From Extraterrestrial Microbes to Alien Intelligence: Rebalancing Astronomical Research Priorities
Omer Eldadi, Gershon Tenenbaum, Abraham Loeb

TL;DR
The paper highlights the significant funding imbalance in astronomical research, advocating for increased support for extraterrestrial intelligence studies due to scientific, public interest, and recent empirical findings.
Contribution
It proposes establishing a comprehensive research program for biosignatures and technosignatures on interstellar objects, challenging existing institutional biases.
Findings
Public and scientific interest in extraterrestrial intelligence is high.
Empirical research shows humanity's resilience to extraterrestrial contact.
Current underinvestment hampers potential discoveries from interstellar objects.
Abstract
We examine the funding disparity in astronomical research priorities: the Habitable Worlds Observatory is planned to receive over $10 billion over the next two decades whereas extraterrestrial intelligence research receives nearly zero federal funding. This imbalance is in contrast to both scientific value and public interest, as 65% of Americans and 58.2% of surveyed astrobiologists believe extraterrestrial intelligence exists. Empirical psychological research demonstrates that humanity possesses greater resilience toward extraterrestrial contact than historically recognized. Contemporary studies reveal adaptive responses rather than mass panic, conflicting with the rationale for excluding extraterrestrial intelligence research from federal funding since 1993. The response to the recent interstellar object 3I/ATLAS exemplifies consequences of this underinvestment: despite discovery…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Science and Extraterrestrial Life
