. But it’s really weak. Because we weren’t transmitting to anybody except to somebody in the next county. We weren’t trying to transmit to somebody at the next star. So the power involved is very small.

You can imagine that there have got to be economics of something for any technological civilization, some conserved resource that would probably mean that you don’t put any more power or energy into a transmission than is necessary. The chances are that what we are going to detect is going to be intentional, and it’s going to be attention-getting. But again, our definition of what is attention-getting — versus an advanced technologies definition of what is attention-getting — may not yet be the same. We’re a very young technology. Very primitive.

You can apply analysis to signals that are compressed in frequency, simply because astrophysics can’t do that. And if you find such a thing, you’ve either found someone else’s technology, or a new brand of astrophysics, a new field of astrophysics. But now that we’ve had more years of technology development, it might be that other kinds of signals make sense.

Is there a star, or a region in the sky, that intrigues you?

We know that life and technological civilizations arose and evolved around one particular type of star — a sort of medium-weight. It’s not really massive, and it’s not a tiny dwarf either. This kind of star burns stably for billions of years. We’re about halfway through the life of our star.

We don’t want to look at stars that are much more massive than the Sun because they use up their nuclear fuel in hundreds of millions of years and we don’t think you could get the evolution of a technological society that quickly. That’s a guess based on our example of one, and how long evolution as a natural process seems to take.

So the idea of looking for stars that are much lower mass than the Sun wasn’t in vogue for a long time because the idea was that those stars would be so faint that any habitable planet would have to be very, very close to the star and it would get tidally locked so that one face of the planet would continually face the star. You’d have a near side and a far side, or a hot side and a cold side. And we thought that it would be impossible to maintain any atmosphere in such a configuration.

But that was on the basis of early calculations, and we’ve now done more sophisticated calculations, and it looks like with a modest amount of greenhouse gas, you could retain an atmosphere and you could have circulation winds which would distribute the heat from the sub-solar point around to the backside. And you might end up with habitable parts of the planet at the terminator, halfway around the planet from the star.

And so, these M dwarfs that live forever — there’s no dwarf star like this that’s ever been born in the galaxy that has yet died. Their lives are tens of billions of years in length. They might, after a few billion years, become a reasonable place to host life. This is stuff we’re just beginning to study. Let’s just say that M dwarf stars are back on the table, whereas they were off for a while.

So, generally speaking, you’re searching for stars within certain parameters …

The kinds of stars that we’re interested in looking at are roughly the solar mass and smaller. And we’ll pick stars that are at least a couple of billions of years old to give evolution time to have produced a technology.

We’ll also pick stars for which companions — nearby stars — aren’t awkwardly placed, because stars that are too close to one another would tend to disrupt the planets in orbit around one of the stars. There are a couple of stable configurations. You can have two stars very close to one another and planets circling around the pair of stars. Or you can have two stars that are widely enough separated that the planets can be circling one and not be disrupted by the second. Or you can have stars that are essentially isolated, like our own sun. We’ll use that kind of thing as a criterion.

We’ll use what astronomers call the metallicity. For an astronomer, anything heavier than helium is a metal. If it’s known, we’ll use the ratio of the amount of iron to hydrogen in the star as an indicator of whether there’s enough stuff there to make rocky planets. Earlier generations of stars in the galaxy could well have had planets. But really, there was only hydrogen and helium to work with, so they’d all be gas giants and not small, rocky planets. It took several generations of star formation in the galaxy to build up the retinue of metals: carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, phosphorus — stuff that we’re made out of — and the minerals that form a rocky planet that life as we know it enjoys.

We’ll also look at all of the stars that we know to have planetary systems because those are stars that are somewhat special and we know something more about them.

So we’re using a lot of biases here to pick out stars. At the moment we’ve got about a quarter of a million stars that roughly satisfy the criteria.

And outside of those biases?

We will also look in another way. We’ll say, “We’ve made a lot of assumptions. Why don’t we give up most of those assumptions, except the fact that a technological civilization is going to be associated with a stellar host.” And then the idea is to just look in the directions that there are huge numbers of stars, and not make these assumptions and biases and target individual stars. Just survey regions of the galaxy where the star density is a maximum. That’s generally toward the center of the galaxy and along the plane of the Milky Way galaxy toward the center.

We’ve picked out 20 square degrees on the sky that contain probably 10 billion stars. And we will survey those. And while we’re surveying that region of the sky, the astronomers will piggyback on our observing. And we’ll be piggybacking on theirs. Those stars are all mostly very far away. The galactic center is 26,000 light years away. Most of those stars are at such a large distance that any transmitter that is coming from there would have to be extremely strong.

But we don’t know that there aren’t these cosmic miracles.

Interview conducted and reported by Matthew Trost

Credit: TED.com / SETI Institute

Watch Jill Tarter Share Her TED Prize Wish

Friday, February 20th, 2009

Inspired by Jill Tarter’s wish? Help make it a reality.

Get In On the Excitement

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

“WHAT is the biggest question in science? The origin of consciousness? How to combine quantum mechanics with general relativity? These are big, but arguably there’s a bigger one: is there anyone out there?”

So opens Michael Hanlon’s opinion piece at the NewScientist.  He argues that science, particularly government institutions like NASA and the European Space Agency, needs to “shed its ET hang-up” and refocus their programs on searching for life outside of our planet.

While not changing NASA’s priorities, the TED community has an amazing opportunity to help answer this big question.  Jill’s wish encourages each of us to become active participants in the search.  The wish will tap into the power of open-source initiatives to globalize the search for extra-terrestial intelligence and empower a new generation of SETI enthusiasts.   As Hanlon says the hunt is too exciting to ignore.

Learn More About SETI

Friday, February 13th, 2009

2009 TED Prize winner Jill Tarter serves as the Director of the SETI Institute’s Center for SETI Research.  The mission of the SETI Institute is to explore, understand and explain the origin, nature and prevalence of life in the universe. They believe they are conducting the most profound search in human history – to know our beginnings and our place among the stars. The hope is that Jill’s wish will help fulfill this mission by tapping into the power of open-source initiatives to globalize the search for extra-terrestial intelligence and empower a new generation of SETI enthusiasts.

Learn more about  Jill and her TED Prize wish in Robert Lee Hotz profile from the Wall Street Journal:

In a display of private sector science, [Tarter's] cause — the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) — has been embraced by a geek-chic collective of technocrats, info-moguls, activists and wishful thinkers, from Bill Gates to Cameron Diaz, who gathered in Long Beach, Calif., last week at the conclave of an influential enterprise called TED.

[...]Within minutes of announcing her TED wish, she started hearing offers of assistance.

An Australian electronics magnate volunteered his company’s engineers to improve the telescope’s signal processing capabilities. A computer scientist donated his patented search algorithms for better data analysis. Marketing experts offered to create Spanish-language Web sites to spread her message throughout Central and South America. A senior developer from Google Inc. volunteered to persuade his company to incorporate searchable star maps into Google Earth.

If you want to participate in this endeavor, offer your support here.

Jill Tarter’s Wish Blog

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Stay tuned for updates on Jill Tarter’s wish.