‘I think there’s life out there’: powerful radio antenna used for first time to find exoplanets

Australian scientists part of team using Low Frequency Array to detect signals indicating planets beyond our solar system

New techniques for spotting previously hidden planets could reveal whether there is life out there – or not.

Australian scientists are part of a team that has for the first time used a radio antenna to find exoplanets, which means planets beyond our solar system.

Using the world’s most powerful antenna – the Low Frequency Array in the Netherlands (Lofar) – the team has discovered radio signals from 19 distant red dwarf stars.

Four of them are emitting signals that indicate that planets are orbiting them.

University of Queensland astrophysicist Dr Benjamin Pope says the finding opens up “radically new opportunities” to study exoplanets, which may be habitable.

The research was published on Tuesday in Nature Astronomy, at the same time as a second paper Pope has authored which confirmed the data using an optical telescope.

Pope said it was staff at Australia’s scientific research agency, the CSIRO, who first started studying the sky with military radars during the second world war. Then CSIRO developed the Parkes Observatory – known as The Dish.

Lofar is a prototype or “pathfinder” that is part of the development of the Square Kilometre Array, which will be the world’s largest telescope, based in Western Australia and South Africa. “Lofar’s a mini version of what we can expect in WA in five to 10 years,” Pope said.

The team studies space using radio signals and importantly worked out how to screen out other objects such as black holes and neutron stars to focus on red dwarfs, using the same technology that gives us polarised sunglasses.

Lead author Joseph Callingham said the team is confident the signals come from a magnetic connection between the stars and unseen orbiting planets.

“It’s a spectacle that has attracted our attention from light years away,” he said.

Pope said further study is needed, but that “the evidence rules out all the other possibilities other than that it is a star interacting with a planet”.

“We now have a new window on the sky thanks to the power of Lofar and techniques like putting on the polarised sunnies. This opens up a realm of possibilities for the future,” he said.

So far with Lofar, they have only looked at a fraction of the sky. Once the SKA comes online “we’ll find hundreds and hundreds of these things”, Pope said.

And the thing about red dwarves is that planets which orbit them often have Earth-like temperatures.

“So we’re looking for habitable planets as potential abodes for life. It’s not about finding Planet B for us to move to. It’s about finding whether there is life elsewhere in the universe. This would be a profound discovery,” he said.

Pope, who researches exoplanets, said it was likely that many planets orbiting red dwarves were pleasantly balmy but scoured by radiation, rendering them uninhabitable.

But some could be in the so-called Goldilocks zone.

As for his own opinion, he doesn’t think we are alone in the universe but is careful to distinguish between the search for extraterrestrial intelligence and the search for evidence of any sort of biological signature.

“I do think there’s life out there. I wouldn’t be doing this job if I didn’t think there was some realistic prospect of that,” he said, adding that he thinks we’ll have an answer within our lifetimes – either way.

Contributor

Tory Shepherd

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
James Webb: world’s most powerful telescope makes its first call to Australia on Christmas Day
The $13bn telescope, which replaces the Hubble, will allow us ‘to see back to the beginning of time’, astronomers say

Tory Shepherd

24, Dec, 2021 @7:00 PM

Article image
The Dish runs back to the moon: Parkes telescope to support commercial lunar landings
Australian observatory that shared Apollo 11 images reaches deal with US company Intuitive Machines

Elias Visontay

25, Mar, 2021 @1:30 AM

Article image
Australian scientists to keep an eye on Nasa’s Artemis 1 on historic space mission to moon
Craft being monitored by CSIRO will carry mannequins as a dress rehearsal for human mission in 2025

Tory Shepherd

30, Aug, 2022 @12:19 AM

Article image
Tracing Cassini's fiery death was like seeing a heart monitor flatline
At a Nasa site nestled in a valley not far from Australia’s capital city, a lucky few get a closer view of the end of the spacecraft’s 20-year odyssey

Andrew P Street

16, Sep, 2017 @2:17 AM

Article image
Nasa to be hit by CSIRO engineers' stop-work action over pay
CSIRO is limiting pay rises for Australians whose work supports Nasa despite the fact they are paid out of Nasa’s budget

Paul Karp

21, Nov, 2017 @5:00 PM

Article image
Alien resurrection: $135m search for life in outer space rescues Parkes telescope
Radio telescope, which was in danger of closing down due to federal government funding cuts, wins reprieve from project funded by Russian internet billionaire

Michael Safi

12, Aug, 2015 @7:41 AM

Article image
Nasa's first close-up images of Pluto to come to Canberra tracking station
The CSIRO’s deep space communication complex will be the first place on Earth to receive images as the New Horizons probe makes its closest encounter with the dwarf planet

Monica Tan

13, Jul, 2015 @2:01 PM

Article image
Australia's shortage of climate scientists puts country at serious risk, report find
Climate science workforce needs to grow by 77 positions over the next four years, according to report prompted by CSIRO redundancies

Michael Slezak

02, Aug, 2017 @2:01 PM

Article image
‘Are we alone in the universe?’: work begins in Western Australia on world’s most powerful radio telescopes
More than 100,000 antennas will be built on Wajarri country, enabling astronomers to peek billions of years back to the ‘cosmic dawn’

Donna Lu

04, Dec, 2022 @7:00 PM

Article image
Champagne moment as supernova captured in detail for the first time
Researchers record the earliest moments of a supernova as a shockwave blasts its way through a star

Donna Lu

05, Aug, 2021 @5:30 PM