SETI@home: Data Acquisition and Front-End Processing
Eric J. Korpela, David P. Anderson, Jeff Cobb, Matt Lebofsky, Wei Liu, and Dan Werthimer (Space Sciences Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley)

TL;DR
SETI@home leverages a vast distributed volunteer computing network to perform sensitive, wide-ranging searches for extraterrestrial technosignatures in radio data collected over two decades, enhancing detection capabilities.
Contribution
This paper introduces the front-end data acquisition and processing system of SETI@home, enabling large-scale, coherent, and diverse signal searches using distributed computing resources.
Findings
Processed ~1.2×10^{10} detections exceeding thresholds.
Performed coherent integration over 123,000 Doppler drift rates.
Analyzed data with multiple DFT sizes and resolutions.
Abstract
SETI@home is a radio Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) project, looking for technosignatures in data recorded at multiple observatories from 1998 to 2020. Most radio SETI projects analyze data using dedicated processing hardware. SETI@home uses a different approach: time-domain data is distributed over the Internet to volunteered home computers, which analyze it. The large amount of computing power this affords ( floating-point operations per second (FPOP/s)) allows us to increase the sensitivity and generality of our search in three ways. We use coherent integration, a technique in which data is transformed so that the power of drifting signals is confined to a single discrete Fourier transform (DFT) bin. We perform this coherent search over 123 000 Doppler drift rates in the range (100 Hz s). Second, we search for a variety of…
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