A Green Bank Telescope search for narrowband technosignatures between 1.1-1.9 GHz during 12 Kepler planetary transits
Sofia Z. Sheikh, Shubham Kanodia, Emily Lubar, William P. Bowman,, Caleb I. Ca\~nas, Christian Gilbertson, Mariah G. MacDonald, Jason Wright,, David MacMahon, Steve Croft, Danny Price, Andrew Siemion, Jamie Drew, S. Pete, Worden, Elizabeth Trenholm

TL;DR
This study conducted a novel search for extraterrestrial technosignatures during 12 Kepler planetary transits using the Green Bank Telescope, employing innovative techniques like citizen science vetting and high drift rate sensitivity, but found no confirmed signals.
Contribution
It is the first to synchronize technosignature searches with exoplanet transits and introduces new methods for signal detection and analysis.
Findings
No confirmed technosignatures detected.
Two signals-of-interest identified for follow-up.
Established upper limits on transmitter power for the observed targets.
Abstract
A growing avenue for determining the prevalence of life beyond Earth is to search for "technosignatures" from extraterrestrial intelligences/agents. Technosignatures require significant energy to be visible across interstellar space and thus intentional signals might be concentrated in frequency, in time, or in space, to be found in mutually obvious places. Therefore, it could be advantageous to search for technosignatures in parts of parameter space that are mutually-derivable to an observer on Earth and a distant transmitter. In this work, we used the L-band (1.1-1.9 GHz) receiver on the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT) to perform the first technosignature search pre-synchronized with exoplanet transits, covering 12 Kepler systems. We used the Breakthrough Listen turboSETI pipeline to flag narrowband hits (3 Hz) using a maximum drift rate of 614.4 Hz/s and a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Advanced Thermodynamic Systems and Engines · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
