Father-Daughter Team Decodes Mars' Alien Signal

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2024-11-03 07:51:18

Image credit: Ken and Keli Chaffin

Image credit: Ken and Keli Chaffin

A father and daughter team based in the U.S. have decoded a mock "alien signal" beamed from ESA's ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter a year ago — but the meaning of the extraterrestrial message remains a mystery.

A father-daughter team has decoded a mock "alien" message after a year of trying. Now, citizen scientists are trying to figure out what the decoded missive truly means for Earth.

According to the European Space Agency (ESA), Ken and Keli Chaffin from the U.S. were the first to crack the code, which was sent from ESA's ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter as part of a citizen science project in May 2023. Three radio observatories on Earth heard the message, and the data were made available to the public. The first step was to extract the signal from the raw data, and the second was to decode it.

The message is part of "A Sign in Space," a science/art project that explores how humanity might react after receiving a real alien message. It took only 10 days for an online community to extract the message from the raw data, but decoding it was more difficult: That wasn't achieved until June 7, 2024, when the Chaffins messaged Daniela de Paulis, the founder and artistic director of the project, with the solution. ESA publicly announced their success on Oct. 22.

The message turned out to be an image depicting the structure of five amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. It was the brainchild of a group of "simulated extraterrestrials," according to A Sign in Space, which included de Paulis, as well as a computer scientist, a poet, a radio engineer, a physicist and space lawyer, and several astronomers and astrobiologists.

The project had additional support from the SETI Institute — a nonprofit dedicated to the search for extraterrestrial life — and the Green Bank Observatory in West Virginia. Decoding the message required many hours of computer simulations. The Chaffins managed to crack the code when they figured out that the message included some biological features, ESA reported.