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'Laser Cloak' Could Hide Earth from Evil Aliens
Space.com ^ | 3/31/16 | Sarah Lewin

Posted on 04/01/2016 1:05:26 AM PDT by LibWhacker

'Laser Cloak' Could Hide Earth from Evil Aliens

A new paper describes how laser beams could disrupt measurements of Earth's orbit around the sun, potentially deceiving inquisitive aliens. Here, a 22W laser used for adaptive optics shines from the Very Large Telescope in Chile. Credit: ESO/G. Hüdepohl

A simple laser beam could disrupt aliens' observations of Earth, making it look like there's nobody home on the third rock from the sun, a new study suggests.

David Kipping, an astronomer at Columbia University in New York, said he first considered this idea when he heard about the strangely dimming star that was detected recently by NASA's Kepler space telescope. Researchers speculated the signal could have come from an "alien megastructure" orbiting the star.

That's a remote possibility, many scientists stressed; the star's strange signal likely has a natural cause. But the Kepler observations got Kipping thinking about ways humanity could alter the signals it sends into space — or hide them altogether from life-hunting aliens, who may have malicious intentions. [13 Ways to Hunt Intelligent Aliens]

He and Columbia graduate student Alex Teachey concluded that it would be surprisingly easy to wipe out Earth's signal, distort it to look strange or even edit out the fingerprint of life — provided researchers knew the location of the snooping aliens.

"We essentially played the thought experiment that if we really had xenophobic tendencies and wanted to avoid the Earth being discovered (as Stephen Hawking and others have been warning about), could we hide the Earth from alien planet-hunters?" Kipping said in an email.

Watch the YouTube video (5m52s)

How to build a cloaking device

The key to Kipping and Teachey's thinking lies in the way humans have identified most planets around other stars, a process called the transit method. This strategy, which has most famously been employed by the Kepler spacecraft, detects tiny dips in the brightness of stars, which can indicate an orbiting planet.

The transit method could theoretically be used by alien civilizations to detect Earth, too. But there's a way to trip up such extraterrestrial searches, Kipping and Teachey said.

"To make it look like the planet is not there at all, you've got to get rid of that dip. You've got to fill in the missing starlight," Teachey said in an explanatory video.

NASA's Kepler space telescope uses small dips in a star's brightness to detect planets passing in front of the star. Each planet will leave a distinctive light signature. Credit: Alex Teachey/Columbia University via YouTube

Engineers could shine a very bright laser or collection of lasers toward a star suspected of hosting intelligent aliens during the time Earth was passing in front of the sun from the other planet's perspective. Then, aliens making measurements wouldn't see any change in solar brightness.

"I started to think about lasers," Kipping told Space.com. "Most people might have stopped there, because the sun emits so much light — how could you possibly produce a laser beam which could ever compete with the sun? But it turns out, when you actually run through the equations, it's really not that bad." [How to Discover an Alien Planet (Video)]

"We could build this next week if we wanted to," Teachey added.

To alter Earth's signature as seen by an alien version of Kepler, a laser system would have to emit 30 megawatts of power for about 10 hours per year, coinciding with Earth's passing in front of the sun, the duo calculated.

That equates to significantly less than the energy the International Space Station gathers in a year with its solar panels, Kipping said, or the energy used by about 70 homes over the course of a year. Such a laser system, either on Earth or in orbit, could charge its solar-powered batteries for most of the year and then release the high-powered blasts at just the right time, brightening when the sun's light would normally dim.

While a laser of that intensity hasn't been built before, the researchers said, such a cloaking system could also use multiple smaller lasers, all shining in the same direction. The alien star would be so distant that such a difference would be indistinguishable. Laser beams are tightly focused, but at greater distances, the beams will have grown large enough to require less precise aim.

But perhaps the most interesting use, the researchers said, would be as a "bio-cloak," which would actually use less power than would be required to totally conceal the planet. When a planet crosses its star's face, a little bit of light passes through the planet's atmosphere, and researchers can determine the atmosphere's makeup based on the wavelengths of that light. By sending laser beams that are the inverse of certain wavelengths, humanity could conceivably edit out the life-generated "biosignatures" in Earth's atmosphere, Kipping said.

