The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has partnered with scientists working on the Breakthrough Listen project in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI). The team will use NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) to identify "light-curve anomalies" and detect "technosignatures."
Breakthrough Listen is a $100 million SETI initiative considered as the most comprehensive search for alien communications to date. Project scientists already have a target list of exoplanets for study and secured thousands of hours of observation time in many cutting-edge observatories around the world. Their partnership with NASA will provide more resources that can deepen their search.
“It’s exciting that the world’s most powerful SETI search, with our partner facilities across the globe, will be collaborating with the TESS team and our most capable planet-hunting machine,” said S. Pete Worden, executive director of the Breakthrough Initiatives.
TESS and Breakthrough Listen scientists announced their partnership in October last year during the International Astronautical Congress in Washington, D.C. The collaboration will expand the Breakthrough Listen's target list, adding over 1,000 exoplanets detected via TESS in the last two years.
The Breakthrough Listen team will scan these promising worlds using a range of instruments, including the Green Bank and Parkes radio telescopes in West Virginia and Australia, respectively; the Automated Planet Finder telescope in California; and the MeerKAT radio array in South Africa.
The collected data will be analyzed for technosignatures with the help of NASA scientists. These signatures are indicators of technology that may have been developed by advanced civilizations. The Breakthrough Listen scientists said that while past searches failed to detect unambiguous technosignatures, the chances of detection are now higher with their project.
The researchers will also use TESS data to look for anomalies in the light curves of stars. Light curves are graphs of a star's brightness over time, and recent observations using the Kepler space telescope suggested that oddities in these graphs might have been caused by orbiting megastructures built by advanced civilizations. (Related: Has the second "alien megastructure" been found?.)
"The discovery by the Kepler spacecraft of Boyajian's Star, an object with wild and apparently random variations in its lightcurve, sparked great excitement and a range of possible explanations, of which megastructures were just one," said Andrew Siemion, the lead researcher of the Breakthrough Listen team and an astrophysicist at the University of California, Berkeley.
Siemion added that while dust particles in orbit around Boyajian's Star could be responsible for the dimming, studies of light-curve anomalies will refine future observations and cast a wider net in the search for technosignatures.
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