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The Secret Messages NASA Sent to Aliens

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted September 11, 2007.


When NASA sent the Voyager into space 30 years ago, it contained record albums intended for alien consumption.
Annalee Newitz

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As annoying as hippies can be, it's strangely comforting to think that the one bit of junk we shot into deep space is emblazoned with a hippie symbol. I'm talking about the golden records screwed onto the shells of Voyagers I and II, two space probes that completely changed our understanding of the solar system and then shot out into deep space bearing record albums intended for alien consumption.

Last week marked the 30th anniversary of the Voyager II launch. While most people recall the Voyager probes for creating close-up photographs and atmospheric readings from Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, these probes were always intended to do more than send messages back home for human consumption.

In the mid-1970s, when the Voyager spacecraft were being completed, pop cosmologist Carl Sagan convinced NASA to include a message from Earth on the probes. They were to bring news of us to alien beings in the unknowable reaches of the galaxy and beyond.

In consultation with a bunch of other geeks (including Timothy Ferris, who produced the album), Sagan decided that the delivery mechanism for this message should be a golden record, packaged with a cartridge and needle, as well as abstract mathematical instructions for how fast to spin the disc and at what frequencies it would emit sound. You can listen to the entire recording at goldenrecord.org, and the experience is bittersweet, an auditory glimpse of a very different time in human history.

The tracks include greetings in dozens of languages, including ancient Sumerian, which of course nobody knows how to pronounce anymore. And Gaia help us, there is also a "whale greeting." There is a track devoted to "Earth sounds," all which sound totally cool while remaining unrecognizable as particularly Earthly. There are over a dozen music recordings from around the world, all of which are written (and mostly performed) by men.

Most are from the West, with a few Russian numbers thrown in -- probably for "diversity." Bach is presented alongside Chuck Berry, Navaho chants beside Beethoven. It's a Sesame Street notion of pluralism, with an emphasis on music and greetings rather than political speeches or academic treatises on economics.

Also included on these records are directions to Earth, using nearby stars as navigation points.

The golden records imply that music, math and images are universal symbolic systems, the best kind for communicating with beings radically different from ourselves. This is an idea that was popular in the 1970s -- Steven Spielberg immortalized it in Close Encounters of the Third Kind, in which humans meeting aliens establish communication via electronic sounds.

But as American historian Karen Ordahl Kupperman has pointed out, the idea that music (and the math underlying it) is a universal form of communication also comes from centuries-old encounters between Europeans and natives in the Americas. Early European explorers recount communicating with natives via music upon first meeting and reaching an understanding on that basis.

Music may be a near-universal form of communication among humans, and there is something glorious and touching about trying to share that with other creatures in space. Of course, the notion that aliens might share the idea of "hearing" with us is profoundly silly. What if these are creatures who communicate via molecular manipulation, or chemical signatures? What if they live in vacuum, and therefore cannot "hear" at all?

So yeah, the golden record is species-centric. It's also naively specific to one culture, for who can think of a golden record full of Western music as anything but the work of hippie liberal white dudes? Still, I'd rather be represented by its naive utopianism than by most of the signals shooting off this planet.

No doubt the golden record will bemuse any alien life that actually bothers to examine the goo on a piece of space junk. But a bemused alien may in fact be the one who comes closest to guessing the true meaning of the golden record, and perhaps the true meaning of human life itself. And so it seems fitting that our one letter to the universe reads something like this: We have no idea what we're doing, but we sound good! Wish you were here.

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See more stories tagged with: space, nasa

Annalee Newitz (annalee@techsploitation.com) is a surly media nerd who thinks that perhaps the golden record is really a message to ourselves.

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Well...
Posted by: Domokun on Sep 11, 2007 12:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We The People are also the ones who paid for production of the thing, so well, there's a lot of those questions and concerns answered right in that.

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a mix-tape to the stars is for fun, why the pessimism?
Posted by: jingles on Sep 11, 2007 2:09 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The record is neat, and full of fun and different noises. What else are you going to put on it- the author perhaps would include some image of her need to pump out another page of filler nonsense? What if the aliens are as cynical and devoid of emotion as the author seems to be? How do you communicate with what you don't know?
The message 'to ourselves' is to dream and enjoy, I hope the author takes off her snark colored glasses once in a wonder to while in it.

