Listening
for ETs Television
By
Seth Shostak
SETI Institute
posted: 09 November 2006
The
first episode of I Love Lucy was broadcast sometime on October 15,
1951. About 0.0002 seconds later, the signal glided over the rooftops of the farthest
city suburbs, and headed into space.
Its
still going. Every day, that first installment passes through an additional 4
thousand trillion trillion trillion cubic kilometers of the cosmos.
Given
that stars in our galactic neighborhood are separated by about 4 light-years,
its easy to figure that roughly 10 thousand star systems have been exposed
to I Love Lucy in the past five decades. That may suggest a high Nielson
rating, but the chance that extraterrestrials are now hooked on 1950s television
is low. Look at it this way: Carl Sagan, who was singularly optimistic about such
things, figured that the number of technically competent societies in our Galaxy
was a million or more. Thats a lot. But even so, it would imply that only
one in every few hundred thousand star systems would actually boast such a society.
Consequently, theres little probability that hairless gray guys are puzzling
over the domestic difficulties of Lucy and Ricky, a fact that no doubt will disappoint
the advertisers.
The
widespread use of television on Earth is a phenomenon of the last half-century.
But the cosmos is three times as old as our planet. So there could be galactic
civilizations that have been churning out sitcoms for thousands of years or more
time enough for the signals to reach our world.
This
possibility was evidently on the mind of Abraham Loeb at Harvard University, who
recently noted in the New Scientist that a radio telescope being built to study
distant galaxies might also be able to pick up ETs TV. The so-called Low-Frequency
Array (LOFAR), a telescope consisting of 25 thousand tent-shaped antennas spread
across Holland and Germany, can be tuned to frequencies under 250 megahertz. This
is a spectral range far below whats usually searched by SETI, but its
the band in which much of your local television is broadcast. And maybe theirs,
as well.
So
how realistic is this? Could LOFAR really pick up I Love Zork?
To
answer that question requires doing some numbers (you can read through this quickly
if quantitative arguments cause your brain to idle).
First,
we reverse the situation, just to see if tuning in remote TV makes sense. Imagine
that there are alien couch potatoes 55 light-years away who, bored with their
own Fall lineup, have constructed a LOFAR-style antenna in hopes of picking up
I Love Lucys debut. Hunky TV transmitters on Earth belch out
a few hundred thousand watts of power. That energy is not beamed in all directions
equally; most of it is aimed around the horizon (which, of course, is where the
audience is). Because of this slight beaming, the effective transmitter power
is a bit more: lets say a million watts, to keep the math simple.
OK,
how strong is that signal by the time it reaches our putative alien audience at
55 light-years distance? Not very. The megawatt broadcast washes over ETs
world with a power density of about 0.3 million million million million millionths
of a watt per square meter, which is not exactly a scorching signal. Actually,
only about a third of that transmission power is in the carrier
the part of the broadcast thats very narrow in frequency and easily detected.
So knock that piddling power density down by another factor of three if you want
to know the strength of the easily detectable part of the transmission. (Of course,
if they only find the carrier, they wont get the picture and sound. But
Lucys jokes might not appeal to aliens anyway.)
Could
their LOFAR-style antenna find that carrier, thereby indicating that a program
was on the air? Well, engineers have computed that at the frequency of VHF television,
LOFAR will have an effective collecting area similar to that of the 305-meter
diameter Arecibo antenna in Puerto Rico.
Thats
big. Thats brawny. But not brawny enough. In our SETI experiments at Arecibo,
we could find a signal if it were about 0.1 million million million millionths
of a watt per square meter. That number, you will notice if you count up the words,
is a million times bigger than the I Love Lucy carrier at 55 light-years.
The aliens LOFAR would be inadequate to detect the broadcast by a factor
of a million, a not entirely negligible amount. Simply stated: LOFAR couldnt
hear it.
So
heres the bottom line: LOFAR would only be able to find TV signals comparable
to ours from a distance of much less than one light-year! Turning this around,
the mother of all rabbit ears couldnt pick up the Alien Broadcasting Network
at the distance of even the nearest star.
Disappointing,
but you might argue that the extraterrestrials will have much, much more powerful
TV transmitters than we do. In fact, their broadcasts would have to be millions
of times more powerful to even produce a blip on LOFAR, which seems a bit silly
and likely to set alien roofs on fire.
Now
Loeb points out that LOFAR and other large telescopes now being planned can stare
at the same spot on the sky for months or years. That allows a signal to build
up, making even weak transmissions visible. After a year of staring, LOFARs
sensitivity will be several hundred times better than our work at Arecibo. Thats
the good news. The bad news is that its still inadequate to hear TV transmitters
similar to our own.
But
theres another point, and one thats possibly of greater significance.
The whole idea of television broadcasting may be passé for the aliens.
Consider: how do you pick up your daily dose of boob-tube fodder? With a rooftop
antenna strapped to your chimney? Probably not. You most likely get your TV via
a cable, fiber optic, or direct broadcast satellite dish. The powerful television
transmitters on the hills outside town are going to vanish in the next few decades.
They likely vanished long ago on ETs world.
So
while its certainly an excellent idea to look for cosmic signals at low
frequencies, its unlikely that any will resemble the type of entertainment
we still loft into the skies here on Earth. And some would say thats reassuring.