Yagami
26-05-2004, 22:54
Mi è arrivata adesso.
Dear Yagami:
SETI@home turned five years old on May 17, 2004!
Thanks for participating in SETI@home.
According to our records, you have processed 2028 work units,
the most recent on May 26, 2004.
Your contribution of computer time is greatly appreciated.
Support SETI@home
------------------------------------
You can support SETI@home by donating directly to us
(see http://setiathome.berkeley.edu/donor.html).
Or join The Planetary Society, help SETI@home, and get a free SETI@home mug.
In a special, limited-time offer, SETI@home volunteers can
join The Planetary Society for two years at a reduced rate of $45.00
(a savings of $15.00 off the regular dues)
and receive a SETI@home mug as a thank-you gift.
Visit http://planetary.org/mugoffer.html
The Planetary Society is the Founding Sponsor of SETI@home
and has supported us unflaggingly for five years.
SETI@home receives the bulk of your first-year membership dues
when you join the Society through this special offer.
(The rest goes to providing you with membership benefits,
including a subscription to The Planetary Report.)
You can also join the Society at the regular rate of $30 per year
and receive a spectacular SETI poster as your thank you gift.
http://planetary.org/html/member/SETIoffer.html
Thanks to the people around the world who have donated to SETI@home,
and to our other major supporters: the University of California,
Sun Microsystems, NVIDIA, Snap Appliance,
Network Appliance, Quantum, and Xilinx.
Science News
---------------
Last year, SETI@home was granted 24 hours at the Arecibo observatory
to reobserve the best "candidate" locations detected by
volunteers running the SETI@home screensaver.
We were able to observe 226 points on the sky,
including many of the best SETI@home candidates,
others found by the SERENDIP project,
and some interesting astronomical objects
including known planetary systems and external galaxies.
We sent the data from these observations to SETI@home
volunteers (that means you!), and when the results came back
we scanned them for signals similar to the candidates.
We expected that, due to random noise,
the scores of about 10% of candidates would improve.
In fact, no matching signals were found for most candidates
and therefore their scores got worse.
The exceptions were Gaussian candidates with a wide frequency window;
about half of their scores improved, but this is an artifact
of the way SETI@home detects Gaussians.
Of the other signal types, only one candidate was found whose score improved.
It is a Gaussian-type signal with a narrow frequency window.
This would normally get us excited,
but unfortunately the properties of this particular signal
don't seem consistent with it being an ET signal.
In a narrow frequency window,
we would expect to find Gaussians with low Doppler drift rates
(ones whose frequency is not changing rapidly with time).
This Gaussian candidate consists of signals
whose Doppler drift rates are between 10 and 50 Hz per second.
These would drift out of our 125 Hz matching window in a few seconds,
so if we had looked at that part of the sky even a few seconds later
(in any of our observations of this part of the sky),
we wouldn't have found a match.
So it's not likely that this is an ET signal.
Even so, we'll keep an eye on this spot on the sky.
For details of this entire process, see
http://www.planetary.org/html/UPDATES/seti/SETI@home/Update_051704.html
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/candidates.html
http://planetary.org/stellarcountdown/index.html
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/newsletters/newsletter8.html
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/newsletters/newsletter14.html.
What's Next?
------------
The candidates we reobserved came from only the first 2 years of SETI@home
observations, so we've still got a lot of work to do.
Right now, we're identifying a new set of candidates,
and we will request time on the Arecibo telescope to reobserve them.
SETI@home will continue with a new software architecture (BOINC)
and new hardware at Arecibo
(the Arecibo L-band Feed Array, or ALFA, a new multi-beam receiver)
that will perform a comprehensive survey of the sky.
We hope you're as excited as we are about our search for life outside Earth.
Thanks for your continued participation and support.
Dr. David P. Anderson
Project Director, SETI@home
http://setiathome.berkeley.edu
E' arrivata anche a voi?
Ciaoooz!
Dear Yagami:
SETI@home turned five years old on May 17, 2004!
Thanks for participating in SETI@home.
According to our records, you have processed 2028 work units,
the most recent on May 26, 2004.
Your contribution of computer time is greatly appreciated.
Support SETI@home
------------------------------------
You can support SETI@home by donating directly to us
(see http://setiathome.berkeley.edu/donor.html).
Or join The Planetary Society, help SETI@home, and get a free SETI@home mug.
In a special, limited-time offer, SETI@home volunteers can
join The Planetary Society for two years at a reduced rate of $45.00
(a savings of $15.00 off the regular dues)
and receive a SETI@home mug as a thank-you gift.
Visit http://planetary.org/mugoffer.html
The Planetary Society is the Founding Sponsor of SETI@home
and has supported us unflaggingly for five years.
SETI@home receives the bulk of your first-year membership dues
when you join the Society through this special offer.
(The rest goes to providing you with membership benefits,
including a subscription to The Planetary Report.)
You can also join the Society at the regular rate of $30 per year
and receive a spectacular SETI poster as your thank you gift.
http://planetary.org/html/member/SETIoffer.html
Thanks to the people around the world who have donated to SETI@home,
and to our other major supporters: the University of California,
Sun Microsystems, NVIDIA, Snap Appliance,
Network Appliance, Quantum, and Xilinx.
Science News
---------------
Last year, SETI@home was granted 24 hours at the Arecibo observatory
to reobserve the best "candidate" locations detected by
volunteers running the SETI@home screensaver.
We were able to observe 226 points on the sky,
including many of the best SETI@home candidates,
others found by the SERENDIP project,
and some interesting astronomical objects
including known planetary systems and external galaxies.
We sent the data from these observations to SETI@home
volunteers (that means you!), and when the results came back
we scanned them for signals similar to the candidates.
We expected that, due to random noise,
the scores of about 10% of candidates would improve.
In fact, no matching signals were found for most candidates
and therefore their scores got worse.
The exceptions were Gaussian candidates with a wide frequency window;
about half of their scores improved, but this is an artifact
of the way SETI@home detects Gaussians.
Of the other signal types, only one candidate was found whose score improved.
It is a Gaussian-type signal with a narrow frequency window.
This would normally get us excited,
but unfortunately the properties of this particular signal
don't seem consistent with it being an ET signal.
In a narrow frequency window,
we would expect to find Gaussians with low Doppler drift rates
(ones whose frequency is not changing rapidly with time).
This Gaussian candidate consists of signals
whose Doppler drift rates are between 10 and 50 Hz per second.
These would drift out of our 125 Hz matching window in a few seconds,
so if we had looked at that part of the sky even a few seconds later
(in any of our observations of this part of the sky),
we wouldn't have found a match.
So it's not likely that this is an ET signal.
Even so, we'll keep an eye on this spot on the sky.
For details of this entire process, see
http://www.planetary.org/html/UPDATES/seti/SETI@home/Update_051704.html
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/candidates.html
http://planetary.org/stellarcountdown/index.html
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/newsletters/newsletter8.html
http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/newsletters/newsletter14.html.
What's Next?
------------
The candidates we reobserved came from only the first 2 years of SETI@home
observations, so we've still got a lot of work to do.
Right now, we're identifying a new set of candidates,
and we will request time on the Arecibo telescope to reobserve them.
SETI@home will continue with a new software architecture (BOINC)
and new hardware at Arecibo
(the Arecibo L-band Feed Array, or ALFA, a new multi-beam receiver)
that will perform a comprehensive survey of the sky.
We hope you're as excited as we are about our search for life outside Earth.
Thanks for your continued participation and support.
Dr. David P. Anderson
Project Director, SETI@home
http://setiathome.berkeley.edu
E' arrivata anche a voi?
Ciaoooz!