The SKA is described as a key future tool for technosignature searches due to its sensitivity, field of view, and resolution, requiring high temporal and spectral resolution data products.
All-sky Radio SETI
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Over the last decade, Aperture Arrays (AA) have successfully replaced parabolic dishes as the technology of choice at low radio frequencies - good examples are the MWA, LWA and LOFAR. Aperture Array based telescopes present several advantages, including sensitivity to the sky over a very wide field-of-view. As digital and data processing systems continue to advance, an all-sky capability is set to emerge, even at GHz frequencies. We argue that assuming SETI events are both rare and transitory in nature, an instrument with a large field-of-view, operating around the so-called water-hole (1-2 GHz), might offer several advantages over contemporary searches. Sir Arthur C. Clarke was the first to recognise the potential importance of an all-sky radio SETI capability, as presented in his book, Imperial Earth. As part of the global SKA (Square Kilometre Array) project, a Mid-Frequency Aperture Array (MFAA) prototype known as MANTIS (Mid- Frequency Aperture Array Transient and Intensity-Mapping System) is now being considered as a precursor for SKA-2. MANTIS can be seen as a first step towards an all-sky radio SETI capability at GHz frequencies. This development has the potential to transform the field of SETI research, in addition to several other scientific programmes.
fields
astro-ph.IM 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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Searching for Extraterrestrial Intelligence with the SKA
The SKA is described as a key future tool for technosignature searches due to its sensitivity, field of view, and resolution, requiring high temporal and spectral resolution data products.