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Authors: Neil deGrasse Tyson,Donald Goldsmith

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Compare this explanation of UFO abductions with an alternative, that extraterrestrial visitors have singled out Earth and arrived in sufficient numbers to abduct humans by the thousands, though only briefly, and apparently to examine them closely (but should they not have long ago learned whatever they cared to—and could they not abduct sufficient corpses to learn human anatomy in detail?). Some stories imply that aliens extract some useful substances from their abductees, or plant their seeds into female victims, or alter their mind patterns to avoid later detection (but in that case could they not eliminate abduction memories entirely?). These assertions cannot be dismissed categorically, any more than we can rule out the possibility that alien visitors wrote these words, attempting to lull human readers into a false sense of security that will further the aliens’ plans for world or cosmic domination. Instead, relying upon our ability to analyze situations rationally, and to discriminate between more likely and less likely explanations, we can assign an extremely low probability to the abduction hypothesis.

One conclusion seems unassailable by UFO skeptics and believers alike. If extraterrestrial societies do visit Earth, they must know that we have created worldwide capabilities for disseminating information and entertainment, if not for distinguishing one from the other. To say that these facilities would be open to any alien visitors caring to use them amounts to a gross understatement. They would receive immediate permission (come to think of it, they might not need it), and could make their presence felt in a minute—if they cared to. The absence of apparent extraterrestrials from our television screens testifies either to their absence from Earth or to their unwillingness to reveal themselves to our gaze—the “shyness” problem. The second explanation raises an intriguing conundrum. If alien visitors to Earth choose not to be detected, and if they possess technology far superior to ours, as their journeys across interstellar distances imply, why can they simply not succeed in their plans? Why should we expect to have any evidence—visual sightings, crop circles, pyramids built by ancient astronauts, memories of abductions—if the aliens prefer that we don’t? They must be messing with our minds, enjoying their little game of cat and mouse. Quite probably they are secretly manipulating our leaders too, a conclusion that snaps much of politics and entertainment into immediate focus.

The UFO phenomenon highlights an important aspect of our consciousness. Believing though we do that our planet forms the center of creation, and that our starry surroundings must decorate our world, rather than the reverse, we nevertheless maintain a strong desire to connect with the cosmos, manifested in mental activities as disparate as credence in extraterrestrial visitor reports and belief in a benevolent deity that sends thunderbolts and emissaries to Earth. The roots of this attitude lie in the days when a self-evident distinction existed between the sky above and Earth below, between the objects we could touch and scratch and those that moved and shone but remained forever beyond our reach. From these differences we drew distinctions between the earthly body and the cosmic soul, the mundane and the marvelous, the natural and supernatural. The need for a mental bridge connecting these two apparent aspects of reality has informed many of our attempts to create a coherent picture of our existence. Modern science’s demonstration that we are stardust has thrown an enormous wrench into our mental equipment, from which we are still struggling to recover. UFOs suggest new messengers from the other part of existence, all-powerful visitors who well know what they are up to while we remain ignorant, barely aware that the truth is out there. This attitude was captured well in the classic film
The Day the Earth Stood Still
(1951), in which an alien visitor, far wiser than we, comes to Earth to warn that our violent behavior may lead to our own destruction.

Our innate feelings about the cosmos manifest a dark side that projects our feelings about human strangers onto nonhuman visitors. Many a UFO report contains phrases similar to “I heard something odd outside, so I took my rifle and went to see what it was.” Films that depict aliens on Earth likewise slip easily into a hostile mode, from the cold war epic
Earth Versus the Flying Saucers
(1956), in which the military blasts away at alien spacecraft without pausing to ask their intentions, to
Signs
(2002), in which the peace-loving hero, with no rifle at hand, uses a baseball bat to chastise his trespassers—a method not likely to succeed against actual aliens capable of crossing interstellar distances.

