The Interstellar Laser Beacons Hypothesis and the Cosmic Lighthouses Project

Abstract

In this paper, we argue that in a realistic, resource-limited scenario senders whose intent is to maximize successful communication at the lowest cost will utilize very long-lived, pulsed beacons. Further, we argue that mass-producible laser beacons with simpler technology (μs or ms pulses instead of ultrashort fs pulses) are more optimal if placed on interstellar orbits. Our extensive, existing surveys are mostly blind to the μs/ms-second universe and to such beacons. We show, however, that the convergence of three technologies (massively parallel processing, ultra high-speed CMOS detectors, and broadband, mass-producible diffractive-refractive lenses) now offer an exciting opportunity for a low-cost survey of the μsecond sky. Such survey would be astrophysically compelling and, with even low-cost telescopes, could place volume-complete constraints on interstellar beacons within twenty parsecss.

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