Issue #2(24) 2020 Opinion

Revisiting the Drake Equation - a cultural addendum

Artist’s impression of Epsilon Eridani, the closest known planetary system to our own.
Artist’s impression of Epsilon Eridani, the closest known planetary system to our own.
Savannah Mandel Virginia Tech VA, USA

Known as the father of SETI science, radio astronomer Frank Drake created the Drake Equation to stimulate dialogue about the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. Here, space anthropologist and author Savannah Mandel asks if it is time to look again at the famous seven-part equation taking into consideration the social implications of life existing on other planets.

In a collection of fantastical stories about a far-away land full of peculiar and mystical beings, children’s author L Frank Baum wrote about a land called Oz which was ruled by a powerful and just fairy-child known as Ozma. In 1960, inspired by Baum’s work, scientists working with Project Ozma used the National Radio Astronomy Observatory’s 85-foot radio telescope to detect interstellar radio waves.

This groundbreaking SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) experiment was launched by Frank Drake, who created the eponymous Drake Equation in 1961. The radio astronomer would go on to play an important role in developing the 1974 Arecibo Message, the most powerful radio broadcast ever deliberately beamed into space.

If you already have a login and password to access www.room.eu.com - Please log in to be able to read all the articles of the site.

Popular articles

See also

Security

Original Sin - Power, Technology and War in Outer Space

Specials

Green cosmonautics: an ideal to strive for

Lounge

We live on a planet!

Popular articles

The remote 10-acre launch site at Sutherland Spaceport in the Scottish Highlands will be the ‘home’ spaceport of Orbex and will see the launch into low Earth orbits (LEO) of up to 12 rockets per year. Astronautics

Planning, designing and delivering a spaceport

Astronautics

Commercial launch development in Spain