The SETI Institute's Allen Telescope Array (ATA) recently played host to 16 scientists, engineers, and technologists who gathered for a three-day "hackathon" to develop novel capabilities for the ...
Decentralized physical infrastructure connects independently operated telescopes into a coordinated observing network ...
SETI's 1977 "Wow!" signal from deep space was even stronger than originally thought, but its source remains a complete ...
You can knock a good telescope out, but you can't keep it down. Using data from the now-destroyed Arecibo radio telescope, scientists from the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) Institute ...
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Let the search for extraterrestrial life resume! Back in April, the SETI Allen Telescope Array was shut down due to lack of funding. Now, the institute’s search for extraterrestrial life is set to ...
The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI(Opens in a new window)) Institute's Allen Telescope Array (ATA(Opens in a new window)), located at the Hat Creek Radio Observatory, California, has ...
While alien hunting is often associated with tinfoil hats and flying saucers, the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence ...
Today, April 11, 2006, The Planetary Society dedicated a new optical telescope at an observatory in Harvard, Massachusetts — one designed solely to search for light ...
After 20 years of listening for signs of life elsewhere in the universe, The Planetary Society is now ready to watch the skies. On April 11, 2006 the Society will dedicate a brand new optical ...
The search for extraterrestrial civilizations has gotten a major boost as SETI joins forces with the National Science Foundation’s Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) near Socorro, New Mexico. It ...
Due to funding cuts, SETI’s Allen Radio Telescope Array will no longer be scanning the skies for signs of intelligent life. All the group needs is $5 million to keep working. Sound like a lot? Not ...