The Case for Technosignatures: Why They May Be Abundant, Long-lived, Highly Detectable, and Unambiguous
Jason T. Wright, Jacob Haqq-Misra, Adam Frank, Ravi Kopparapu, Manasvi, Lingam, and Sofia Z. Sheikh

TL;DR
This paper argues that technosignatures could be more abundant, longer-lasting, and more detectable than biosignatures, suggesting that SETI efforts should include searches for both types of signs of extraterrestrial life.
Contribution
It introduces a comparative analysis of technosignatures and biosignatures within the Drake equation framework, highlighting the potential prevalence and longevity of technosignatures.
Findings
Technosignatures may be more abundant than biosignatures.
Technosignatures can be long-lived, possibly outlasting their creators.
Detection methods for technosignatures can complement biosignature searches.
Abstract
The intuition suggested by the Drake equation implies that technology should be less prevalent than biology in the galaxy. However, it has been appreciated for decades in the SETI community that technosignatures could be more abundant, longer-lived, more detectable, and less ambiguous than biosignatures. We collect the arguments for and against technosignatures' ubiquity and discuss the implications of some properties of technological life that fundamentally differ from nontechnological life in the context of modern astrobiology: It can spread among the stars to many sites, it can be more easily detected at large distances, and it can produce signs that are unambiguously technological. As an illustration in terms of the Drake equation, we consider two Drake-like equations, for technosignatures (calculating N(tech)) and biosignatures (calculating N(bio)). We argue that Earth and humanity…
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