"We can actually cancel those features out, such as oxygen," he said. "The alien civilization is going to detect your planetary transit. They're going to detect your planetary radial velocity, but then when they 'smell' the atmosphere, it would not look like a tasty planet. It would just look like a dead world."

While a planet that was fully cloaked could still be detected by other means, such as by the gravitational pull it exerts on its star, this kind of cloak would arouse less suspicion, because the planet would be there as expected, just without signs of life.

"We feel like this is the most deceptive cybercloaking you could possibly do, because then everything adds up — there's no missing piece to the puzzle," Kipping said. "And that would be a very difficult cloak to see." [10 Exoplanets That Could Host Alien Life]

Kipping and Teachey laid out their thinking in a study published Thursday (March 31) in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Many possibilities

Concealing Earth's existence from extraterrestrials, or announcing its presence with an artificial light curve, would work only if humanity knew or suspected where those aliens were living. But the concept is still intriguing as scientists look out to read other stars' light signatures and speculate about alien astronomers reading signals from Earth.

Kipping and Teachey suggested that alien civilizations could communicate with each other during transits by varying their light signatures, because individuals investigating a planet are likely to watch it as it passes in front of its star. Alien lasers could even encode information to transmit, the researchers said.

One possible next step, they added, would be to look more carefully through archival Kepler data to search for artificial signatures.

Jason Wright, an astronomer from Pennsylvania State University, recently published a paper about how scientists could identify advanced civilizations around other stars. "Alien megastructures" would dim stars more than expected, whereas lasers would tend to brighten them, but "we should look for both," Wright told Space.com.

"The fact that Kepler looked at 100,000 stars and didn't see much of anything along those lines suggests that that is pretty rare in the galaxy," Wright added. "And we should look more closely to see if there are things that aren't totally obvious."

In terms of this particular technology on Earth, "The only time it'd be useful for us is if we had some knowledge of alien civilizations along the thin strip of the sky that would see Earth transit the sun," he said.

Avi Loeb, who chairs the astronomy department at Harvard University in Massachusetts, told Space.com that the laser-cloaking method assumes researchers know where to look, that aliens aren't observing from moving spaceships and that putative extraterrestrial observers are mainly investigating planets by looking for transits across stars.

Energy demands would quickly grow as a civilization tried to hide from, or signal to, an increasing number of star systems, Loeb added. But the laser cloak is still an interesting new idea to add to the arsenal in the search for extraterrestrial life, he said.

"If there is a literature of ideas like this one, ideas that people proposed for potential signals that are artificial — the richer the literature is, the better it is," Loeb said. "The moment we find something artificial, it will change everything. It's good to have the imagination at work prior to seeing something unusual, so we are aware that there are possibilities beyond what we expect."

"I don't think anyone's thought of this particular application before," Wright said. "I think it just emphasizes how little energy is actually required to get someone's attention across the galaxy."


TOPICS: Astronomy; Science
KEYWORDS: aliens; cloak; earth; hide; laser
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1 posted on 04/01/2016 1:05:26 AM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3416045/posts

The BBC News version was already posted, but:

(1) You can never have enough laser-cloaking-device-as-protection-against-aliens articles, and

(2) The content in this article is different.

As scientific gibberish goes, this nonsense is particularly fun.


2 posted on 04/01/2016 1:14:04 AM PDT by Pollster1 (Somebody who agrees with me 80% of the time is a friend and ally, not a 20% traitor. - Ronald Reagan)
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To: Pollster1

can’t wait to see the comments and pictures in the morning :)

should be great.


3 posted on 04/01/2016 1:20:05 AM PDT by dp0622
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To: LibWhacker

Suppose the cloak makes the aliens think that Earth is composed of a crucial element needed for their dying civilization? Then what, eh?