The greatest arguments against interpreting UFO reports as evidence for extraterrestrial visitors reside in our planet’s unimportance, together with the vast distances between the stars. Neither can be regarded as absolute bars to this interpretation, but in tandem they form a powerful argument. Must we, then, conclude that because Earth lacks popular appeal, our hopes of finding other civilizations must await the day when we can expend our own resources to embark on journeys to other planetary systems?

Not at all. The scientific approach to establishing contact with other civilizations within the Milky Way and beyond, should they exist, has always relied on letting nature work in our favor. This principle redirects the question: What aspect of extraterrestrial civilizations would we find most exciting? (answer: Visitors in the flesh) into the scientifically fruitful one: What seems to be the most likely means of establishing contact with other civilizations? Nature, and the immense distances between stars, supply the answer—use the cheapest, fastest means of communication avaiable, which presumably holds the same rank elsewhere in the galaxy.

The cheapest and fastest way to send messages between the stars uses electromagnetic radiation, the same medium that carries almost all long-range communication on Earth. Radio waves have revolutionized human society by allowing us to send words and pictures around the world at 186,000 miles per second. These messages travel so rapidly that even if we beam them up to a stationary satellite orbiting at an altitude of 23,000 miles, which relays them to another part of Earth’s surface, they undergo a time delay on each leg of their journey much shorter than one second.

Over interstellar distances, the time lag grows longer, though it remains the shortest we can hope to achieve. If we plan to send a radio message to Alpha Centauri, the star system closest to the Sun, we must plan on a travel time of 4.4 years in each direction. Messages that travel for, say, twenty years can reach several hundred stars, or any planets that orbit them. Thus if we are prepared to wait for a round-trip of forty years, we could beam a message toward each of these stars, and eventually find out whether we receive a reply from any of them. This approach assumes, of course, that if civilizations exist close to any of these stars, they have a command of radio, and an interest in its application, at least equal to ours.

The fundamental reason why we don’t adopt this approach in searching for other civilizations lies not in its assumptions but in our attitudes. Forty years is a long time to wait for something that may never happen. (Yet if we had beamed out messages forty years ago, by now we would have some serious information about the abundance of radio-using civilizations in our region of the Milky Way.) The only serious attempt in this direction occurred in the 1970s, when astronomers celebrated the upgrading of the radio telescope near Arecibo, Puerto Rico, by using it to beam a message for a few minutes in the direction of the star cluster M13. Since the cluster lies 25,000 light-years away, any return message will be a long time coming, rendering the exercise more a demonstration than an actual casting call. In case you think that discretion has inhibited our broadcasting (for it is good to be shifty in a new country), recall that all of our post–World War II radio and television broadcasting, as well as our powerful radar beams, have sent spherical shells of radio waves into space. Expanding at the speed of light, the “messages” from the
Honeymooners
and
I Love Lucy
era have already washed over thousands of stars, while
Hawaii Five-O
and
Charlie’s Angels
have reached hundreds. If other civilizations really could disentangle individual programs from the cacaphony of Earth’s radio emission—now comparable to or stronger than that from any solar system object, including the Sun—there might be some truth to the playful speculation that the content of these programs explains why we have heard nothing from our neighbors, because they find our programming either so appalling or (dare we suggest) so overwhelmingly impressive that they choose not to reply.

A message might
arrive tomorrow, laden with intriguing information and commentary. Herein lies the greatest appeal of communication by electromagnetic radiation. Not only is it cheap (sending fifty years of television broadcasts into space has cost lest than a single spacecraft mission), it is also instantaneous—provided that we can receive and interpret another civilization’s emission. This also provides a fundamental aspect of UFO excitement, but in this case we might actually receive transmissions that could be recorded, verified as real, and studied for as long as it would take to understand them.

In the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, shortened to SETI by the scientists who engage in it, the focus remains on searching for radio signals, though the alternative of looking for signals sent with light waves should not be rejected. Although light waves from another civilization must compete with myriad natural sources of light, laser beams offer the opportunity to concentrate the light into a single color or frequency—the same approach that allows radio waves to carry messages from different radio or television stations. So far as radio waves go, our hopes for success in SETI rest with antennas that can survey the sky, receivers that record what the antennas detect, and powerful computers that analyze the receivers’ signals in a search for the unnatural. Two basic possibilities exist: We might find another civilization by eavesdropping on its own communications, some of which leaks into space in the same way that our radio and television broadcasts do; or we might discover deliberately beamed signals, meant to attract the attention of previously uncatalogued civilizations such as our own.

