It is probably the most seductive urge for mankind: search for extraterrestrial life. There are many ways to look for life; from digging into the
Martian dirt with robotic landers looking for pre-biotic compounds, to building vast radio antennae to "listen" out for distant communications
either leaked or transmitted deliberately from a distant star system from a developed, intelligent civilization. However, despite our best efforts, we
appear to be the only form of life for hundreds of lightyears around. It is eerily quiet out there…
Although we appear to be drawing blanks so far, it doesn't stop us from trying to work out what we should be looking for. In the quest to find a
vastly advanced alien civilization, a forthcoming Russian space telescope hopes to bridge the gap between science fiction and science fact, attempting
to find evidence (or lack thereof) of observable attempts of astroengineering by an alien race…
www.universetoday.com...
Although the Kepler spacecraft is just as exciting, this is surely a science-fiction fan's dream come to life.
However, I doubt we will find
clear signs of astroengineering. For all we know, aliens could be using natural celestial objects in space as
weapons, platforms, or what have you.
Still, it would be eerily amazing if we detected evidence of a Larry Niven Ring world or Alderson disk around a star.
Just don't hold your breath, it won't be launched until 2017.