 
      
          
    The signal detection problems facing those who search the sky for evidence of extraterrestrial civilizations or interesting natural phenomena are enormous. Among those problems are the fact that we don't know much about what to expect. In particular, we don't know exactly where to look in the sky, or what frequencies might be used, or the possible forms of the transmissions. Moreover, the many powerful sources of natural and terrestrial sources of interfering signals must not be confused for extraterrestrial ones. There is also the massive computer power required, which has driven the development of specialized hardware and software as well as distributed computation over thousands of Internet-connected personal computers across the world using the SETI@home computational screen-saver. Although many of the computational techniques used in this search are far more sophisticated than those covered in this web site, they begin with the basic concepts covered here.
One of the reoccurring themes of this site has
                been that the more you know about your data, the more
                likely you are to obtain a reliable measurement. In the
                case of possible extraterrestrial signals, we don't know
                much, but we do know a few things. 
                
                We know that electromagnetic radiation over a wide range
                of frequencies is used for long-distance transmission on
                earth and between earth and satellites and probes far
                from earth. Astronomers already use radio telescopes to
                receive natural radiations from vast distances. In order
                to look at different frequencies at once, Fourier
                  transforms of the raw telescope signals
                can be computed over multiple time segments. We
                previously saw a simulation that showed how
                hard it is to see a periodic component in the presence
                of on equal amount of random noise and yet how easy it
                is to pick it out in the frequency spectrum. 
                
                Also, transmissions from
                  extraterrestrial civilizations might be in the form
                  of  equally-spaced pulses, so their detection and
                  verification is also part of SETI signal processing.
                  Interestingly, triplets and other groups of equally
                  spaced pulses appear in the Fourier transforms of high
                  frequency carrier waves that are amplitude
                    or frequency modulated (like AM
                    or FM radio). Of course, there is no reason to
                  assume, nor to reject, that extraterrestrial
                  civilizations might use the same methods of
                  communication as ourselves. 
      
        
      One thing that we know for
                sure is that the earth rotates around its axis once a
                day and that it revolves around the sun once a year. So
                if we look at a fixed direction out from the earth, the
                distant stars will seem to move in a predictable
                pattern, whereas terrestrial sources will remain fixed
                on earth. The huge Arecibo
                    Observatory dish in Puerto Rico is fixed in
                  position and is often used to look in one selected
                  direction for extended periods of time. The field of
                  view of this telescope is such that a point source at
                  a distance takes 12 seconds to pass. As
SETI
                    says: "Radio signals from a distant transmitter
                  should get stronger and then weaker as the telescope's
                  focal point moves across that area of the sky.
                  Specifically, the power should increase and then
                  decrease with a bell shaped curve (a
                    Gaussian curve). Gaussian curve-fitting is an excellent test to
                  determine if a radio wave was generated 'out there'
                  rather than a simple source of interference somewhere
                  here on Earth, since signals originating from Earth
                  will typically show constant power patterns rather
                  than curves". Also, any observed 12 second peaks can
                  be re-examined with another focal point shifted
                  towards the west to see if it repeats with the
                  expected time and duration. 
        
         We also know
                  that there will be a Doppler
                    shift in the frequencies
                  observed if the source is moving relative to the
                  receiver; this is observed with sound
                    waves as well as with electromagnetic
waves
                    like radio or light. Because the earth is
                  rotating and revolving at a known and constant speed,
                  we can accurately predict and compensate for the
                  Doppler shift caused by earth's motion (this is called
                  "de-chirping"
                  the data). 
                  
                  For more on the details of SETI signal processing, see
                  SETI@home.