4 posted on 04/01/2016 1:29:43 AM PDT by Ken H
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To: LibWhacker
Wow, well can we start spending tax payer money on it immediately then?

/s

< no, I didn't read any of the article >

5 posted on 04/01/2016 2:03:53 AM PDT by Bullish (Face it, insanity is just not presidential.)
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To: LibWhacker

Cool!! Now, can we please use it to cloak Colorado from invading liberals fleeing California?


6 posted on 04/01/2016 2:27:02 AM PDT by LittleBillyInfidel (This tagline has been formatted to fit the screen. Some content has been edited.)
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To: LibWhacker

Great-so after we have polluted the solar system airways with radio broadcasts for almost a hundred years—now our “brilliant” scientists want to hide the planet.

Too late—if the bad aliens want to find us they know where to find us.

And—we can’t seem to find any radio signals of our own out there.

There can be no doubt that in the intergalactic world advanced aliens are playing chess while we are playing checkers.


7 posted on 04/01/2016 2:37:05 AM PDT by cgbg (Epistemology is not a spectator sport.)
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To: cgbg

One other thought—Rupert Sheldrake has pointed out that human science is totally useless when dealing with intelligent life forms—science assumes that the dumb subject of its study will not try to subvert the study.


8 posted on 04/01/2016 2:39:28 AM PDT by cgbg (Epistemology is not a spectator sport.)
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To: cgbg

The evil aliens would have ignored us and left us alone,...UNTIL THEY OBSERVED THE LASER CLOAKING DEVICE WE NOW POSSESS!!

What in God’s name are they thinking???

<8^0


9 posted on 04/01/2016 2:41:36 AM PDT by Cvengr ( Adversity in life & death is inevitable; Stress is optional through faith in Christ.)
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To: LibWhacker

10 posted on 04/01/2016 2:47:11 AM PDT by COBOL2Java (Rubio: All the slipperiness of Bill Clinton, with none of the smarts.)
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To: LibWhacker

Simply no and no

These stupid thought experiments by those in academe get ridiculous


11 posted on 04/01/2016 2:52:41 AM PDT by Nifster (I see puppy dogs in the clouds)
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To: Pollster1

Last sentence is true

Also drives me nuts because these stupid star gazers know ZERO about lasers.


12 posted on 04/01/2016 2:57:11 AM PDT by Nifster (I see puppy dogs in the clouds)
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To: LittleBillyInfidel

Too late by several decades. What you need is a flux capacitor


13 posted on 04/01/2016 2:58:33 AM PDT by Nifster (I see puppy dogs in the clouds)
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To: LibWhacker
Twilight Imperium in 32 minutes
14 posted on 04/01/2016 3:05:04 AM PDT by Berlin_Freeper
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To: Nifster

Good point! Lol! (Plus, they can just follow their noses to get here, anyway.)


15 posted on 04/01/2016 3:07:55 AM PDT by LittleBillyInfidel (This tagline has been formatted to fit the screen. Some content has been edited.)
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To: LibWhacker

I’d rather they found a way to destroy space rocks headed our way. Don’t think aliens could get here from another solar system, but rocks have hit Earth in the past, and someday one will again.


16 posted on 04/01/2016 3:12:56 AM PDT by Hugin (Conservatism without Nationalism is a fraud.)
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To: LibWhacker

Fine, but how are you going to mask all of those reruns of I Love Lucy that are travelling out into deep space?


17 posted on 04/01/2016 3:25:27 AM PDT by Yo-Yo (Is the /sarc tag really necessary?)
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To: LibWhacker

Cool. How do we know that aliens detect planets the same way we do?


18 posted on 04/01/2016 3:29:43 AM PDT by cincinnati65
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To: Nifster
Too late by several decades. What you need is a flux capacitor

Does that measure how fluxed we are?

19 posted on 04/01/2016 3:41:28 AM PDT by Ken H
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To: LibWhacker

Where are you going to find enough dilithium crystals to power the thing?


20 posted on 04/01/2016 3:43:37 AM PDT by circlecity
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