First Contact
First Contact
Over a century ago, the astronomer Percival Lowell thought that he had glimpsed artificial canals on Mars and the radio pioneer Nikola Tesla believed that he had intercepted a Martian radio broadcast. Later attempts to signal Mars by means of huge bonfires and powerful radio broadcasts proved unsuccessful. Today people realize that although remnants of microbial life
may exist within the solar system, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) must extend to distant stars.
Search Strategies
Microwave SETI, which uses radio telescopes, was popularized in Carl Sagan's novel Contact (1985) and in the 1997 Jodie Foster movie of the same name. Dish antennas collect faint microwaves that are fed into receivers that scan billions of channels simultaneously. Computers flag the signals that merit a closer look. Some astronomers have employed optical SETI and use optical telescopes fitted with special devices to hunt for flashes from extraterrestrial lasers pointed toward Earth. There are other search strategies, but because these two are in widespread use, they have the greatest chance of success. Most likely, first contact will involve intercepting a faint signal from a civilization many light-years away.
Initial Reactions
So many people have become used to the idea that "we are not alone" that intercepting a signal from another solar system is unlikely to cause widespread psychological meltdown or social collapse. Indeed, when a prankster convinced the media that a microwave search had located ET, the public was not upset. An authenticated discovery would prove that humans are the product of processes that are not limited to Earth. Scientists estimate that the average extraterrestrial civilization could be about a billion years older than that on Earth. Finding such an old-timer would prove that civilizations can survive population growth, resource depletion, atomic warfare, and other threats. This would renew hope for the future of human society.
What We Might Learn
In light of the likely differences between two civilizations that are located in different parts of the galactic neighborhood, those civilizations may have
trouble recognizing each other, let alone communicating. Still, an ancient civilization may have solved the problem of communicating with a civilization such as Earth's, or after years of research, humans may learn to communicate with creatures that are not from around here. Our reactions will be shaped by our impressions of the alien civilization's capabilities, intentions, and desire to travel to Earth. These reactions will depend on our expectations, whether the discovery occurs during a time of peace or war, how the media handle the story, as well as other considerations.
Most discussions of first contact are optimistic and suggest benefits for humankind. Earth's new acquaintances might share practical ways to solve energy needs, cure illnesses, and eliminate crime. Their advanced ideas could have a deep and lasting impact on our philosophy, science, religion, and the arts. Learning about their ways could transform the way people think about themselves and prompt humans to redefine their place in the universe. Of course, contact may never occur or may proceed in a less pleasant way. If generations of searches fail, people will come to grips with the reality that humans are alone. Perhaps in the very distant future, as an advanced space-faring civilization, humankind will fill the universe with intelligent life.
see also Life in the Universe, Search for (volume 2); SETI (volume 2).
Albert A. Harrison
Bibliography
Billingham, John. Societal Implications of the Detection of an Extraterrestrial Civilization. Mountain View, CA: SETI Institute, 1999.
Dick, Steven J. The Biological Universe: The Twentieth Century Extraterrestrial Life Debate and the Limits of Science. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
Harrison, Albert A. After Contact: The Human Response to Extraterrestrial Life. New York: Plenum, 1997.
Shostak, Seth. Sharing the Universe: Perspectives on Extraterrestrial Life. Berkeley, CA:Berkeley Hills Books, 1998.
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The Tower; New Book Involves Missing Children and Hollywood.
M2 Presswire; 12/18/2002; 607 words
; ...1stBooks Library), by Catherine Lane Salter, will take you through a...sinister tower of death! Catherine Lane Salter has lived in eastern North...life. She is a distant relative of Sir Ralph Lane, a historical figure under whose...
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Authorities probe string of car thefts, break-ins: All 40 vehicles plundered and the four stolen in Poquoson this past week were unlocked.
Newspaper article from: Daily Press (Newport News, VA); 1/10/2007; 668 words
; ...stolen, Buffington said. On Monday night, 22 vehicles were rifled through along streets such as Little Florida Road, Sir Ralph Lane and White House Drive, Buffington said. Police have boosted night patrols to crack down on the thefts. Eight police...
