Help Search For ET Intelligence By Funding Allen Telescope Array

In April, we were saddened to find out that SETI’s Allen Telescope Array (ATA) had lost its funding and would have to shut down the world’s biggest, longest-running experiment in searching for extraterrestrial intelligence.

Now a group called SETIStars is working to crowdfund the telescope array and bring the search for alien life back online for another year. Their goal is to raise $US200,000 by August. So if we all pitch in a little bit, SETI scientists can start listening for signals from space again, focusing especially on the many star systems we’ve found over the past couple of years with Earthlike planets. SETI is a nonprofit institution, so everything you donate is tax-free.

So what will your money be used for? SETIStars explains:

Priority one is getting the Allen Telescope Array (ATA) back online as soon as possible and once again fixing our gaze on the stars. The ATA is a powerful field of linked radio telescopes that enable countless avenues of astronomical study, chief among them the search for evidence of extraterrestrial civilizations and insight into the nature of our cosmic origins. In the wake of a recent funding shortfall, however, this invaluable tool lies dormant and our vision of the universe around us has gone dark. With your help, we can change that.

But like any worthwhile endeavor, the first challenge is unlikely to be the last. This is a journey that will last our lifetimes, as we continually strive to get closer to answering the kinds of questions that may one day change everything about our world. It won’t happen overnight, but with your support, it will happen.

We here at SETI are making an appeal to the power of human collaboration, and now is the time to get involved. Join us!

The mission of the SETI Institute is to explore, understand and explain the origin, nature and prevalence of life in the universe.

We believe we are conducting the most profound search in human history – to know our beginnings and our place among the stars.

You can donate, and learn more about SETI, on the SETIStar page.

Republished from io9

Discuss

(4 Comments)
  • [–]

    David

    Wednesday, June 22, 2011 at 4:05 PM

    It is not such a bad thing that SETI closed down. It is silly to look for aliens using telescopes when the aliens already here.It is the US military/intelligence community that does not want the truth about advanced aliens visiting from outer space to be revealed, since that would undermine US military and economic dominance of the world. See ufocoverup.org for more info

    • [–]

      Scott

      Wednesday, June 22, 2011 at 7:13 PM

      Have I told you, you look great in tin foil?

  • [–]

    Alex

    Wednesday, June 22, 2011 at 9:28 PM

    You humans are hilarious, we stopped using radio signals thousands of years ago! By the way we’re living under your streets and are planning to rise up soon and take over the planet.

  • [–]

    ChemZ

    Thursday, June 23, 2011 at 3:39 AM

    I like the idea but… isn’t the world gonna end in 2012 anyway? =P

    Doesn’t give them much time!

Join The Discussion