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Is ET Hiding?

Other galaxies my contain extra-terrestrial life, but that life might be hiding. (NASA, Wikimedia Commons)
Other galaxies my contain extra-terrestrial life, but that life might be hiding. (NASA, Wikimedia Commons)

We are closer than ever to finding inhabited worlds. When an alien planet passes in front of its star, an event that's called a transit, there is a small dip in the intensity of starlight that astronomers use to detect the planet.

They hope to measure the composition of a planet's atmosphere by analyzing how starlight changes during a transit. This will give us key clues about whether the planet supports life. Once we know where the life-bearing planets are, we can focus our search for extraterrestrial civilizations.

Of course, there is also the possibility that the aliens are hiding from us. In 2016, two astronomers from Columbia University published an analysis. They found aliens could cancel the light dip that reveals their planet with lasers.

What's even more surprising is that this wouldn't even take that powerful of a laser. The researchers calculated that just 30 megawatts of laser power would be enough to hide from the Kepler Space Telescope's searches. That's less power than seventy homes use in a year. To hide from a more advanced telescope might take ten times more power.

This should all be taken with a healthy dose of scepticism, of course. Science is about claims that can be tested by experiment. The hypothesis that aliens are hiding isn't testable.

The astronomers were looking for ways aliens might signal their presence during a transit. They want to analyze transit data for signs of alien signaling. Along the way, they discovered how easy it would be to hide from detection.

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Y:        We are closer than ever to finding inhabited worlds. When an alien planet passes in front of its star, an event that's called a transit, there is a small dip in the intensity of starlight that astronomers use to detect the planet. They hope to measure the composition of a planet's atmosphere by analyzing how starlight changes during a transit. This will give us key clues about whether the planet supports life. Once we know where the life‑bearing planets are, we can focus our search for extraterrestrial civilizations.

D:        But, Yaël, what if the aliens are hiding from us?

Y:        Don't be silly, Don. How do you hide a whole planet?

D:        Its easier than you think. In 2016 two astronomers from Columbia University published an analysis. They found aliens could cancel the light dip that reveals their planet with lasers.

Y:        But wouldn't that take an absurdly powerful laser.

D:        Surprisingly, it wouldn't. The researchers calculated that just thirty megawatts of laser power would be enough to hide from the Kepler Space Telescope's searches. That's less power than seventy homes use in a year. To hide from a more advanced telescope might take ten times more power.

Y:        Don, science is about claims that can be tested by experiment. The hypothesis that aliens are hiding isn't testable.

D:        True. The astronomers where looking for ways aliens might signal their presence during a transit. They want to analyze transit data for signs of alien signaling. Along the way, they discovered how easy it would be to hide from detection.

Y:        Why would they want to hide?

D:        Yaël, we don't know what's out there. If we did, maybe we would want to hide too.

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Walker Rhea has a B.A. in Comparative Literature from Indiana University. In addition to reading and writing about science, he enjoys performing live comedy in Bloomington, IN and studying dead languages.