They'll simply conclude we invented the radio early, and didn't know about the other 20 yet.They won't find us as they'll be looking for a system with nine planets.
They'll simply conclude we invented the radio early, and didn't know about the other 20 yet.They won't find us as they'll be looking for a system with nine planets.
They won't find us as they'll be looking for a system with nine planets.
The position of the solar system is shown relative to a number of pulsars - I wonder how accurate that map is given current knowledge and how long before it becomes effectively useless - longer than the many tens of thousands of years it will take for the probe to pass by other stars?
The probes were launched when the influence of the hippy era was still prevalent. "Everone's got something to hide except me and my monkey."True but why put naked pictures on there?
True but why put naked pictures on there?
It's not meant to be titillating. (If you think an alien would get excited by a drawing of a naked human, you've been watching too much 50s sci fi...) In addition to saying, "This is where we are.", the plaque (and the golden record of Earth sounds and music) also says, "This is who we are." Clothes aren't actually physically part of the human body and distort an accurate depiction of the body. Besides, fashion changes, over time and by culture. Who decides what these images should wear to represent the whole human race? The Voyager probes were science probes. The information sent along with them should also be about science.
My comment was tongue in cheek. Sorry if people took that out of context as it was not the intention. I know any alien wouldn't be turned on by a line drawing. By then anyway who is to say the plaques survived? They could be damaged through travel.
Sorry, when you repeated the question, I assumed you were serious. Unfortunately, I've encountered people who are honestly offended by such things, so I leapt in zealously. My bad...
As far as the plaque (and recording) surviving millenia of dust and micrometeor bombardment, you're probably right. By the the time either of the Voyagers are anywhere near another star system, it'll be a pitted hunk of junk tumbling through space. Until some Klingon blasts it w/ phasers...![]()
Sorry to refer to a post made that far back but I only just discovered this thread.Not space junk but EM junk, a world like ours with telecommunications, TV, radio and all other forms of comms would be like a bright spot in the night sky if anyone wanted to find us.
Just look at what happens to a simple cell phone, wireless or HAM radio signal over a distance of few miles, particularly in foggy weather or during a sunstorm. The closest long wave radio station is perhaps 50 km from me as the crow flies and yet the signal is strongly contorted and often hardly readable. Even high frequency ultra short waves often get distorted at comparatively short distances, let alone > 100 lightyears.
73 from the other side of the pond
Sadly, I am no HAM myself (I thought 4 licenses including one DARC president in one family are more than enough) else we could have a QSO and discuss it directly, possibly even using JT9 - it sounds pretty cool. I might eavesdrop there a little, occasionally. What equipment would you recommend?
At the first glance you make a point that seems to contradict me but you forget to take into account that JT9 works by bouncing the signal off the ionosphere. It doesn't exit the ionosphere to enter space.
Also, I'd like to point out that it's only a rather short distance from the US to NZ and no gravitational lenses, black holes, dark matter, interstellar dust clouds, magnetic fields of other planets etc. are there to distort or dampen the signal. It's a bit like comparing a toddler's first steps with a marathon run. (No offense meant - I'm just trying to use an image non HAMs are familiar with.) Both are locomotion but the distance and the obstacles are wildly different.
Stars an be great gravitational lenses--not having just a focal point--but a focal line.
I have often wondered if the so-called Wow! signal was the result of Earth passing though a focal line briefly--although many think it was a singing comet type emission now.
The aliens are just as likely to be offended by the depiction of the naked spider-like creature.
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