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The Search for Extraterrestrials [recurso electrónico] : Intercepting Alien Signals / by Monte Ross.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Springer Praxis BooksEditor: New York, NY : Praxis, 2009Descripción: online resourceTipo de contenido:
  • text
Tipo de medio:
  • computer
Tipo de soporte:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9780387740706
  • 99780387740706
Tema(s): Formatos físicos adicionales: Printed edition:: Sin títuloClasificación CDD:
  • 520 23
  • 500.5 23
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
The likelihood of extraterrestrial intelligence -- Vast distances and long travel times -- Stars, their evolution and types -- Planets and our Sun -- The many constraints on life -- Why would anyone transmit to us? -- The Drake Equation and habitable planets -- The basics of space communication -- Where to look in the electromagnetic spectrum? -- Receiver basics and how big is big? -- Noise and limitations on sensitivity -- Programs in SETI -- A brief history of SETI -- Radio-frequency and microwave SETI, including the Allen Telescope Array -- Early optical SETI and the all-sky Harvard system -- Possibilities in SETI -- The PhotonStar project -- Key issues for SETI -- Other parts of the spectrum, decoding the data and forming pictures -- Future systems for intercepting alien lasers.
En: Springer eBooksResumen: In The Search for Extraterrestrials, Monte Ross explores in detail the key problems in starting a search, the programs that have failed and those that continue. He includes the fundamental considerations and the physics of the necessary laser, UV, IR and RF technologies, as well as coding and information theory considerations. The author explores future possibilities providing the reader with a comprehensive view of the many ways signals from aliens could be sent and explains why the search using RF leaves more than 99% of the electromagnetic spectrum unexamined. He also demonstrates the many parts of the electromagnetic spectrum, considering the next likely steps in this unique enterprise. Given man's intrinsic nature to explore, the search will continue in one form or many, until success is achieved, which may be tomorrow or a millennium away. In summary, Monte Ross proposes to get around the failure of a fruitless search at radio frequencies by developing, in a precise way, the argument for searching for transmissions in the optical region of the electromagnetic spectrum.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Libros electrónicos Libros electrónicos CICY Libro electrónico Libro electrónico 520 | 500.5 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available

The likelihood of extraterrestrial intelligence -- Vast distances and long travel times -- Stars, their evolution and types -- Planets and our Sun -- The many constraints on life -- Why would anyone transmit to us? -- The Drake Equation and habitable planets -- The basics of space communication -- Where to look in the electromagnetic spectrum? -- Receiver basics and how big is big? -- Noise and limitations on sensitivity -- Programs in SETI -- A brief history of SETI -- Radio-frequency and microwave SETI, including the Allen Telescope Array -- Early optical SETI and the all-sky Harvard system -- Possibilities in SETI -- The PhotonStar project -- Key issues for SETI -- Other parts of the spectrum, decoding the data and forming pictures -- Future systems for intercepting alien lasers.

In The Search for Extraterrestrials, Monte Ross explores in detail the key problems in starting a search, the programs that have failed and those that continue. He includes the fundamental considerations and the physics of the necessary laser, UV, IR and RF technologies, as well as coding and information theory considerations. The author explores future possibilities providing the reader with a comprehensive view of the many ways signals from aliens could be sent and explains why the search using RF leaves more than 99% of the electromagnetic spectrum unexamined. He also demonstrates the many parts of the electromagnetic spectrum, considering the next likely steps in this unique enterprise. Given man's intrinsic nature to explore, the search will continue in one form or many, until success is achieved, which may be tomorrow or a millennium away. In summary, Monte Ross proposes to get around the failure of a fruitless search at radio frequencies by developing, in a precise way, the argument for searching for transmissions in the optical region of the electromagnetic spectrum.

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