""A unique hybrid of science and conjecture as the author looks at SETI methods and search tactics and presents some interesting and refreshingly new ideas.... Thought-provoking and original.” -AstroGuyz “Advising reliance on scientific methods over fantastical thinking, Ashpole urges us to continue ‘trying to discover the status of our lives and our world in the immensity of the universe.’” -Publishers Weekly “A very enjoyable book.... Ashpole is noticeably good at getting complex ideas across in clear, simple prose.” -Open Letters Monthly
Description
An intriguing overview of the ways in which science could find evidencefor extraterrestrial life Are we alone in the universe, oris life a universal phenomenon?For fifty years,astronomers in SETI (Search for ExtraterrestrialIntelligence) have scanned the universe for intelligent signals, but with no success. In this intriguing book, Edward Ashpole explains the probable reasons for this and discusses other avenues of investigation more in line with the nature of science and technology. The author examines the problems inherent in scanning the universe for radio or optical signals from an alien intelligence. Theseinclude the difficulty of trying to communicate with another species possessing a completely unknown form of technology and the vast distances that alien communications would have to travel to reach us. This leads Ashpoleto other ways of finding evidence for extraterrestrial life, giventhat advanced civilizations would probably use artificial intelligenceforinterstellar travel. Our scientists now know how to detect the presence of life on a planet by observing its spectral lines, so more advanced alien researchers would have had ample time (about two billion years) to investigate these "signatures of life" coming from Earth. Hence, the author argues, alien space probes could exist within our own solar system; there might be evidence on the erosion-free Moon or on another moon or planet. In fact, a few scientists have scannedNASA's best photography,looking for evidence of such "alien archaeology." In a final chapter, the author urges an open-minded attitude on the part of scientists to allcredible sources ofinformation, along with the use of the scientific method to test various hypothesesand weed out the fantasy factor, which so often interferes with seriousattempts to find hard evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence. Informative and fascinating, Signatures of Life delves into a topic thatoften provokes wild speculation in a thought-provoking yet scientifically responsible way.