Douglas
Vakoch and Interstellar Message-Making
If we receive a message or signal from another civilization,
our response will set the tone for interstellar dialogue
for thousands of years, says Douglas Vakoch. Vakoch
holds the fascinating position of Director of Interstellar
Message Composition at the SETI Institute.
There are lots of factors to consider while crafting
our message, including how much information we should
share and what kind of languages and symbols we should
use. Vakoch believes a variety of people from different
disciplines should have a hand in composing this message.
He's gathered scientists, artists, and others to contribute
their expertise. Andrew Kaiser, a composer who has
worked with Vakoch, believes that there is something
in music that conveys a sense of being human. Concepts
like rhythm, repetition, and silence reflect physical
events in our bodies and aspects of the structure
of our societies.
Music is largely rooted in math, a quality that makes
it a good candidate as a form of interstellar communication.
Aesthetically, humans seem to seek patterns, and many
of the melodies we find pleasing often contain some
sort of mathematical pattern. For this reason, Vakoch
has worked with Kaiser to compose draft messages based
on a series of numbers called a "Fibonacci sequence."
In the sequence, every third number is the sum of
the two preceding numbers. The result is 0, 1, 1,
2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21
. This sequence is related
to many natural phenomena, such as the distinctive
shapes of spiral galaxies and the nautilus seashell,
and has applications as diverse as the architecture
of the Parthenon and the musical compositions of Bartok.
Vakoch believes that many natural sounds have an
underlying mathematical logic, and that through evolution,
humans may have become particularly sensitive and
attuned to the audio patterns that result. These mathematical
relationships, like the Fibonacci sequence, could
help another civilization understand not only what
kinds of sounds we live with and make, but also a
sense of aesthetic that goes to the very core of our
experience as humans.
You can listen to draft messages composed by Douglas
Vakoch and Andrew Kaiser. These sounds may someday
be the basis for messages we send via radio transmitter
to another civilization.
In this clip, you can hear the Fibonacci series in
the number of pulses, and also in the duration between
silences when the file is played backward.
Listen to the
clip
|
See
an image of the pulse pattern
In this clip, you can hear the Fibonacci series in
the changing duration of pulses.
Listen to the
clip
|
See
an image of the pulse pattern
To learn more about the Fibonacci series:
"An Introduction to the Fibonacci Series":
http://library.thinkquest.org/~27890/theSeries1.html
"Fibonacci Numbers in Art, Architecture, and
Music":
http://www.mcs.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/R.Knott/Fibonacci/fibInArt.html
More information about Vakochs composing work
with Kaiser:
http://www.space.com/searchforlife/seti_music_vakoch_020912.html
"The View from a Distant Star: Challenges of
Interstellar Message-Making,"
(A paper by Vakoch about the history and design of
interstellar messages):
http://208.55.253.100/mercury/mercury/9902/vakoch2.html
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