Articles features
No evidence of life in 100,000 galaxies: Scientists
Washington, May 11
After searching 100,000
galaxies for signs of highly advanced extraterrestrial life, a team of
scientists using observations from NASA's WISE orbiting observatory has
found no evidence of advanced civilizations in them.
The team also discovered some mysterious new phenomena in our own Milky Way galaxy.
"The
idea behind our research is that, if an entire galaxy had been
colonized by an advanced spacefaring civilization, the energy produced
by that civilization's technologies would be detectable in mid-infrared
wavelengths," said lead researcher Jason T. Wright, assistant professor
of astronomy and astrophysics at the Centre for Exoplanets and Habitable
Worlds at Penn State University.
Freeman Dyson, a theoretical
physicist, had proposed in the 1960s that advanced alien civilizations
beyond Earth could be detected by the telltale evidence of their
mid-infrared emissions.
It was not until space-based telescopes
like the WISE satellite that it became possible to make sensitive
measurements of this radiation emitted by objects in space.
Roger
Griffith, researcher at Penn State and the lead author of the paper,
scanned almost the entire catalogue of the WISE satellite's detections
-- nearly 100 million entries -- for objects consistent with galaxies
emitting too much mid-infrared radiation.
He also examined and categorized around 100,000 of the most promising galaxy images.
"This
research is a significant expansion of earlier work in this area," said
Brendan Mullan, director of the Buhl Planetarium at the Carnegie
Science Centre in Pittsburgh.
"As we look more carefully at the
light from these galaxies, we should be able to push our sensitivity to
alien technology down to much lower levels and to better distinguish
heat resulting from natural astronomical sources from heat produced by
advanced technologies. This pilot study is just the beginning," Wright
concluded.
The study will be published in Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series.