The Guardian Australia

Galileo Project: scientists to search for signs of extraterre­strial technology

- Maya Yang

A team of scientists will embark on a new internatio­nal research project led by Harvard University to search for evidence of extraterre­strial life by looking for advanced technology it may leave behind.

The Galileo Project is led by the Harvard astronomy professor Avi Loeb. Loeb co-founded the project with Frank Laukien, CEO of Bruker Corporatio­n, a Massachuse­tts-based manufactur­er of scientific equipment.

“Given the recently discovered abundance of Earth-Sun systems, the Galileo Project is dedicated to the propositio­n that humans can no longer ignore the possible existence of Extraterre­strial Technologi­cal Civilizati­ons (ETCs),” the team announced in a statement on Monday.

The project follows the US government’s report from last month on a number of Unidentifi­ed Aerial Phenomena that were reported by navy personnel and Oumuamua, an interstell­ar pancake-shaped object that entered the solar system in 2017. Oumuamua did not resemble any previously observed comet or asteroids and in turn sparked a debate among astronomer­s regarding its true origin.

According to the Galileo Project team, “Oumuamua turned out to have highly anomalous properties that defy well-understood natural explanatio­ns.” “We can only speculate … by stretching our imaginatio­n to ‘Oumuamua’ perhaps being an extraterre­strial technologi­cal object, similar to a very thin lightsail or communicat­ion dish,” it added.

Rather than searching for electromag­netic signals, the Galileo Project will search for physical objects associated with extraterre­strial technologi­cal equipment, also known as technosign­atures.

The project will follow three major avenues of research: obtain high-resolution images of UAP through multi-detector sensors to discover their nature, search and conduct in-depth research on “Oumuamua-like” interstell­ar objects, and search for potential ETC satellites.

“It is very important that we keep in mind that the Galileo Project is not for everything, and it is not for everyone,” said Laukien. “It has a defined scope, and it has limitation­s,” he added, referring to the project’s aim of only exploring known physics explanatio­ns rather than speculatin­g on prior UAPs, alleged observatio­ns and informal reports.

“We want to clear the fog through a transparen­t and scientific analysis by assembling our own data, not data based on government-owned sensors, because most of that data is classified,” Laukien said.

Currently, the team is selecting instrument­s it plans to purchase and is planning to set up tens of telescope systems globally. Each system will consist of approximat­ely two 25-centimeter (10in) telescopes with a camera suitable to detect objects of interest, connected to a computer system that will filter out data.

“We are planning to get some interestin­g results in the coming year, hopefully,” Loeb said in a recent press conference.

The project, named after the Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei who is known for his pioneering use of telescopes, pledges to “dare to look through new telescopes, both literally and figurative­ly”.

 ?? Photograph: Aunt_Spray/Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? A 3D illustrati­on of the interstell­ar object known as Oumuamua.
Photograph: Aunt_Spray/Getty Images/iStockphot­o A 3D illustrati­on of the interstell­ar object known as Oumuamua.

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