Write to Galaxies
Treat galaxies like CD drives to send directional laser updates of our civilization, and survive in the minds of the distant future civilizations.
Given that METI (MEssaging to Extraterrestrial Intelligence) is generally thought to be risky [*], it may be unlikely to have those civilizations try to signal to all the stars in the Milky Way, and upon picking up such signals, they would likely keep silence to keep strategic advantages.
So, statistically and from risk analysis perspective, we'd probably have better odds at discovering aliens by searching for them in other galaxies (not in Milky Way).
Imagine that we do intercept an informative signal of an intelligent civilization somewhere out there in the Andromeda galaxy. We'd know something very special, down to a particular star system, and we'd be guessing, whether it still exists, because it happened 2.5 million years ago. We'd probably even feel safe to send a signal back, and continue broadcasting, especially if the signal that we picked up were to be periodic like blog updates about that civilization.
If the signals from aliens in another galaxy were periodic and lasting, with new bits of information every time, it would certainly be something that stays breaking the news here in the Solar system. Inspired by that, a project from our side could be to set up powerful lasers, pointed to the nearby galaxies, and broadcasting our status like that not to our local, but to the future civilizations that don't yet exist in other galaxies.
A single laser could send out bursts of packages to cover entire Andromeda, treating Andromeda like a CD drive, and using same techniques to write to CD drive with a laser (just more bits per dot), over a period of say, a month, and repeat that. This way, all the civilizations in the Andromeda galaxy, in the line of sight to the Milky Way could get monthly updates. That would certainly increase the odds of them discovering us, and if other civilizations in other galaxies had the same way of thinking, and pointed their lasers to the Milky Way, perhaps we just need more powerful telescopes to pick that up: the intergalactic chatter might actually be a real phenomenon, that happens, cause: over very large distances, even the potential enemies have enough time to become friends.
It's amazing to think, that "if you take our most powerful lasers, and our largest mirrors, and pair them together, for a fraction of a second, they can produce light that outshines the Sun by factors of a thousand at more than a thousand light-years away." -- so the method that this particular way implies, is that of using such extremely directional lasers, to make them see a new star appearing and flickering in the Milky Way, so that, with sufficiently large telescopes they could read our "blog posts" from.
"There's a plausible chance that we may be alone in the galaxy right now. But the odds that the galaxy has never, and will never, host other civilizations is far less likely. Today we explore the possibility of communicating through time, and how such a feat might be accomplished."
(video presentation by Robin Hanson, George Mason University)
"A recent rethink of the Arecibo message and how we might contact an alien civilization." by John Michael Godier
Again, asking the people to weight-in on METI.
A mailing list as a buffer for future messages to aliens.
Собираетесь ли вы отправить «Блог Земли / Земное радио» лазерного канала в Галактику Андромеды?
:)
是要向仙女座星系发送激光频道的“地球博客/地球广播”吗? :)
Ну, идея что-то в этом роде. Ну, мы могли бы выбрать набор ближайших галактик, чтобы сделать это.
Well, the idea is something like that. Well, we could choose a set of closest galaxies to do that.
Близкая галактика ... Большое Магелланово Облако ... 160 000 световых лет от нас ...
附近的星系……大麦哲伦星系……16万光年远……
LMC, вероятно, слишком близко, и поэтому может считаться опасным для сообщения.
И ... если мы отправим самую полезную информацию для выживания информации, мы бы назвали это - межгалактическая любовь, поскольку на самом деле может быть [общая цель] (https://blog.mindey.com/2017/01 / 03 / спасаясь-энтропийный-черная дыра-вместе /
LMC is probably too near, and thus may be considered dangerous to message to.
And,... if we send the most useful information for survival of information, would we call this -- intergalactic love, as there actually may be a common goal of preserving information. Additionally, if we do start think together as a civilization, what to send to the future civilizations, it may help us as a civilization politically.
Зная, что зеленые звезды не могут существовать во Вселенной естественным образом, мы могли бы целенаправленно создать зеленую звезду (ссылка ведет на видео, в котором рассказывается, почему зеленые звезды могут не существует) с зеленым лазером, чтобы он казался зеленым тому, кто смотрит галактику Млечный Путь с Андромеды;) С другой стороны, возможно, тот факт, что мы и жизнь на Земле в первую очередь видим в визуальном спектре, довольно случайен - кто бы там мог специально искать звезды с длиной волны 520 или 532 нм?
Knowing that green stars can't exist naturally in the Universe, we could purposefully make a green star (link leads to a video answering why green stars can't exist) with a green laser to appear green to someone viewing MilkyWay galaxy from Andromeda ;) On the other hand, perhaps the fact that we and life on Earth primarily sees in the visual spectrum is quite random, -- who out there would be looking specifically for stars with 520 or 532 nm wavelength light?
Думая о периодичности отправки сигналов: вероятно, средний период обращения планет в обитаемых зонах, разделенный на число от 6 до 12, может быть хорошим началом. Это предполагает, что большинство технологических цивилизаций развили конечности, похожие на руки, которые имели от 3 до 6 пальцев на каждой, и, вероятно, использовали их в качестве исходной базы для подсчета и деления своего года (орбитального периода) на это количество частей в исходной базе. .
Thinking of periodicity of sending signals: probably median orbital period of planets within habitable zones divided by a number between 6 and 12 could be a good start. This is assuming that most technological civilizations will have evolved hand-like limbs, which had from 3 to 6 fingers each, and likely used them as reference base for counting and dividing their year (orbital period) into this number of parts in the reference base.