Berkeley conducts 7 SETI programs at IR, visible and radio wavelengths. Here
we review two of the newest efforts, Astropulse and Fly's Eye.
A variety of possible sources of microsecond to millisecond radio pulses have
been suggested in the last several decades, among them such exotic events as
evaporating primordial black holes, hyper-flares from neutron stars, emissions
from cosmic strings or perhaps extraterrestrial civilizations, but to-date few
searches have been conducted capable of detecting them.
We are carrying out two searches in hopes of finding and characterizing these
mu-s to ms time scale dispersed radio pulses. These two observing programs are
orthogonal in search space; the Allen Telescope Array's (ATA) "Fly's Eye"
experiment observes a 100 square degree field by pointing each 6m ATA antenna
in a different direction; by contrast, the Astropulse sky survey at Arecibo is
extremely sensitive but has 1/3,000 of the instantaneous sky coverage.
Astropulse's multibeam data is transferred via the internet to the computers of
millions of volunteers. These computers perform a coherent de-dispersion
analysis faster than the fastest available supercomputers and allow us to
resolve pulses as short as 400 ns. Overall, the Astropulse survey will be 30
times more sensitive than the best previous searches. Analysis of results from
Astropulse is at a very early stage.
The Fly's Eye was successfully installed at the ATA in December of 2007, and
to-date approximately 450 hours of observation has been performed. We have
detected three pulsars and six giant pulses from the Crab pulsar in our
diagnostic pointing data. We have not yet detected any other convincing bursts
of astronomical origin in our survey data. (Abridged)Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, Accepted to Acta Astronautica "Special Issue:
Life Signatures