We all want
there to be aliens. Green ones, pink ones, brown ones, Greys. Or maybe Vulcans,
Klingons, even a being of pure energy. Any type will do. That’s why whenever a
mysterious signal or energetic fluctuation arrives from somewhere in the cosmos
and hits one of our many telescopes, headlines erupt across the media: “Have We
Finally Detected An Alien Signal?” or “Have Astronomers Discovered An Alien
Megastructure?” But science-minded people know that we’re probably getting
ahead of ourselves.
Skepticism
still rules the day when it comes to these headlines, and the events that spawn
them. That’s the way it should be, because we’ve always found a more prosaic
reason for whatever signal from space we’re talking about. But, being skeptical
is a balancing act; it doesn’t mean being dismissive.
What we’re
talking about here is a new study from E.F. Borra and E. Trottier, two
astronomers at Laval University in Canada. Their study, titled “Discovery of
peculiar periodic spectral modulations in a small fraction of solar type stars”
was just published at arXiv.org. ArXiv.org is a pre-print website, so the paper
itself hasn’t been peer reviewed yet. But it is generating interest.
The two
astronomers used data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, and analyzed the
spectra of 2.5 million stars. Of all those stars, they found 234 stars that are
producing a puzzling signal. That’s only a tiny percentage. And, they say,
these signals “have exactly the shape of an ETI signal” that was predicted in a
previous study by Borra.
A portion of
the 234 stars that are sources of the pulsed ETI-like signal. Note that all the
stars are in the narrow spectral range F2 to K1, very similar to our own Sun.
Prediction
is a key part of the scientific method. If you develop a theory, your theory
looks better and better the more you can use it to correctly predict some
future events based on it. Look how many times Einstein’s predictions based on
Relativity have been proven correct.
The 234
stars in Borra and Trottier’s study aren’t random. They’re “overwhelmingly in
the F2 to K1 spectral range” according to the abstract. That’s significant
because this is a small range centred around the spectrum of our own Sun. And
our own Sun is the only one we know of that has an intelligent species living
near it. If ours does, maybe others do too?
The authors
acknowledge five potential causes of their findings: instrumental and data
reduction effects, rotational transitions in molecules, the Fourier transform
of spectral lines, rapid pulsations, and finally the ETI signal predicted by
Borra (2012). They dismiss molecules or pulsations as causes, and they deem it
highly unlikely that the signals are caused by the Fourier analysis itself.
This leaves two possible sources for the detected signals. Either they’re a
result of the Sloan instrument itself and the data reduction, or they are in
fact a signal from extra-terrestrial intelligences.
This graph
shows the number of detected signals by Spectral Type of star.
The detected
signals are pulses of light separated by a constant time interval. These types
of signals were predicted by Borra in his 2012 paper, and they are what he and
Trottier set out to find in the Sloan data. It may be a bit of a red flag when
scientist’s find the very thing they predicted they would find. But Trottier
and Borra are circumspect about their own results.
As the
authors say in their paper, “Although unlikely, there is also a possibility
that the signals are due to highly peculiar chemical compositions in a small
fraction of galactic halo stars.” It may be unlikely, but lots of discoveries
seem unlikely at first. Maybe there is a tiny subset of stars with chemical
peculiarities that make them act in this way.
To sum it
all up, the two astronomers have found a tiny number of stars, very similar to
our own Sun, that seem to be the source of pulsed signals. These signals are
the same as predicted if a technological society was using powerful lasers to
communicate with distant stars.
We all want
there to be aliens, and maybe the first sign of them will be pulsed light
signals from stars like our own Sun. But it’s all still very preliminary, and
as the authors acknowledge, “…at this stage, this hypothesis needs to be
confirmed with further work.”
That further
work is already being planned by the Breakthrough Listen Initiative, a project
that searches for intelligent life in the cosmos. They plan to use the Automated
Planet Finder telescope at the Lick Observatory to further observe some of
Borra’s 234 stars.
The
Breakthrough team don’t seem that excited about Borra’s findings. They’ve
already poured cold water on it, trotting out the old axiom that “Extraordinary
claims require extraordinary evidence” in a statement on Borra’s paper. They
also give Borra’s findings a score of 0 to 1 on the Rio Scale. The Rio Scale is
something used by the international SETI community to rank detections of
phenomena that could indicate advanced life beyond Earth. A rating of 0 to 1
means its insignificant.
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