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William Bacon's Breakthrough Intiative Page Index


INTRODUCTION

Status of the Deep Space Network

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About the Deep Space Network: Space Communications and Navigation

Information on About the Deep Space Network: Space Communications and Navigation

NASA's Digital Orrery

MAST: Barbara A. Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes

Map of the Universe from Johns Hopkins University and others.....

Johns Hopkins University (JHU) continues to pad its space community résumé with their interactive map, “The map of the observable Universe”, that takes viewers on a 13.7-billion-year-old tour of the cosmos from the present to the moments after the Big Bang. While JHU is responsible for creating the site, additional contributions were made by NASA, the European Space Agency, the National Science Foundation, and the Sloan Foundation.

JWST's weekly observing schedule:

NASA's Unverse of Learning
An Integrated AstroPhisics STEM Learning and Literacy program


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The Breakthrough Inititave

A Breakthrough Initiatives Launch Highlights Breakthrough






Published on Feb 16, 2016 To learn more about Breakthrough Listen and the Breakthrough Initiatives, visit The Breakthrough Initiatives were launched at the Royal Society in London on July 20, 2015. The Initiatives were announced by Yuri Milner, Stephen Hawking, Martin Rees, Frank Drake, Pete Worden and Ann Druyan. The Breakthrough Initiatives seek scientific evidence of life in the Universe. The first initiative is Breakthrough Listen, the most comprehensive, intensive and sensitive search ever undertaken for artificial radio and optical signals. It is a complete survey of the 1,000,000 nearest stars, the plane and center of our galaxy, and the 100 nearest galaxies. All data will be open to the public. Category Science & Technology License Standard YouTube License

Breakthrough Listen and NASA Team Up to Look for Signs of Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence!

This week, the non-profit research organization Breakthrough Listen announced that it was entering into a partnership with scientists from the NASA Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission. This new collaboration will direct the resources of the former with data and expertise of the latter to the search for extra-terrestrial intelligence (SETI) like never before!

Breakthrough Listen Inititive Database

Information on Breakthrough Listen Inititive Database


Artist concept of the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite and its four wide-field cameras. Credit: NASA/MIT

The Parkes Telescope in New South Wales, Australia. Credit: Roger Ressmeyer/Corbis

The SETI Institutes’s Allen Telescope Array (ATA), located in California. Credit: SETI

Illustration showing Breakthrough Listen’s facilities across the globe. Credit: Breakthrough Listen


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ARTICLES

Breakthrough listen

BREAKTHROUGH LISTEN TO COLLABORATE WITH SCIENTISTS FROM NASA’S TRANSITING EXOPLANET SURVEY SATELLITE (TESS)
TEAM TO LOOK FOR SIGNS OF ADVANCED EXTRATERRESTRIAL LIFE

