Extrasolar Asteroid Mining as Forensic Evidence for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
Duncan Forgan, Martin Elvis

TL;DR
This paper explores how signs of asteroid mining by extraterrestrial intelligences might be detectable through specific observational signatures in debris discs, offering a new approach to SETI research.
Contribution
It introduces the hypothesis that asteroid mining activities could leave detectable signatures in debris discs, suggesting a method to identify potential ETI activity.
Findings
Individual signatures can be explained by natural phenomena.
Multiple signatures together may indicate extraterrestrial involvement.
Signatures can guide targeted SETI investigations.
Abstract
The development of civilisations like ours into spacefaring, multi-planet entities requires significant raw materials to construct vehicles and habitats. Interplanetary debris, including asteroids and comets, may provide such a source of raw materials. In this article we present the hypothesis that extraterrestrial intelligences (ETIs) engaged in asteroid mining may be detectable from Earth. Considering the detected disc of debris around Vega as a template, we explore the observational signatures of targeted asteroid mining (TAM), such as unexplained deficits in chemical species, changes in the size distribution of debris and other thermal signatures which may be detectable in the spectral energy distribution (SED) of a debris disc. We find that individual observational signatures of asteroid mining can be explained by natural phenomena, and as such they cannot provide conclusive…
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