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A tale of English buccaneers, bloodshed, natives and nicotine
Newspaper article from: Evening Standard - London; 7/31/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...from home, were the mixed-blood offspring of Sir Walter Raleigh's failed colonial experiment...concentrates on the stories of Sir Humfrey Gilbert, Sir Walter Raleigh, Sir Richard Grenville, Ralph Lane and the London miniature portraitist John White...
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List of Nobel Peace Prize winners.
News Wire article from: United Press International; 10/11/2002; 700+ words
; ...Leon Jouhaux, France. 1950 -- Ralph Bunche, United States. 1949...Henderson, United Kingdom. 1933 -- Sir Norman Angell (Ralph Lane), United Kingdom. 1932 -- The...Stresemann, Germany. 1925 -- Sir Austen Chamberlain, United Kingdom...
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LIST OF NOBEL PEACE PRIZE WINNERS
News Wire article from: United Press International; 10/8/2004; 700+ words
; ...Leon Jouhaux, France. 1950 -- Ralph Bunche, United States. 1949...Henderson, United Kingdom. 1933 -- Sir Norman Angell (Ralph Lane), United Kingdom. 1932 -- The...Stresemann, Germany. 1925 -- Sir Austen Chamberlain, United Kingdom...
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LATE ARRIVAL LIKELY DOOMED LOST COLONY.(CAROLINA COAST)
Newspaper article from: The Virginian Pilot; 7/27/2001; 700+ words
; ...hoeing and sowing. Sir Walter Raleigh's first...gloriously for weeks. Sir Richard Grenville deposited Gov. Ralph Lane and 107 colonists on...natives and the shipping lanes. Besides, it was too...shucked oysters. But Sir Francis Drake's offer...
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Anniversaries
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 10/7/1999; 507 words
; ...Archbishop of Canterbury, 1573; Major- General Sir Ralph Abercromby, soldier, 1734; Wilhelm Bernhard...Alfredo Arnold Cocozza), singer, 1959; Sir Norman Angell (Ralph Norman Angell Lane), writer and journalist, 1967. On this day...
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Ralph Lane's 1586 Discourse on the First Colony: The Renaissance Commercial Report as Apologia.(Communication)
Magazine article from: Technical Communication; 5/1/2004; ; 486 words
; Ralph Lane's 1586 Discourse on the First Colony...communication quarterly 12:125-154. "In 1584 Sir Walter Raleigh received from Queen Elizabeth...plant a colony under the governorship of Ralph Lane on Roanoke Island near what is now the Outer...
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"Strange wives": Pocahontas in early modern colonial advertisement.
Magazine article from: Mosaic (Winnipeg); 9/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...negative publicity produced by the abject failure of the earlier colonial settlements on Roanoke, namely, the Ralph Lane Colony, founded by Sir Richard Grenville and abandoned in 1586 due to famine and lack of support from England, and the so-called...
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Big Chief Elizabeth: The Adventures and Fate of the First English Colonists in America
Magazine article from: The Virginia Quarterly Review; 4/1/2001; ; 407 words
; ...of prominent Elizabethan figures like Sir Humphrey Gilbert, Sir Walter Raleigh, Sir Francis Drake and Sir Richard Grenville and including gifted characters like Ralph Lane, John White, and Thomas Harriot. A...
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Sir Ralph Lane
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Sir Ralph Lane c.1530-1603, leader of the first attempted...America, on Roanoke Island , N.C. Sent by Sir Walter Raleigh , the expedition of over...in a fleet of seven ships commanded by Sir Richard Grenville. The group landed on...
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Lane, Sir Ralph
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Literature
Lane, Sir Ralph (c.1530–1603), English maritime adventurer and American colonist, governed the Roanoke Island colony (1585–86), of which he wrote a glowing report, published in Hakluyt's The Principall Navigations ….
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Ralph Norman Angell Lane
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Ralph Norman Angell Lane see Angell, Sir Norman .
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Roanoke Island
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...Philip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe, exploring for Sir Walter Raleigh in 1584, brought back such glowing...Raleigh dispatched a colonizing expedition under Sir Richard Grenville and Sir Ralph Lane. The colonists landed on Roanoke Island in Aug...
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Philip Amadas
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...1618, English navigator. With Arthur Barlowe he was sent by Sir Walter Raleigh in 1584 to explore the North American coast. Their...Island, N.C., led to the colonizing expedition (1585) under Sir Richard Grenville and Sir Ralph Lane .
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