Tech-crash threatens to take down SETI@home

The future of SETI@home, an Internet-based distributed computing experiment to find radio signals from intelligent alien life-forms, is in serious danger as academics behind the project face a funding crisis.

Australian scientists early next year were to be given a prominent role in the project to record data from radio telescopes and distribute it to 4 million PCs volunteered to analyse it. However that plan appears set to fail along with the entire project unless organisers can raise the sponsorship SETI@home needs to survive.

SETI@home chief scientist, University of California-based Dan Werthimer, has told SETI (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence) Australia chairman, Dr Frank Stootman, that all work on SETI@home II, which would see radio data recording equipment installed at the Parkes telescope facility in NSW, had stopped until funding dollars to save the global experiment were found.

"I'm sorry we haven't been working on SETI@home II at Parkes," wrote Werthimer in an apologetic e-mail to his antipodean colleague. "Our funding is drying up and we are very uncertain about the future of SETI@home I and II".

Werthimer said that SETI@home engineers had finished building a multi-beam down-converter and data recorder for Parkes but said that the project's organisers had no money to follow through on the work.

Werthimer has laid the blame for the funding drought squarely at the feet of tough economic times.

"I'm working hard trying to raise more funds, but as you know, it's not an easy time to raise money.

"Sorry things are so uncertain", he wrote.

The CSIRO Australian Telescope National Facility's Time Assignment Committee has already approved the installation of the equipment at Parkes. Chairman of the allocation committee, Professor Ray Norris, said he was not aware SETI@home was in danger of running out of funds.

The revelation comes at a time when there are indications that relations between SETI@home organisers and their home institute, University of California Berkeley campus, are strained.

According to sources close to ATNF, Berkeley may not be hosting the site that distributes data with the best graces.

"I know that the Berkeley isn't happy that its site is getting hammered by all these people wanting data because it creates a lot of traffic that they have to pay for," said the source.

Dr Stootman said it would be a terrible loss for the Australian astronomers if SETI@home could no longer survive. The situation has compelled Stootman to send out a plea for financial support to help ensure the future the project.

"If there are philanthropists who think the project is worthwhile, I would, on behalf of SETI Australia and UC Berkeley, gratefully receive it," he said.

SETI@home's current sponsor list includes Sun Microsystems, The Planetary Society, Fujifilm, IBM, Intel, Hewlett-Packard, Quantum Corporation, Network Appliance and Informix.

US-based SETI scientists have held plans to host a data recording equipment at Parkes for over a year.

The Parkes facility is more powerful than that currently used to record the data at Arecibo, Peurto Rico and its addition would widen the search for extra-terrestrials to the Southern Hemisphere.

By harnessing the collective power of the PCs the project can approximate the work of supercomputers, vastly improving the probability of discovering intelligent extraterrestrial life.

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Talkback 3 comments

    Doubt little green men out there. Though I'm an avid fan of the X-Files; as a result of recent experiences in my life, and due to other facts, I seriously doubt the existence of intelligent life out there. One key issue that casts doubt on the existence oAnonymous -- 16/10/02

    Doubt little green men out there. Though I'm an avid fan of the X-Files; as a result of recent experiences in my life, and due to other facts, I seriously doubt the existence of intelligent life out there. One key issue that casts doubt on the existence of extra-terrestrials, is the fact that sightings of UFOs seem to have all taken place after man reached super-sonic speeds in aircraft. Also, I think if it was relatively easy for intelligent life similar to our own to appear throughout our galaxy, there would be more creatures having slightly lesser intelligence than ourselves around. As it is, primates have near identical DNA makeup as our own, yet their intelligence simply do compare to ours. The odds of finding creatures on planets that can sustain life, having biological compositions that are able to express intelligence comparable to our own, are simply way too high.

    "Also, I think if it was relatively easy for intelligent life similar to our own to appear throughout our galaxy, there would be more creatures having slightly lesser intelligence than ourselves around." Why? Sure, chimp DNA is remarkAnonymous -- 18/10/02

    "Also, I think if it was relatively easy for intelligent life similar to our own to appear throughout our galaxy, there would be more creatures having slightly lesser intelligence than ourselves around."

    Why? Sure, chimp DNA is remarkably similar to our own, but that 1% difference is what makes us different. Just because Homo Sapiens took a different evolutionary path than the chimps doesn't mean that intelligent life elsewhere is completely out of the question.

    There are about 100 billion stars in our galaxy alone. Of those, G-type stars like our sun make up a large portion of that population. On that information alone I think it's reasonable to deduce that around at least one of those stars a planetary accretion disk formed (and recent discoveries of Jupiter-like planets orbiting other stars shows that very possible), and that from that disk formed a rocky planet the right distance from the star with the right environmental conditions for life to form.

    The problem is the distances involved. Even if we do receive a transmission from another star system that shows intelligence, chances are in the time it took that transmissione to reach earth, the beings who sent it are more than likely long gone.

    We aren't looking for little green men who can travel faster than light and abduct lifeforms from earth. We're just looking for some sign that we are not unique in the universe.

    Do I think intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe? Most definately. Do I think they visit, abduct and probe certain orafices of the human race? Not likely. Do I think we'll ever see a sign that other intelligence exists in the universe? I'd like to think yes, and I think the search is well worth the effort.

    Whether you expect SETI@home will find anything or not, you can still donate processing time. If you think that nothing will be found, then help complete the processing and show the world yourself. If you think something will be found, run a few workuniAnonymous -- 11/11/02

    Whether you expect SETI@home will find anything or not, you can still donate processing time. If you think that nothing will be found, then help complete the processing and show the world yourself. If you think something will be found, run a few workunits and show the world yourself. No matter which outcome you expect, you can still contribute. It's a great idea simply for that reason.

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