Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada Contributing To Telescope Involved In Search For Extraterrestrials

Peter Rakobowchuk The Canadian Press, 04 Oct, 2014 01:55 PM

    MONTREAL - Canada is contributing to a new space telescope that one scientist says may help in the search for signs of extraterrestrial life.

    The Canadian Space Agency is providing a number of devices for the $8-billion James Webb Space Telescope, which is expected to launch in 2018.

    The contributions include two cameras and one of the four science instruments on board the telescope.

    A keynote speaker at a public science symposium in Montreal this Monday and Tuesday is hoping the telescope and others in the future will help lead to finding signs of life beyond Earth.

    "A lot is riding on that telescope — including possibly the discovery of life," said Sara Seager, a Toronto-born professor of planetary science and physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

    "We do have a chance to find life, but...it would be like winning the lottery five times in a row.

    "I'll say that in the next 10 years, we'll have the capability to find signs of life on an exoplanet far away — if it's out there."

    Since the 1990s, a number of exoplanets — planets that revolve around stars other than the sun — have been detected by space satellites.

    Last April, an Earth-sized planet was discovered orbiting around a star in a region that scientists said had the proper temperature to support life.

    Seager, who was named in Time Magazine's 2012 list of the 25 most influential space experts, said scientists are focused on finding gases in a planet's atmosphere.

    "We do know that life on our own Earth, including us humans to some extent, produce gas as a byproduct of living and that's what we're looking for."

    While rocky planets that could host life are very common, Seager cautioned that scientists aren't searching for aliens.

    "We all want to talk to aliens, we all want to find intelligent life or little green people," she said. "That's not what we're looking for, from the astronomers' point of perspective."

    The scientific focus on exoplanets also gets the nod from Jill Tarter, another scientist who will speak at the McGill University-organized symposium entitled "Are We Alone? Searching For Life Out There."

    "We're delighted, I mean exoplanets are real," she said in an interview from California. "When we started this we didn't know that."

    Tarter is best known for her involvement in SETI, the Center for the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence. It has been scanning the heavens with its alien-hunting radio telescopes since the 1980s.

    Tarter would not say if she believes there is life beyond Earth, preferring to let the space community do its work.

    "Scientists and engineers have tools that can actually explore, they can make observations," she said. "And so...let's see what's actually out there."

    Yet Tarter, who says her work was portrayed by Jodie Foster in the movie "Contact," isn't about to call it quits any time soon in the search for life beyond Earth.

    "Oh, no, no, I may run out of money, but I haven't given up," she added.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Transgender Woman Says Community Faces Discrimination In Job Search

    Toronto Transgender Woman Says Community Faces Discrimination In Job Search
    TORONTO - Melissa Hudson says 30 years of experience in the Toronto business world hasn't been enough to land her a job, despite numerous call-backs on her resume for first-round interviews.

    Toronto Transgender Woman Says Community Faces Discrimination In Job Search

    'Educational Banana Republic': B.C.'s Teachers' Feud Dates Back Decades

    'Educational Banana Republic': B.C.'s Teachers' Feud Dates Back Decades
    VANCOUVER - All summer long, there's been one overriding conversation amongst the hundred-plus employees at a Vancouver financial firm who have school-age children: British Columbia's acrimonious teachers' strike.

    'Educational Banana Republic': B.C.'s Teachers' Feud Dates Back Decades

    B.C. To Start Daycare Payments To Parents As Teachers Strike Talks Collapse

    B.C. To Start Daycare Payments To Parents As Teachers Strike Talks Collapse
    VANCOUVER - The British Columbia government said on Sunday it expects to be helping parents pay the costs of daycare because the first day of school appears to be delayed indefinitely by an ongoing teachers' strike.

    B.C. To Start Daycare Payments To Parents As Teachers Strike Talks Collapse

    Alberta: Investigators Look For Answers On What Caused 15 Grain Cars To Derail

    Alberta: Investigators Look For Answers On What Caused 15 Grain Cars To Derail
    CN spokeswoman Lindsay Fedchyshyn says 15 grain cars went off the track near Hondo, approximately 180 kilometres northwest of Edmonton, early Sunday.

    Alberta: Investigators Look For Answers On What Caused 15 Grain Cars To Derail

    Canada's Refugee Policy Risks Tearing Parents From Their Children: Activists

    Canada's Refugee Policy Risks Tearing Parents From Their Children:  Activists
    MONTREAL - For the past month, Sheila Sedinger woke up every morning fraught with worry over the prospect of being deported to Mexico without her two young children.

    Canada's Refugee Policy Risks Tearing Parents From Their Children: Activists

    Newfoundlanders Who Lined Up To Serve In WWI Still Revered As The Blue Puttees

    Newfoundlanders Who Lined Up To Serve In WWI Still Revered As The Blue Puttees
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Diana Snow's grandfather was among hundreds of Newfoundlanders who lined up a century ago to fight in the First World War as part of a fervent bid to help Britain.

    Newfoundlanders Who Lined Up To Serve In WWI Still Revered As The Blue Puttees