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  1. We’re the guy yelling and making a bunch of noise in the woods while everyone else is silently hiding from the planet eaters. Basically screaming that we’re morons ripe for harvest.

    Unserious comment.

  2. We wouldn’t detect any signals even if there was a thriving technological civilization on that planet. At 124 light years any signals being sent would look exactly like the background radiation that fills the universe. The Inverse square law all but insures that we won’t ever detect anything this way, and that no one else out there will be detecting us.

  3. jodrellbank_pants on

    Look the neighbours are being nosey again, keep quiet.

    Is this the whole spectrum or just radio

    Why would another civilisation have radio 4

  4. plan_with_stan on

    Ok but k2-18b is 127 light years away. If they scanned us they wouldn’t fin anything either because we would be in the year 1899… soooo… I don’t think it means anything.

  5. I mean, they are probably drawing the same conclusion while looking at earth. There wasn’t much going out from earth 124 years ago.

  6. Here’s the paper if anyone’s interested: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2602.09553

    They searched for narrowband signals, and say they’d have detected down to around 10^12 W. So they would have detected the Arecibo message if they’d been beaming one right at us, arriving during the 80 minutes this experiment was observing. I don’t think they would have detected anything else humanity has emitted.

  7. We assume that any advanced civilization out there is obeying the same laws of physics that we do. What if their technology is so advanced that we are completely incapable of detecting it let alone deciphering it.

  8. Frankly, if we were going to detect radio signals, it would probably be from stray ship to ship communication from relatively close by. Or beacons that are just that – beacons with no real information, like lighthouses.

  9. assuming they had powerful enough broadcasts at least 124 years ago.. how long have we been detectable by K2-18b?

  10. Sohn_Jalston_Raul on

    We wouldn’t be able to detect their radio signals from here anyway, so this is moot. If there are any civilizations out there sending communication signals between stars they’d be using lasers, since they have much further range and can carry a much greater signal density than radio. Using radio to communicate between stars is like using smoke signals to communicate across the ocean.

  11. Unfortunately with the distances and time involved I don’t think we will ever find a alien civilization.