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Engineers model electric grid demand for EVs to charge while in motion

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 2:37pm
Running out of gas in a remote area far from a gas station is every driver's worst nightmare. A similar stressor, known as "range anxiety," exists for owners of electric vehicles who worry about how far their EV's can drive without running out of battery. As EVs become more common on roadways -- annual EV sales are estimated to reach 7.2 million by 2030 -- innovative new methods are being developed to more easily charge them.
Categories: Science

How Far Away Could We Detect… Ourselves?

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 12:39pm

Revelations from the past can seem quaint once we’ve been living with them for a generation or two. That’s true of the realization in the past that spawned SETI: the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence. Humanity realized that if we’re blasting radio signals out into the cosmos haphazardly, then other ETIs, if they exist, are probably doing the same.

It seems obvious now, but back then, it was a revelation. So, we set up our radio antennae and began scanning the skies.

The realization that other ETIs are probably sending out radio noise leads to the obvious question: How easily can hypothetical ETIs detect our radio signals and other technosignatures?

A fledgling space-travelling civilization similar to ours may be out there somewhere in the Milky Way. Maybe they have their own fledgling SETI program, complete with radiotelescope arrays scanning the sky for the telltale signs of another technological civilization.

If there is, and if they do, from how far away could they detect our technosignatures? New research is asking that question.

The research is titled “Earth Detecting Earth: At What Distance Could Earth’s Constellation of Technosignatures Be Detected with Present-day Technology?” It’s published in The Astronomical Journal, and Sofia Sheikh is the lead author. Sheikh is affiliated with the SETI Institute, the Penn State Extraterrestrial Intelligence Center, and Breakthrough Listen at UC Berkeley.

Nikola Tesla was one of the first to suggest communicating with beings on other planets. In 1899, Tesla thought he had detected a signal from Mars. In the early part of the 20th century, Guglielmo Marconi also thought he had heard signals from Mars. These potential signals were serious enough that when Mars was closest to Earth in 1924, the USA promoted a Radio Silence Day in order to better detect signals from Mars.

We know better now. The only signals we’ll detect will be from our own Martian rovers and orbiters. However, the basic idea of searching for radio signals from other worlds was planted, and people started taking it more seriously.

In 1971, NASA considered Project Cyclops, a plan to build an array of 1500 radio dishes to scan the cosmos for signals. Although it was never funded, it helped lead to the modern SETI.

It’s a simple matter to imagine that other civilizations followed a similar path and are now searching the sky for signals. In the new research in The Astronomical Journal, Sheikh and her co-researchers try to understand how one of these civilizations could detect our technosignatures if they had the same technology as we do in 2024.

“In SETI, we should never assume other life and technology would be just like ours, but quantifying what ‘ours’ means can help put SETI searches into perspective.”

Macy Huston, co-author, Dept. of Astronomy, UC Berkeley

This is important because similar research looks for advanced ETIs that are further along the Kardashev Scale, which many researchers think is probable. However, this means researchers have to do a lot of technological extrapolation. “In this paper, we instead turn our gaze Earthward, minimizing the axis of extrapolation by only considering transmission and detection methods commensurate with an Earth 2024 level,” the authors write.

It all boils down to simple questions: Can an ETI with our current technology detect our technosignatures? If the answer is yes, which of our signatures would they detect, and from how far away?

The researchers considered multiple types of different technosignatures, including radio transmissions, microwave signals, atmospheric technosignatures like NO2, satellites, and even city lights. They used a theoretical, modelling-based method in their effort, and they say they’re the first to analyze these technosignatures together rather than separately.

“Our goal with this project was to bring SETI back ‘down to Earth’ for a moment and think about where we really are today with Earth’s technosignatures and detection capabilities,” said Macy Huston in a press release. Huston is a co-author and postdoc at the University of California, Berkeley, Department of Astronomy. “In SETI, we should never assume other life and technology would be just like ours, but quantifying what ‘ours’ means can help put SETI searches into perspective.”

This table is a rough timeline of human technologies across different wavelengths and multimessenger approaches. Image Credit: Sheikh et al. 2025.

Imagine a hypothetical space probe travelling toward us from this hypothetical, technologically equivalent ETI. According to the researchers, the first technosignature they’d detect would come from our effort to detect potentially hazardous asteroids that might be headed for Earth. This is our planetary radar, like the signals coming from the now-defunct Arecibo Radio Observatory. These are detectable out to about 12,000 light years from Earth. That’s about the same distance away as the Tadpole Nebula.

