Messaging with Cost Optimized Interstellar Beacons
James Benford, Gregory Benford, Dominic Benford

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the cost optimization of interstellar Beacons, deriving relations for minimal costs based on power and antenna size, and discusses their implications for SETI search strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a cost-optimized model for galactic-scale interstellar Beacons, providing formulas and examples for their design and detection.
Findings
Optimal cost division between antenna gain and power for fixed costs
Galactic Beacons require >10^17 W radiated power and >km^2 antenna area
Current SETI searches are unlikely to detect such Beacons
Abstract
This paper considers galactic scale Beacons from the point of view of expense to a builder on Earth. For fixed power density in the far field, what is the cost-optimum interstellar Beacon system? Experience shows an optimum tradeoff, depending on transmission frequency and on antenna size and power. This emerges by minimizing the cost of producing a desired effective isotropic radiated power, which in turn determines the maximum range of detectability of a transmitted signal. We derive general relations for cost-optimal aperture and power. For linear dependence of capital cost on transmitter power and antenna area, minimum capital cost occurs when the cost is equally divided between antenna gain and radiated power. For non-linear power law dependence a similar simple division occurs. This is validated in cost data for many systems; industry uses this cost optimum as a rule-of-thumb.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Science and Extraterrestrial Life · Space exploration and regulation · Planetary Science and Exploration
