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UPDATE 04/19/04: Since the release of the newsletter, the
rescoring algorithms have changed. The Gaussian scores have since been
updated and other scores are still being recalculated.
New data will be presented shortly.
Note: For a recap of our candidate reobservations, please see this
Planetary
Society article and some
related
informational pages.
We are now entering the final stages of analysis. In August we
distributed work units containing reobservation data to our users (for
a second time).
It took several weeks for these work units to be generated and sent out,
and several more for all the results to return from our users
and be inserted into our database.
While at Arecibo, we observed 226 different points in the sky containing
mostly SETI@home candidates, but also some
SERENDIP
candidates and interesting astronomical objects when we
had extra time.
For each of these points in the sky we scanned the
verified
results to see if we found similar signals
during these observations (or in the case of the non-SETI@home
candidates, seeing if we found any signals at all).
We are currently in the process of calibrating our scoring algorithms and
rescoring
the candidates. The scores represent relative probabilities that we'd
see these particular signals in random data - so the lower the score the
more interesting it is (because the probability is lower). Don't get too excited
about the tiny numbers - we are looking at billions of signals, so extremely low
probability events are common.
For most of these candidates, the lack of matching
signals during reobservations will cause their score to go up (i.e. get worse).
However, a few scores should go down. This does not mean we found E.T.!
Random noise will ring the bell a few times, as will radio frequency
interference coming from our own planet.
The rescored candidates are presented in a table below, separated
by signal type
(Gaussians,
Pulses,
Triplets,
and "metacandidates" which are of mixture of the above) and
frequency window
("barycentric" (i.e. narrow),
or "non-barycentric" (i.e. wide)).
Currently only a fraction of these categories have been rescored.
We will update these pages as we progress.
No matter the outcome of these analyses, this is not the end of the
project. The candidate set for these reobservations were based on
roughly the first 50% of SETI@home data, and we'll repeat the whole
process again when the last 50% is done.
| Signal Type: |
Barycentric |
Non-Barycentric |
| Gaussian |
new scores |
new scores |
| Pulses |
(pending) |
(pending) |
| Triplets |
(pending) |
(pending) |
Metacandidates (mixed signal type) |
(pending) |
(pending) |
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