The hypothetical space probe would have a long way to travel before it could detect our next technosignature. When it was about 100 light-years away, it would detect signals from NASA’s Deep Space Network that’s used to communicate with spacecraft we send out into the Solar System. 100 light-years away is about the same distance away as Alpha Pictoris, the brightest star in the Pictor constellation.

The alien spacecraft would hit paydirt at about four light-years away, around the same distance as our closest stellar neighbour, Proxima Centauri. At that distance, it would detect lasers, our atmospheric NO2 emissions, and even LTE signals.

The figure below illustrates how our current technology would detect our own technosignatures and at what distances.

This figure from the research shows the maximum distances that each of Earth’s modern-day technosignatures could be detected at using modern-day receiving technology. Image Credit: Sheikh et al. 2025.

“One of the most satisfying aspects of this work was getting to use SETI as a cosmic mirror: what does Earth look like to the rest of the galaxy? And how would our current impacts on our planet be perceived,” said Sheikh. “While, of course, we cannot know the answer, this work allowed us to extrapolate and imagine what we might assume if we ever discover a planet with, say, high concentrations of pollutants in its atmosphere.”

The research also illustrates how our own technosignature footprint is growing. According to the authors, it highlights “the growing complexity and visibility of the human impact upon our planet.”

It also shows that despite some second-guessing among the SETI community, it’s probably wise to focus our search on radio waves. “In this framework, we find that Earth’s space-detectable signatures span 13 orders of magnitude in detectability, with intermittent, celestially targeted radio transmission (i.e., planetary radar) beating out its nearest nonradio competitor by a factor of 103 in detection distance,” the authors write in their paper.

The authors also point out that we can begin to understand what an ETI might surmise about us based on our technosignatures. That can also serve as a mirror through which we can see ourselves. “It is possible for ETIs to hypothesize about our culture, society, biosphere, etc., from our unintentional technosignatures, and thinking through those possible hypotheses can help us interrogate how we are presenting ourselves to the galaxy: how we organize socially, how we relate to the world around us, how we perceive and experience things, and perhaps even what we value,” the authors explain in their research.

For example, they could correctly surmise that our species has no biological capacity to detect radio signals; otherwise, our world would be an unimaginably noisy cacophony of competing signals. Or, they may infer the reverse. “Conversely, our reliance on radio waves could make it natural for an alien species to wonder if it is because we can detect them biologically!” the authors write.

As in all things SETI and technosignature related, we’re left wondering.

However, with their “Earth detecting Earth” paradigm, Sheikh and her co-authors are at least giving us another way to examine one of our most quintessential questions: Are we alone?

Press Release: Earth Detecting Earth

Research: Earth Detecting Earth: At What Distance Could Earth’s Constellation of Technosignatures Be Detected with Present-day Technology?

The post How Far Away Could We Detect… Ourselves? appeared first on Universe Today.

Categories: Science

Why your headphone battery doesn't last

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 11:18am
Engineers took on the well-known battery challenge of degradation in a real-world technology that many of us use daily: wireless earbuds.
Categories: Science

Fights: fishes vs. birds

Why Evolution is True Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:50am

I am not particularly keen on seeing fish catching birds—or, indeed, seeing any animals eaten by others—but of cours that’s the way Nature works.  So here we see a 6½-minute BBC Earth video showing  terns in the Indian Ocean becoming possible meals for giant trevally (Caranx ignobilis).  It’s natural selection, Jake! But I’m still glad that the bird in the last segment escapes.

Categories: Science

Is cleaner air accelerating global warming more than we expected?

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:37am
Reductions in air pollution have helped warm the planet by cutting down on reflective particles in the atmosphere – but researchers still disagree on the size of this effect
Categories: Science

Pushing the boundaries of flat optics

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:25am
A research team has developed a novel multidimensional sampling theory to overcome the limitations of flat optics. The study not only identifies the constraints of conventional sampling theories in metasurface design but also presents an innovative anti-aliasing strategy that significantly enhances optical performance.
Categories: Science

Why do plants transport energy so efficiently and quickly?

