Russian Billionaire Yuri Milner Pledges 100M To Find Space Aliens
Contrary to what some members of the public might believe, NASA doesn’t really devote much in the way of resources to looking for aliens, and the search has, up to this point, been hobbled by severe lack of resources from other channels. But thanks to Milner and his team, it’s going to have all the resources it needs – and the initiative is called Breakthrough Listen. It was unveiled at a press conference earlier this week – here’s a statement from Milner on the project and its approach to the problem of seeking out other lifeforms in the universe: The idea of social networking with aliens is an appealing one (at least to me), but that’s not exactly what Milner means. Instead, part of what he’s referring to is a system developed at the University of California at Berkeley known as a “screen saver program” that uses the processing power of idle computers belonging to individuals in order to sift through the massive amounts of data being collected by Breakthrough Listen. This way, unusual signals, possibly of some intelligent origin, can be found much more efficiently than if the project depended on just one standalone supercomputer. Some of that data will be coming from the Automated Planet Finder Telescope at California’s Lick Observatory. This telescope can be used to find “laser signals” being beamed back and forth by intelligent life elsewhere in the universe, here explained by one of Breakthrough Listen’s team members, famous “planet hunter” Geoff Marcy: That’s only one of the most exciting aspects of Breakthrough Listen, which represents a $100 million investment from Millner over the next ten years. Obviously, whether or not they find anything remains to be seen, but the simple fact of the matter is that if there is intelligent life somewhere out there in space, we’re now in a much better position to make contact than we ever were before.