Project Phoenix (SETI)
Project Phoenix was a SETI project to search for extraterrestrial intelligence by analyzing patterns in radio signals. It was run by the independently funded SETI Institute of Mountain View, California, U.S.
Project Phoenix started work in February 1995 with the Parkes radio telescope located in New South Wales, Australia, the largest telescope in the Southern Hemisphere.
Between September 1996 and April 1998, the Project used the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Green Bank in Green Bank, West Virginia, U.S.
Rather than attempting to scan the whole sky for messages, the Project concentrated on nearby systems that are similar to our own. Project Phoenix's targets comprised about 800 stars with a 200 light-year range.
The Project searched for radio signals as narrow as 1 Hz between 1,000 and 3,000 MHz: a broad bandwidth compared with most SETI searches.
In March 2004 the Project announced that after checking the 800 stars on its list, it had failed to find any evidence of extraterrestrial signals.[1] Project leader Peter Backus remarked that they had been forced to conclude that "we live in a quiet neighborhood".[1]
See also
- HabCat
References
- ^ a b Whitehouse, David (25 March 2004). "Radio search for ET draws a blank". BBC News.
External links
- Project Phoenix
- Project Phoenix project at Jodrell Bank
- v
- t
- e
- Shergotty meteorite (1865)
- Nakhla meteorite (1911)
- Murchison meteorite (1969)
- Viking lander biological experiments (1976)
- Allan Hills 77005 (1977)
- Allan Hills 84001 (1984)
- Yamato 000593 (2000)
- CI1 fossils (2011)
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habitability
- Catalog of Nearby Habitable Systems
- Circumstellar habitable zone
- Earth analog
- Extraterrestrial liquid water
- Galactic habitable zone
- Habitability of binary star systems
- Habitability of natural satellites
- Habitability of neutron star systems
- Habitability of red dwarf systems
- Habitability of K-type main-sequence star systems
- Habitability of yellow dwarf systems
- Habitability of F-type main-sequence star systems
- List of potentially habitable exoplanets
- Planetary habitability
- Superhabitable planet
- Tholin
- Beagle 2
- Biological Oxidant and Life Detection
- BioSentinel
- Curiosity rover
- Darwin
- Dragonfly
- Enceladus Explorer
- Enceladus Life Finder
- Europa Clipper
- ExoMars
- Rosalind Franklin rover
- ExoLance
- EXPOSE
- Foton-M3
- Icebreaker Life
- Journey to Enceladus and Titan
- Laplace-P
- Life Investigation For Enceladus
- Living Interplanetary Flight Experiment
- Mars Geyser Hopper
- Mars sample-return mission
- Mars 2020
- Northern Light
- Opportunity rover
- Perseverance rover
- SpaceX Red Dragon
- Spirit rover
- Tanpopo
- Titan Mare Explorer
- Venus In Situ Explorer
- Viking 1
- Viking 2
communication
- Active SETI
- Allen Telescope Array
- Arecibo message
- Arecibo Observatory
- Berkeley SETI Research Center
- Bracewell probe
- Breakthrough Initiatives
- Communication with extraterrestrial intelligence
- Gauss's Pythagorean right triangle proposal
- Astrolinguistics
- Lincos language
- NIROSETI
- Pioneer plaque
- Project Cyclops
- Project Ozma
- Project Phoenix
- SERENDIP
- Search for extraterrestrial intelligence
- SETI@home
- setiQuest
- Voyager Golden Record
- Water hole
- Xenolinguistics
extraterrestrial beings
- Ancient astronauts
- Astrobiology
- Astroecology
- Biosignature
- Brookings Report
- Exotheology
- Extraterrestrials in fiction
- Extremophile
- Hemolithin
- History of the extraterrestrial life debate
- MERMOZ
- Nexus for Exoplanet System Science
- Noogenesis
- Planetary protection
- Potential cultural impact of extraterrestrial contact
- Post-detection policy
- San Marino Scale
- Technosignature
- UFO religion
- Xenoarchaeology