In November 1974 when humans, after setting foot on the moon and conquered part of the sky, deciding to explore deeper into the open universe. A radio message was deliberately broadcast on using a strong Arecibo telescope in Puerto Rico which contained information about the basic chemicals of life, the DNA structure, where the earth was in our solar system, and human stick leaders.The message is still traveling with space. Nearly fifty years after the simple and elegant message, scientists want to send other broadcasts to extraterrestrial intelligence on the Galaxy Milky Way, if there is anything.
Antarintang messages have been proposed to be known as flares in galaxies, opening communication channels between human species and ETS. The team of scientists wants to broadcast simple principles for communication, basic concepts of mathematics, physics formulas, DNA constituents along with information about humans, earth, and sender’s addresses if someone wants to return.While broadcast 1974 was designed by Cornell Astronomy Professor Frank Drake along with Carl Sagan physicist, the latest effort was being led by Dr. Jonathan Jiang from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
The team proposes to broadcast these messages using a five-hundred meter ball radio telescope in China and the Allen Telescope Institute Array Seti in North California to the chosen area with the proposed Milky Way as the most likely to have developed. “This strong beacon, the successor to the Arecibo radio telescope which transmits a 1974 message where this expanded communication is partly based, can advance Arecibo’s legacy to the 21st century with equally built communication from the civilization of the earth’s technology,” the researchers hope .
In a paper, which Peer has not reviewed, and published in Arxiv, the team said that the message would have a digital picture of the solar system, the surface of the earth, and human form, along with invitations to respond.Astronomers have long worked to identify intelligent life in the Galaxy Bima Sakti. However, the results have not promised. NASA has detected more than 5000 worlds in our own galaxy with the possibility of conditions that can support life. But, learn all this world is not possible with current technology.
Opportunities for messages received by low-intelligent life forms and from them responding even lower. However, scientists still hope to find our place in the breadth of the cosmos when we continue to explore more space with plans to go beyond our solar system and explore the interstellar media.