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A SETI Dialog
SETI League
The following questions were posed to SETI League executive director H. Paul Shuch, by Manchester University's Prof. Ian Morison, coordinator of SETI activities at the Nuffield Radio Astronomy Laboratories, Jodrell Bank.
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About SETI: Searching for Life
Ron Hipschman
Alien Investigators: A Look at the SETI Institute
Space.com, 09 May 2000
Based in Mountain View, California, the SETI institute is the most prominent organization involved in the search for intelligent life beyond Earth.
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Allen Telescope Array: SETI's Next Big Step
Alan M. MacRobert
SETI researchers have long had to beg time on instruments built for conventional radio astronomy. Now they're building one of their own. Its capabilities will be eye-popping.
Can SETI Succeed: Carl Sagan and Ernst Mayr Debate
Here we present both sides of the philosophical and scientific debate. First, one of the most prominent evolutionary specialists of this century, Ernst Mayr of Harvard University's Museum of Comparative Zoology, delivers the main arguments of the uniqueness hypothesis. Mayr notes that, since they are based on facts, the various degrees of uniqueness are a problem for SETI, not a hypothesis. The late Carl Sagan of The Planetary Society and Cornell University's Laboratory of Planetary Studies responds to Mayr's statements and expresses the optimist's view.
Is anyone out there? The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
The Guardian (U.K.), January 22, 2003
The search for extraterrestrial life grips the human imagination
because it tells us about ourselves.
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My 40 Years of SETI
Philip Morrison
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Mysteries of Wow
Seth Shostak, SETI Institute, Astrobiology Magazine
In August 1977, a sky survey conducted with Ohio State University's "Big Ear" radio telescope found what has become known as the 'Wow' signal. Registering an enormous signal strength, the shape of the signal had the characteristic rise and fall expected for its short 72 second lifetime. But a hitch remains: the signal has not been retrieved from other sky surveys, making it more anomaly than confirmable cosmic source.
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Scientists Hunt For Light Flashes From Extraterrestrial Civilizations
Adapted from a SETI Institute press release
Astronomers are broadening the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) by looking for powerful light pulses coming from other star systems.
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SETI and the Search for Life
Christopher F. Chyba, SETI Institute
Excerpts from the written testimony submitted by Christopher F. Chyba, SETI Institute, to the "Life in the Universe" hearings held by the House Subcommitee on Space and Aeronautics on July 12, 2001.
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SETI Searches Today
Alan M. MacRobert
Bigger and better hunts than ever are seeking radio and laser emissions from other civilizations. Here’s a rundown of all the searches now under way worldwide, comparing the capabilities of each.
SETI: The Radio Search
Ron Hipschman
Smarter SETI Strategy
Nathan Cohen and Robert Hohlfeld
Why the world’s biggest search should rethink its strategy and why the first signal we hear will come from an extremely powerful civilization extremely far away.
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The Chance of Finding Aliens
Govert Schilling and Alan M. MacRobert
In 1961 the Drake Equation put the search for alien civilizations on a scientific footing and launched the modern SETI movement. How do its numbers look today? What is the chance of finding aliens?
The Future of SETI
Seth Shostak
Searches for extraterrestrial intelligence are about to expand into new realms, thanks to new advances in technology and new thinking.
The Quest for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
Carl Sagan, Cosmic Search Vol. 1 No. 2
A masterful overview of SETI, the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence, and its meaning to humanity - a classic.
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The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
Carl Sagan and Frank Drake, Scientific American, 1997
Is mankind alone in the universe? Or are there somewhere other intelligent beings looking up into their night sky from very different worlds and asking the same kind of question? Are there civilizations more advanced than ours, civilizations that have achieved interstellar communication and have established a network of linked societies throughout our galaxy? Such questions, bearing on the deepest problems of the nature and destiny of mankind, were long the exclusive province of theology and speculative fiction. Today for the first time in human history they have entered into the realm of experimental science.
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The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence - SETI
NASA - edited by Philip Morrison, MIT, John Billingham and John Wolfe, NASA Ames
The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence: A Short History
Amir Alexander, The Planetary Society
Read about the scientific paper that launched the modern search for extraterrestrial intelligence, and about Project Ozma - the first radio search. Learn about support from NASA and opposition from Congress, the long years of waiting, and the tantalizing "Wow!" signal. Follow the visionaries and the skeptics, the dreamers and the realists, as they search for the holy grail that would change human history - contact with an alien civilization!
The Search for Life in the Universe
Neil deGrasse Tyson, to the House Subcommitee on Space and Aeronautics
Neil deGrasse Tyson discusses the search for life in the Universe. Are we alone?
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UFOs: Challenge to SETI Specialists
Stanton T. Friedman
Major news media and many members of the scientific community have taken strongly to the radio-telescope based SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) program as espoused by its charismatic leaders, but not supported by any evidence whatsoever. In turn, perhaps understandably, they feel it necessary to attack the ideas of alien visitors (UFOs) as though they were based on tabloid nonsense instead of on far more evidence than has been provided for SETI.
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