Did alien signals reach Earth? If he did this, then why was he not found out?
For more than six decades, astronomers have heard possible signals from extraterrestrial civilisations, but there has been no confirmation to date. A new statistical study considers a narrower and more inconvenient possibility. It asks whether one or more alien signals have already reached Earth since the early 1960s but went unnoticed. Using a Bayesian framework, researchers model how missed contacts will affect current expectations of detection. The analysis focuses on the period after the first modern SETI experiment, which took place in 1960. It concludes that if past signals were real but unknown, the number of transmitting civilisations needed to explain today’s silence would be unexpectedly high, in some cases exceeding reasonable estimates for habitable planets within several hundred light years of Earth.
If nearby alien civilizations are sending signals to Earth, why is there no evidence of it
Research: “Unknown past contact with technological species: implications for technosignature science” Asking a simple but uncomfortable question. If alien signals have already reached Earth sometime in the last 65 years, why have we not detected them?
Scientists working on SETI, the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence, often argue that we have explored only a small fraction of the potential “search space.”. That search space includes:
- different distances in the galaxy
- Different wavelengths such as radio, microwave, optical or infrared
- different signal strengths
- different time windows
The silence may be due to the search space’s size; we may not have looked in the right place, at the right time, or with the right sensitivity. The new study tests a stronger idea. What if the signals have already reached Earth, but we missed them?
what did the researchers do
He used Bayesian statistical models. He asked in clear words: If at least one alien signal reached Earth in the last 65 years but was not detected, what does that mean for how many civilisations are transmitting? They found something surprising. To make today’s non-detection consistent with past missed signals, you would need a large number of emitting civilisations nearby. In some scenarios, the number required would exceed the number of habitable planets within a few hundred light-years. This phenomenon creates tension. The numbers don’t sit comfortably together.
Why does traceability matter
The study defines traceability practically. A signal is considered detectable if its source is within a distance (R) from the Earth. That distance depends on two things:
- how strong is the signal
- How sensitive are our telescopes
For radio signals, stronger transmitters can be detected from greater distances. The minimum detectable flux depends on telescope sensitivity, bandwidth and integration time. Projects such as Breakthrough Listen have dramatically expanded the range of frequencies and targets explored since 2016. Future facilities such as the Square Kilometre Array and the Next Generation Very Large Array are expected to increase sensitivity even further. Yet even with these improvements, the model suggests that high current detection of nearby civilisations would require an unrealistically high number of transmitters.
What does this data reveal?
If undetected alien signals have indeed reached Earth before, they were probably rare and distant. The best chances for detection may lie not just in our local neighbourhood, but thousands of light years away. Still, the study suggests we should expect only a few detectable signals, not a sky full of them.
