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The Breakthrough Listen Search for Intelligent Life: Public Data, Formats, Reduction, and Archiving

Authors :
Lebofsky, Matthew
Croft, Steve
Siemion, Andrew P. V.
Price, Danny C.
Enriquez, J. Emilio
Isaacson, Howard
MacMahon, David H. E.
Anderson, David
Brzycki, Bryan
Cobb, Jeff
Czech, Daniel
DeBoer, David
DeMarines, Julia
Drew, Jamie
Foster, Griffin
Gajjar, Vishal
Gizani, Nectaria
Hellbourg, Greg
Korpela, Eric J.
Lacki, Brian
Sheikh, Sofia
Werthimer, Dan
Worden, Pete
Yu, Alex
Zhang, Yunfan Gerry
Source :
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific; December 2019, Vol. 131 Issue: 1006 p124505-124505, 1p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Breakthrough Listenis the most comprehensive and sensitive search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) to date, employing a collection of international observational facilities including both radio and optical telescopes. During the first three years of the Listenprogram, thousands of targets have been observed with the Green Bank Telescope (GBT), Parkes Telescope and Automated Planet Finder. At GBT and Parkes, observations have been performed ranging from 700 MHz to 26 GHz, with raw data volumes averaging over 1 PB day?1. A pseudo-real time software spectroscopy suite is used to produce multi-resolution spectrograms amounting to approximately 400 GB h?1GHz?1beam?1. For certain targets, raw baseband voltage data is also preserved. Observations with the Automated Planet Finder produce both two-dimensional and one-dimensional high-resolution (R? 105) echelle spectral data. Although the primary purpose of Listendata acquisition is for SETI, a range of secondary science has also been performed with these data, including studies of fast radio bursts. Other current and potential research topics include spectral line studies, searches for certain kinds of dark matter, probes of interstellar scattering, pulsar searches, radio transient searches and investigations of stellar activity. Listendata are also being used in the development of algorithms, including machine-learning approaches to modulation scheme classification and outlier detection, that have wide applicability not just for astronomical research but for a broad range of science and engineering. In this paper, we describe the hardware and software pipeline used for collection, reduction, archival, and public dissemination of Listendata. We describe the data formats and tools, and present Breakthrough Listen Data Release 1.0 (BLDR 1.0), a defined set of publicly available raw and reduced data totaling 1 PB.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00046280 and 15383873
Volume :
131
Issue :
1006
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs56696438
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1538-3873/ab3e82