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:25am
Photosynthesis -- mainly carried out by plants -- is based on a remarkably efficient energy conversion process. To generate chemical energy, sunlight must first be captured and transported further. This happens practically loss-free and extremely quickly. A new study shows that quantum mechanical effects play a key role in this process.
Categories: Science

Flipping the script: Inverse-design as game-changer in physics

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:24am
Physicists have achieved a breakthrough in data processing by employing an 'inverse-design' approach. This method allows algorithms to configure a system based on desired functions, bypassing manual design and complex simulations. The result is a smart 'universal' device that uses spin waves ('magnons') to perform multiple data processing tasks with exceptional energy efficiency. This innovation marks a transformative advance in unconventional computing, with significant potential for next-generation telecommunications, computing, and neuromorphic systems.
Categories: Science

Flipping the script: Inverse-design as game-changer in physics

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:24am
Physicists have achieved a breakthrough in data processing by employing an 'inverse-design' approach. This method allows algorithms to configure a system based on desired functions, bypassing manual design and complex simulations. The result is a smart 'universal' device that uses spin waves ('magnons') to perform multiple data processing tasks with exceptional energy efficiency. This innovation marks a transformative advance in unconventional computing, with significant potential for next-generation telecommunications, computing, and neuromorphic systems.
Categories: Science

Scientists develop groundbreaking biosensor for rare earth element detection

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:24am
Synthetic biologists have developed a prototype for an innovative biosensor that can detect rare earth elements and be modified for a range of other applications.
Categories: Science

AI-driven performance prediction model to advance space electric propulsion technology?

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:24am
A research team presents an AI assessor for Hall-effect ion thrusters, the engines of satellites and space probes.
Categories: Science

AI-driven performance prediction model to advance space electric propulsion technology?

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:24am
A research team presents an AI assessor for Hall-effect ion thrusters, the engines of satellites and space probes.
Categories: Science

AI-driven performance prediction model to advance space electric propulsion technology?

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:24am
A research team presents an AI assessor for Hall-effect ion thrusters, the engines of satellites and space probes.
Categories: Science

Quantum machine offers peek into 'dance' of cosmic bubbles

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:24am
Physicists have performed a groundbreaking simulation they say sheds new light on an elusive phenomenon that could determine the ultimate fate of the Universe.
Categories: Science

Partnership working key to unlocking EV battery recycling problem

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:22am
Recyclers, battery manufacturers, and electric vehicle manufacturers must work together to revolutionize lithium-ion battery (LIB) recycling processes to meet ever-growing demand for electric vehicles (EVs) and energy storage systems.
Categories: Science

Spinning neutron star gains enormous magnetic fields

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:21am
An international team of scientists have modelled formation and evolution of strongest magnetic fields in the Universe.
Categories: Science

Spinning neutron star gains enormous magnetic fields

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:21am
An international team of scientists have modelled formation and evolution of strongest magnetic fields in the Universe.
Categories: Science

Wobbling stars reveal hidden companions in Gaia data

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:21am
Using data from the European Space Agency's Gaia mission, scientists have found a huge exoplanet and a brown dwarf. This is the first time a planet has been uniquely discovered by Gaia's ability to sense the gravitational tug or 'wobble' the planet induces on a star. Both the planet and brown dwarf are orbiting low-mass stars, a scenario thought to be extremely rare.
Categories: Science

Nanomaterials are emerging as a powerful tool for coastal oil spill cleanup

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:21am
Advances in nanotechnology may provide solutions to oil spill cleanups in coastal regions that are more effective, safer and work much faster than current methods, according to a new paper. The paper synthesizes, reviews and analyzes between 40 and 50 studies on the subject to provide a big-picture look of the status of nanotechnologies in coastal oil spill response. The researchers also present their own suggestions and identifying research gaps between using nanomaterials in the lab and how they can be used in real-world applications.
Categories: Science

Listening for multiple mental health disorders

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 02/04/2025 - 10:20am
Researchers develop machine learning tools that screen for co-morbid anxiety disorders and major depressive disorder using acoustic voice signals. The team spoke to participants with and without co-morbid AD/MDD and recorded them using a secure telehealth platform. The participants were given a semantic verbal fluency test, in which they were required to name as many animals as possible within a time limit. The team extracted acoustic and phonemic features from the recordings and applied machine learning technique to distinguish subjects with and without comorbid AD/MDD. The results confirmed that a one-minute semantic VFT can be reliably used to screen for AD/MDD.
Categories: Science

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