Date: 30/04/2014 13:31:11
From: The_observer
ID: 524949
Subject: Search for life on exoplanets more difficult than thought

From the University of Toronto:

Search for life on exoplanets more difficult than thought

A new study from the University of Toronto Scarborough suggests the search for life on planets outside
our solar system may be more difficult than previously thought.

The study, authored by a team of international researchers led by UTSC Assistant Professor Hanno Rein
from the Department of Physical and Environmental Science, finds the method used to detect biosignatures
on such planets, known as exoplanets, can produce a false positive result.

The presence of multiple chemicals such as methane and oxygen in an exoplanet’s atmosphere is considered
an example of a biosignature, or evidence of past or present life. Rein’s team discovered that a lifeless planet
with a lifeless moon can mimic the same results as a planet with a biosignature.

“You wouldn’t be able to distinguish between them because they are so far away that you would see both in one spectrum,” says Rein.

The resolution needed to properly identify a genuine biosignature from a false positive would be impossible to
obtain even with telescopes available in the foreseeable future, says Rein.

“A telescope would need to be unrealistically large, something one hundred metres in size and it would have to be
built in space,” he says. “This telescope does not exist, and there are no plans to build one any time soon.”
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Stop the funding now. It’s obviously a complete waste of money

Reply Quote

Date: 30/04/2014 14:44:08
From: bob(from black rock)
ID: 524990
Subject: re: Search for life on exoplanets more difficult than thought

The search for intelligent life on this planet, has so far, been negative.

Reply Quote

Date: 30/04/2014 14:45:47
From: The_observer
ID: 524993
Subject: re: Search for life on exoplanets more difficult than thought

>>>The search for intelligent life on this planet, has so far, been negative.<<<

get a bigger telescope mate

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Date: 30/04/2014 15:42:22
From: rumpole
ID: 525024
Subject: re: Search for life on exoplanets more difficult than thought

The_observer said:

>>>The search for intelligent life on this planet, has so far, been negative.<<<

get a bigger telescope mate

One is coming. It’s called the SKA.

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Date: 30/04/2014 15:58:12
From: bob(from black rock)
ID: 525025
Subject: re: Search for life on exoplanets more difficult than thought

rumpole said:


The_observer said:

>>>The search for intelligent life on this planet, has so far, been negative.<<<

get a bigger telescope mate

One is coming. It’s called the SKA.

Is that an optical or radio scope?

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Date: 30/04/2014 16:08:24
From: JudgeMental
ID: 525029
Subject: re: Search for life on exoplanets more difficult than thought

The Murchison Widefield Array

The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is the low frequency precursor for the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), located at the Murchison Radioastronomy Observatory (MRO). MWA data are processed at the MRO, transported over an 800km optical fibre network, archived at the Pawsey Centre, and made available to scientists around the world.

The MWA is the first of the three SKA precursor telescopes to be made operational for science since August 2013. As such, the MWA project is the first “Big Data” user of the Pawsey Centre, producing data at a rate of 3 petabytes per year. These data serve a world-wide team of radio astronomers, working on nine large-scale projects, which have been assessed and approved by an independent international panel. The bottom part of the image shows the MWA site at night, with a tile holding 16 antenna elements over a 5×5-metre ground screen, with the beamformer at the far edge of the tile. The top of the image is an MWA image of the Milky Way galaxy, spanning a large fraction of the southern sky.

The MWA consortium consists of thirteen institutions from four countries, and is led by Curtin University.

The Murchison Widefield Array

The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is one of three Square Kilometre Array Precursor telescopes and is located at the Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory in the Murchison Shire of the mid-west of Western Australia, a location chosen for its extremely low levels of radio frequency interference. The MWA operates at low radio frequencies, 80-300 MHz, with a processed bandwidth of 30.72 MHz for both linear polarisations, and consists of 128 aperture arrays (known as tiles) distributed over a ~3 km diameter area. Novel hybrid hardware/software correlation and a real-time imaging and calibration systems comprise the MWA signal processing backend. In this paper the as-built MWA is described both at a system and sub-system level, the expected performance of the array is presented, and the science goals of the instrument are summarised.

paper pdf at link.

Reply Quote

Date: 30/04/2014 16:08:25
From: rumpole
ID: 525030
Subject: re: Search for life on exoplanets more difficult than thought

bob(from black rock) said:


rumpole said:

The_observer said:

>>>The search for intelligent life on this planet, has so far, been negative.<<<

get a bigger telescope mate

One is coming. It’s called the SKA.

Is that an optical or radio scope?

Radio

Reply Quote

Date: 30/04/2014 16:23:46
From: Bubblecar
ID: 525042
Subject: re: Search for life on exoplanets more difficult than thought

>The Murchison Widefield Array

Might be fun looking for that on Google Earth.

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