Eavesdropping clearly presents a more difficult task. A beamed signal concentrates its power in a particular direction, so that detecting that signal becomes much easier if it should be deliberately sent toward us, whereas signals that leak into space diffuse their power more or less evenly in all directions and are therefore much weaker at a particular distance from their source than a beamed signal. Furthermore, a beamed signal would presumably contain some easy warm-up exercises to tell its recipients how to interpret it, whereas radiation that leaks into space presumably carries no such user’s manual. Our own civilization has leaked signals for many decades, and has sent a beamed signal in one particular direction for a few minutes. If civilizations are rare, any attempts to find them ought to concentrate on eavesdropping and avoid the lure of hoping for deliberately beamed signals.

With ever better systems of antennas and receivers, SETI proponents have begun to eavesdrop on the cosmos, hoping to find evidence for other civilizations. Precisely because we have no guarantee that we shall ever hear anything by eavesdropping, those who engage in these activities have had difficulty securing funding. In the early 1990s, the U.S. Congress supported a SETI program for a year, until cooler heads pulled the plug. SETI scientists now draw their supports, in part, from millions of people who download a screen saver (from the Web site setiathome.sl.berkeley.edu) that co-opts home computers to analyze data for alien signals in their spare time. Even more funding has come from wealthy individuals, most notably the late Bernard Oliver, a prominent Hewlett-Packard engineer with a lifelong interest in SETI, and Paul Allen, the co-founder of Microsoft. Oliver spent many years thinking about the basic problem in SETI, the difficulty of searching through billions of possible frequencies at which other civilizations might be broadcasting. We divide the radio spectrum into relatively wide bands, so that only a few hundred different frequencies exist for radio and television broadcasts. In principle, however, alien signals might be confined so narrowly in frequency that the SETI dial would need billions of entries. Powerful computer systems, which lie at the heart of current SETI efforts, can meet this challenge by analyzing hundreds of millions of frequencies simultaneously. On the other hand, they have not yet found anything suggestive of another civilization’s radio communications.

More than fifty years ago, the Italian genius Enrico Fermi, perhaps the last great physicist to work both as an experimentalist and as a theorist, discussed extraterrestrial life during lunch with his colleagues. Agreeing that nothing particularly special distinguishes Earth as an abode for life, the scientists reached the conclusion that life ought to be abundant in the Milky Way. In that case, Fermi asked, in a query that ripples across the decades,
where are they?

Fermi meant that if many places in our galaxy have seen the advent of technologically advanced civilizations, surely we should have heard from one of them by now, by radio or laser messages if not by actual visits. Even if most civilizations die out quickly, as ours may, the existence of large numbers of civilizations implies that some of them should have sufficiently extended lifetimes to mount long-term searches for others. Even if some of these long-lived civilizations do not care to engage in such searches, others will. So the fact that we have no scientifically verified visits to Earth, nor reliable demonstrations of signals produced by another civilization, may prove that we have badly overestimated the likelihood that intelligent civilizations arise in the Milky Way.

Fermi had a point. Every day that passes adds a bit more evidence that we may be alone in our galaxy. However, when we examine the actual numbers, the evidence looks weak. If several thousand civilizations exist in the galaxy at any representative time, the average separation between neighboring civilizations will be a few thousand light-years, a thousand times the distance to the closest stars. If one or more of these civilizations has lasted for millions of years, we might expect that by now they should have sent us a signal, or revealed themselves to our modest eavesdropping efforts. If, however, no civilization attains anything like this age, then we shall have to work harder to find our neighbors, because none of them may be engaged in a galaxywide attempt to find others, and none of them may be broadcasting so powerfully that our present eavesdropping efforts can find them.

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