shifty88 said:
Interesting article.
Would it ever be possible to detect extra-terrestrial civilisations by listening out for RFI transmissions
couldn't the radio wave be trashed by passing through a gas cloud or affected by the gravitational pull of a star, planet or black hole.
Also wouldn't the frequency of the wave be stretched out by the expansion of the space its passing through and as a result never reach us or reach us in a distorted incomprehensible manner and make it indistinguishable from naturally occurring radio waves in the cosmos
Finally, would we be able to pinpoint the origin of the radio wave if the above comes into effect
SETI searches typically involve stars in our own Milkyway galaxy---stars that are a few tens or hundreds of lightyears away. The galaxy radius is only a few tens of thousands of LY.
There is no noticeable redshift or "stretching" of signals over such short distances. Redshift occurs over distances like 100 million LY or larger.
About "pinpointing", the VLBI is highly directional. Large antennas spaced widely apart.
About "affected by the gravity" of a star, black hole, etc. I don't imagine there is much chance of that kind of interference when VLBI is used to listen for radio signal from a nearby star. There is not very much in the way, and we would already have noticed the effect of some unexpected gravitational lensing in optical telescope images of these stars.
Stars only a few tens or hundreds of LY away are very well known and have been photographed many times. I don't think there's a problem with unexpected distortion of the putative signal.
The problem, I would guess, is the RARITY of identified hab zone planets. Out of on the order of a thousand identified planets, only a handful are classed as habitable. I don't recall how many so far: two or three?
And you might have to look at (wild guess) hundreds of habitable planets before there's a reasonable chance of detecting signal. Surely if you just look at three habitable candidates you couldn't reasonably expect to find a signal. There might be nobody but seaweed and fungus living there