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"to serve man..."
Posted by: punabear on Sep 12, 2007 9:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I remember when the Voyager was blasted into space. I was talking to my friend about it and his comment was "How smart is that? We have this plaque with an image of two humans and a star map showing where earth is. It looks like a menu with directions on how to get to the picnic."

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"ANNOYING HIPPIES"?
Posted by: Roverton on Sep 12, 2007 12:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The very same ones who actually did something?

Stopping the Viet Nam War and booting out the crooked Richard Nixon? THOSE particular annoying Hippies?

You're a poor servant to mankind's cause with that cherry-picked description of those brave souls. They ACTUALLY got things done, beyond the written word.

Otherwise, interesting piece.

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» RE: "ANNOYING HIPPIES"? Posted by: screwjack2000
NASA's fun'ding'le
Posted by: conjuryduty on Sep 12, 2007 12:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How much money does NASA get per year? Why? And why don't the American people get (virtually) ANY say on that number?

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"So yeah, the golden record is species-centric"
Posted by: Q30 on Sep 13, 2007 7:55 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oh give me a break. I hope this was meant to be tongue-in-cheek.

Yes, it's very possible that alien life-forms communicate by something like exchanging long protein strings or bizarre methods that we can't imagine, but there's very little that humans can be expected to do in that case.

I have a feeling that the author wasn't really thinking when this was written.

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bwa ha ha ha ha haaaaaa!!!
Posted by: art guerrilla on Sep 15, 2007 5:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
wtf ?
there were a *bunch* of comments here (including my own 2 cents), most of which (deservedly) took the author to task, where'd they go ? ? ?
c'mon alternet, gotta take the sour with the sweet, stop censoring; its not becoming of a progressive...

oh well, one of the last bastions of semi-free speech circles the toilet; ain't nobody actually believes in the bill of rights no mo'...

art guerrilla
aka ann archy

eof

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What????
Posted by: talkville on Sep 15, 2007 7:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Being one of those "annoying hippies" still living now, 30 years ago I would have been approximately in my 20's. I NEVER GOT THE MESSAGE OR THE RECORD!!

Nowadays, the hippie is the hippie is the hippie, like for Gertrude Stein (waaaay earlier) a rose was a rose was a rose. The particular IS the general. It's just not even NICE to discount A hippie for "those annoying hippies". Comeon Annalee!!

Indeed, I'm still an "alien"; send me a couple of good Doors or Grateful Dead albums would ya? I kinda miss 'em these days! Maybe, just maybe, we annoying hippies may receive the goods so benevolently sent to us from Mr Sagan!! Ah, categories! ain't they just so, so APT! With today's "technology" and religion, we wouldn't have survived to be dissed so much -- maybe a couple of us might have been splurged on YouTube or something, but that's about IT. For some, if god is dead (as Nietzsche so aptly put it), why not have aliens as SUBSTITUTES? But we Humans, will survive despite it all-- hippies, freaks, hip-hoppers or not!

Mr Sagan's attempt may have failed, but at least I got your message! Who says one can't contact aliens?

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Now I Get It
Posted by: LeslieGem on Sep 16, 2007 6:31 AM   
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Ya know, over the years, I've heard the "conservative" compliant against liberals -- that they are pessimists, always complaining, always seeing the negative side of things -- and I never understood why "conservatives" said that. Now I do. For god's sake, lighten up! What do you expect humans to put on their spacecraft?!!? What do you expect Americans to put on their spacecraft?!!? I’m all for calling out bias, but let’s save it for the important things -- and save a little energy to appreciate a few things.

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» RE: Now I Get It Posted by: MyLeftFoot
A Message in a Bottle...
Posted by: MyLeftFoot on Sep 16, 2007 12:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
or a Message in a Satellite...

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Who put that in everyones mind?
Posted by: anise on Oct 10, 2007 5:33 AM   
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'Annoying Hippie' Now there's an idea; one of the things annoying hippies do is check out there own head , heart ,whole-body space. These people ask questions like 'where did that idea get into my head and heart ?' Ever go inside where the center resides/ thats what hippies do Ever see pictures from the 60's ? ever notice the lhe lack of over weight folks ? people called hippies are more in touch with there bodies and surrounding field.

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