![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Tom Potter wrote: Intelligent beings would develop transmitters and receivers, and come to understand modulation and digital communications, and they would eventually utilize digital communications extensively. As codes with good correlation properties are essential to effective and efficient digital communications, no doubt their transmissions would use Barker and Gold code sequences, as there are only a few codes that have good correlation properties. The best way to detect intelligent civilizations is to cross-correlate on these code sequences. Advance civilizations would also use the most effective compression systems, and their signals could be demodulated by decoding with the best systems. If you want to detect intelligent life, and find out what they are interested in, you should: 1. Scan the skies using high gain, tracking, antennas and low noise receivers and record the signals. 2. Run cross-correlations on all of the data using the set of Barker and Gold code sequences. 3. When signals are found, use advanced MP3 and MP4 type decoders to extract the unencoded data. I know that SETA has a program that uses home computers to analyze the data, but I don't know if they are looking for Barker and Gold code sequences. If they are not, they are wasting time and resources. -- Tom Potter Look, we estimate that the Milky Way Galaxy has 100,000 pulsars. We have observed and measured and recorded 2,000 of those pulsars. We know that both Earth and Jupiter transmit radio signals, one of them is Intelligent life Radio Emissions whereas Jupiter is a pulsar of 15 and 40 MHz. So the question then becomes of where does a "reasonable and Reasoned person" draw the line. Does a Reasonable person say that we have to check and observe every pulsar in the Milky Way Galaxy to see if there is a attending Earthlike radio emission in order to say "Earth is the only Intelligent Life Planet in the Milky Way". Or does a Reasonable person say that we have thoroughly checked 2% of the Milky Way of 2,000 pulsars and we find only Earth with Jupiter as having Intelligent Life and thus we form the **reasonable conclusion** that only Earth has intelligent life in all of the Milky Way. So Tom needs to ask at what point would his reason conclude that the Big Bang and Intelligent life does not fit with observations. According to Atom Totality, each galaxy has only one planet that can support intelligent life. This is because it takes so much energy from the Cosmos in whole to support and maintain life on a planet. The old way of thinking is that a star like the Sun is all the support that life needs. Trouble is that the star like the Sun cannot give "first life" since it does not have the concentration of energy to give "first life". And then once life is formed on a planet, a star like the Sun does not have enough energy to wield a "system of life where one organism depends on other organisms". That is why these math numbers that Earth has 10^30 cells of DNA/RNA and that the Force of Gravity is 10^40 weaker than Coulomb Force. So that the Solar System can be run and operated on purely the Force of Gravity allowing and leaving the Cosmos to run and operate LIFE on the Coulomb Force. I made the analogy of the Brain Stem to the entire rest of the Brain versus Gravity to Coulomb. This is an exceptionally good analogy, but there are other analogies which may strike an accord to other people better than this analogy. The Brain Stem runs the human body on auto pilot where it does the breathing the heart beating and other functions vital to life. This frees up the time for the rest of the brain such as cortex to do other things such as daydream, solve puzzles, do exploring and research and wild thinking. Analogously, Gravity can maintain the Solar System or the Milky Way Galaxy freeing up the time for the Coulomb Force to run and operate a solo planet of Earth with its teeming life. So the question for Tom Potter, is where does he come down as being "reasonable"? Does he need to check out every pulsar in the Milky Way of its alleged 100,000 pulsars to see whether there is a Earth-Jupiter combo in that 100,000 or is it reasonable for him to say we checked out 2,000 pulsars and found no Earthlike transmitter and so we can safely conclude Earth is the only Life Planet in the Milky Way. Archimedes Plutonium www.iw.net/~a_plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Potter'S Law | oldcoot[_2_] | Misc | 0 | June 5th 07 02:20 PM |
list of SETI programs ? | Thierry | SETI | 2 | December 1st 05 06:15 PM |
Reasonable Space Vehicle | Tom Kalvelage | Technology | 9 | August 20th 05 07:32 PM |
Tom Potter's Identity Revealed | CLT | Misc | 10 | March 27th 04 03:52 PM |
What is a reasonable telescope to buy in UK? | Steve | Misc | 4 | September 5th 03 06:47 AM |