HUMANS HAVE, FOR MILLENNIA, LOOKED TO THE NIGHT SKIES AND SEEN THEMSELVES, THEIR GODS, THEIR PAST AND THEIR FUTURE.
But they have not yet seen their neighbors. It’s not for a lack of trying.
Sixty years ago, the official quest for such answers, aptly named the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI), launched in Green Bank, West Virginia. Young astronomer Frank Drake trained a radio telescope on two sunlike stars, looking for hints of intelligent life. Drake’s pilot survey of a few months, called Project Ozma, had been inspired by physicists Giuseppe Cocconi and Philip Morrison, who published an article in 1959 in the journal Nature suggesting that if alien civilizations communicated long distance, they’d probably use radio waves, arguably the most efficient method of sending communications between stars at the…