JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
- Messages
- 27,766
How far away we can detect a signal is more a function of the transmitter than the receiver. If some distant civilization was working to make themselves known, they could arrange a single we couldn't miss.
Even so, the amount of searching we've done is infinitesimally small. If they're 150 plus light years away, it would take 150 years for their signal to reach us. When you get further away than that, obviously, the transit time takes even longer. We've only been able to produce radio signals ourselves for about 100 years.
For it to be likely that we'd receive signals from another civilization would mean they'd have to have been transmitting for at least the amount of time it takes a signal to reach us (or at least that long ago--we could get signals from a civilization that no longer exists).
I think the question is, are there other intelligences like us. So, we'd have to assume that their ability (and willingness) to transmit a signal is about the same as ours. How far away could our civilization be detected? And for how long?
It's a needle in the haystack.
ETA: Or even thousands or tens of thousands of needles in a really gigantic haystack. And some of the needles appear and disappear in relatively short periods of time--or possibly in periods of times shorter than the time it takes light from the needles to reach our eyes. OK, the analogy sucks. . . .
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