Thousands of new planets found by TESS will be scanned for “technosignatures” by Breakthrough Listen partner facilities across the globe. Data from TESS monitoring of stars will also be searched for anomalies. San Francisco – October 23, 2019 – Breakthrough Listen, the initiative to find signs of intelligent life in the universe, announced today, at the International Astronautical Congress in Washington, DC, a new collaboration with scientists working on NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). The new collaboration will be led by TESS Deputy Science Director, MIT Professor Sara Seager; S. Pete Worden, Executive Director of the Breakthrough Initiatives; Dr. Andrew Siemion, leader of the Breakthrough Listen science team at the University of California, Berkeley’s SETI Research Center (BSRC); and will engage Listen partners and collaborators worldwide. The TESS and Listen collaboration will expand Breakthrough Listen’s target list (adding over 1000 “objects of interest” identified by TESS); refine Listen’s analysis strategy (for example, utilizing new knowledge about planetary alignments to predict when transmissions might be more likely to occur); and provide more meaningful statistics in the event of non-detections. Observations will take place using Listen’s primary facilities (the Green Bank and Parkes Telescopes1, 2, MeerKAT2, and the Automated Planet Finder), as well as partner facilities including VERITAS4, NenuFAR, FAST5, the Murchison Widefield Array, LOFAR stations in Ireland and Sweden, Jodrell Bank Observatory and e-MERLIN6, Keck Observatory, and the Sardinia Radio Telescope, along with the SETI Institute’s Allen Telescope Array7. “It’s exciting that the world’s most powerful SETI search, with our partner facilities across the globe, will be collaborating with the TESS team and our most capable planet-hunting machine,” remarked Dr. Worden. “We’re looking forward to working together as we try to answer one of the most profound questions about our place in the Universe: Are we alone?” The TESS mission measures “lightcurves” (how the brightness of stars changes over time) to look for telltale dips caused by “transits” – where a planet passes in front of the star as viewed from Earth. The cutting-edge instruments on TESS are sensitive enough to detect small, rocky planets similar to Earth. Such planets are prime targets for follow-up by NASA programs, such as the James Webb Space Telescope, that seek to measure planetary atmospheres. Careful measurements of atmospheric composition could result in the detection of “biosignatures” – indicators that biological processes may be taking place on worlds other than Earth. As well as looking for biosignatures, astrobiologists search for “technosignatures” – indicators of technology that may have been developed by advanced civilizations. Also known as SETI (the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence), technosignature searches use powerful telescopes to look for signals coming from space that appear to have arisen from transmitters, propulsion devices, or other engineering. No unambiguous technosignatures have been seen to date, but the chances of detection are higher than they have ever been, in large part due to Breakthrough Listen – the most sensitive, comprehensive, and intensive search for advanced life on other worlds ever performed8. Listen is using facilities across the globe, including cutting-edge optical telescopes, to search for powerful lasers, and the world’s most capable radio telescopes to search for signals over a wide range of the radio spectrum. In the past three decades over 4,000 exoplanets have been discovered – many by TESS’s predecessor, the Kepler spacecraft. According to recent estimates, the average number of planets per star is greater than one. As a result, technosignature searches operate in a “target-rich” environment, observing stars whether or not confirmed planets are known to exist around them. Nevertheless, as the haul of confirmed exoplanets continues to grow, the additional information about these systems is very useful for optimizing SETI strategies. Launched in April 2018, TESS has four wide-field cameras, each monitoring a region of sky 24 degrees across (about the width of the span of your hand when held at arm’s length). Lightcurves for 20,000 stars are measured every 2 minutes, and in addition, the brightness of every pixel in the cameras is recorded every 30 minutes. TESS will observe over 85% of the sky – around 400 times more than Kepler – and is predicted to find as many as 10,000 new planets. Most of the TESS targets are considerably closer to Earth than those viewed by Kepler, enabling technosignature searches to probe for fainter transmitters. And because TESS only sees planets that pass in front of their host star as viewed from Earth, all the planetary systems it detects will be edge-on. A large fraction (roughly 70%) of radio leakage from Earth-based transmitters is emitted in the plane of Earth’s orbit; if the same is true for any transmitters developed by extraterrestrial intelligence, observing the systems edge-on will offer the best chance of detection. In addition to targeting of TESS planets with Listen facilities, the TESS lightcurves themselves will be searched for anomalies. A planet transit produces a well-understood variation in detected light from the star, but large-scale engineering projects (for example, “megastructures” constructed in orbit) could block the stellar light in more complex ways. The TESS analysis pipeline is in essence a wide-field anomaly detector, and stars that behave strangely are interesting not just as technosignature candidates, but as potential laboratories for studying interesting astrophysics. “The discovery by the Kepler spacecraft of Boyajian’s Star, an object with wild, and apparently random, variations in its lightcurve, sparked great excitement and a range of possible explanations, of which megastructures were just one,” said Dr. Siemion. “Follow-up observations have suggested that dust particles in orbit around the star are responsible for the dimming, but studies of anomalies like this are expanding our knowledge of astrophysics, as well as casting a wider net in the search for technosignatures.” “We are very enthusiastic about joining the Breakthrough Listen SETI search,” said Prof. Sara Seager. “Out of all the exoplanet endeavors only SETI holds the promise for identifying signs of intelligent life.” Breakthrough Listen is a scientific program in search for evidence of technological life in the Universe. It aims to survey one million nearby stars, the entire galactic plane and 100 nearby galaxies at a wide range of radio and optical bands. The Breakthrough Initiatives are a suite of scientific and technological programs, founded by Yuri Milner, investigating life in the Universe. Along with Breakthrough Listen, they include Breakthrough Watch, an optical search for Earth-like planets in the habitable zones of nearby stars; and Breakthrough Starshot, the first significant attempt to design and develop a space probe capable of reaching another star. Yuri Milner founded DST Global, which has become one of the world’s leading technology investors and its portfolio has included some of the world's most prominent internet companies, such as Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, Snapchat, Airbnb, Spotify, Alibaba, and others. Yuri lives in Silicon Valley with his family. He graduated in 1985 with an advanced degree in theoretical physics and subsequently conducted research in quantum field theory. Yuri and his wife Julia have partnered with Sergey Brin, Priscilla Chan and Mark Zuckerberg, Pony Ma, and Anne Wojcicki to fund the Breakthrough Prizes – the world’s largest scientific awards, honoring important, primarily recent, achievements in Fundamental Physics, Life Sciences and Mathematics. In July 2015, together with Stephen Hawking, Yuri launched the $100 million Breakthrough Listen initiative to reinvigorate the search for extraterrestrial intelligence in the Universe; and in April 2016 they launched Breakthrough Starshot – a $100 million research and engineering program seeking to develop a technology for interstellar travel. More information about TESS: Berkeley SETI: : Breakthrough Initiatives For media inquiries: OR New York, New York Janet Wootten Rubenstein Communications, Inc./ +1.212.843.8024


Listen’s primary facilities include some of the most advanced radio and optical telescopes in the world, which monitor the skies regularly for signs of radio transmissions


Universe Today

Finding Aliens May Be Even Easier Than Previously Thought

The Green Bank Observatory In West Virginia

Information on The Green Bank Observatory In West Virginia


The Parkes Observatory in Australia



The Merkat Obsrvatoty

Information on The Merkat Obsrvatoty


The nenufar Observatory in Norway extension of lofar



The giant Fast Observatory In Mainland China


The Murchison Widefield Array



The lofar Observatory

Information on The lofar Observatory


Jordal Bank Observatory


Information on Jordal Bank Observatory


E-Merlin Observatory


The keck Observatory



The srt Observatory




The alan telescope array


The seti Institute's The alan telescope array



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