A Search for Technosignatures Around 11,680 Stars with the Green Bank Telescope at 1.15–1.73 GHz
Author:
Margot Jean-LucORCID, Li Megan G.ORCID, Pinchuk PavloORCID, Myhrvold NathanORCID, Lesyna LarryORCID, Alcantara Lea E., Andrakin Megan T., Arunseangroj Jeth, Baclet Damien S., Belk Madison H., Bhadha Zerxes R., Brandis Nicholas W., Carey Robert E., Cassar Harrison P., Chava Sai S., Chen Calvin, Chen James, Cheng Kellen T., Cimbri Alessia, Cloutier Benjamin, Combitsis Jordan A., Couvrette Kelly L., Coy Brandon P., Davis Kyle W., Delcayre Antoine F., Du Michelle R., Feil Sarah E., Fu Danning, Gilmore Travis J., Grahill-Bland Emery, Iglesias Laura M., Juneau Zoe, Karapetian Anthony G., Karfakis George, Lambert Christopher T., Lazbin Eric A., Li Jian H., Li Zhuofu (Chester), Liskij Nicholas M., Lopilato Anthony V., Lu Darren J., Ma Detao, Mathur Vedant, Minasyan Mary H., Muller Maxwell K., Nasielski Mark T., Nguyen Janice T., Nicholson Lorraine M., Niemoeller Samantha, Ohri Divij, Padhye Atharva U., Penmetcha Supreethi V., Prakash Yugantar, Qi Xinyi (Cindy), Rindt Liam, Sahu Vedant, Scally Joshua A., Scott Zefyr, Seddon Trevor J., Shohet Lara-Lynn V., Sinha Anchal, Sinigiani Anthony E., Song Jiuxu, Stice Spencer M., Tabucol Nadine M., Uplisashvili Andria, Vanga Krishna, Vazquez Amaury G., Vetushko George, Villa Valeria, Vincent Maria, Waasdorp Ian J., Wagaman Ian B., Wang Amanda, Wight Jade C., Wong Ella, Yamaguchi Natsuko, Zhang Zijin, Zhao Junyang, Lynch Ryan S.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract
We conducted a search for narrowband radio signals over four observing sessions in 2020–2023 with the L-band receiver (1.15–1.73 GHz) of the 100 m diameter Green Bank Telescope. We pointed the telescope in the directions of 62 TESS Objects of Interest, capturing radio emissions from a total of ∼11,680 stars and planetary systems in the ∼9′ beam of the telescope. All detections were either automatically rejected or visually inspected and confirmed to be of anthropogenic nature. We also quantified the end-to-end efficiency of radio SETI pipelines with a signal injection and recovery analysis. The UCLA SETI pipeline recovers 94.0% of the injected signals over the usable frequency range of the receiver and 98.7% of the injections when regions of dense radio frequency interference are excluded. In another pipeline that uses incoherent sums of 51 consecutive spectra, the recovery rate is ∼15 times smaller at ∼6%. The pipeline efficiency affects calculations of transmitter prevalence and SETI search volume. Accordingly, we developed an improved Drake figure of merit and a formalism to place upper limits on transmitter prevalence that take the pipeline efficiency and transmitter duty cycle into account. Based on our observations, we can state at the 95% confidence level that fewer than 6.6% of stars within 100 pc host a transmitter that is continuously transmitting a narrowband signal with an equivalent isotropic radiated power (EIRP) > 1013 W. For stars within 20,000 ly, the fraction of stars with detectable transmitters (EIRP > 5 × 1016 W) is at most 3 × 10−4. Finally, we showed that the UCLA SETI pipeline natively detects the signals detected with AI techniques by Ma et al.
Funder
NASA ∣ SMD ∣ Astrophysics Division
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
1 articles.
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