Declassified NASA Document on Extraterrestrial Communication

The following is an abbreviated version of a Declassified NASA document originally published as Classified in 1975. Declassification date is unknown. The entire original document can be found at: NASA Document 3052333 Declassified

This document provides much support for some of the key points made in my Extraterrestrial Communication Code book such as:

  1. Extraterrestrials probably left us a message to find and respond to; which we have not.
  2. The messages we are sending are way too complicated to be interpreted as intended if found by extraterrestrials.
  3. Back to Basics approach to the problem

NASA Document: 3052333FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY

Lambros D. Callimahos: 

Communication with Extraterrestrial Intelligence

We are not alone in the universe. A few years ago, this notion seemed far-fetched; today, the existence of extraterrestrial intelligence is taken for granted by most scientists. Even the staid National Academy of Sciences has gone on record that contact with other (extraterrestrial) “civilizations” is no longer something beyond our dreams but a natural event in the history of mankind that will perhaps occur in the lifetime of many of us. Sir  Bernard  Lovell, one of the world’s leading radio astronomers, has  calculated that, even allowing for a margin of error of 5,000%, there must be in our galaxy about 100 million stars which have planets of the right chemistry, dimensions, and temperature to support (extraterrestrial) organic evolution. If we consider that our own galaxy, the Milky  Way, is but one of at least a billion other galaxies similar to ours in the observable universe, the number of stars that could support some form of (extraterrestrial) life is, to reach for a word, astronomical. As to advanced forms of (extraterrestrial) life—advanced by our own miserable earth standards—Dr. Frank D. Drake of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory at Green Bank, West Virginia, has stated that, putting all our knowledge together, the number of (extraterrestrial) civilizations which could have arisen by now is about one billion. The next question is, “Where is everybody?”

Unless we are terribly conceited (a very unscientific demeanor), we must assume that the “others”(extraterrestrials) are far more advanced than we are. Even a 50- year gap would be tremendous; a 500-year gap staggers the imagination, and as for a 5,000-year gap… (By the way, if they are as much as 50 years behind us, forget it!) It is quite possible that “others” have satellite probes in space, retransmitting to “them” anything that sounds nonrandom to the probe. But they  have probably  called  us several thousand years ago, and are waiting for an answer;  or  worse  yet, they  have  given   up;  or,  more probably, they (extraterrestrials) have reached such impressive technological advances that they have destroyed themselves. In this connection, Professor Losif Shklovsky, Russia’s greatest radio astronomer, has cited the profound crises which lie in wait for a developing civilization, any one of which may well prove fatal:

  1. Self-destruction as a result of a thermonuclear catastrophe or some other discovery which may have unpredictable and uncontrollable consequences;
  2. Genetic danger;
  3. Overproduction of information;
  4. Restricted capacity of the individual’s brain, which can lead to excessive specialization, with consequent dangers of degeneration; and
  5. A crisis precipitated by the creation of artificial intelligent

Epsilon Eridani and Tau Ceti were the targets on which Dr. Drake focused his attention in the spring of 1960 in Project Ozma, an attempt to detect possible intelligent signals from outer space.

The growing presumption that (extraterrestrial) life exists in other worlds led, in 1971, to a six-nation multidisciplinary conference held in Soviet Armenia on Communication with Extraterrestrial Intelligence. The U.S. delegation of about two dozen scientists was headed by Dr. Carl Sagan of the Center for Radiophysics and Space Research at Cornell University. The report of this conference, published in 1973 by MIT, deals with such subjects as the evolution of intelligence, the lifetimes of technical civilizations, and the number of advanced galactic (extraterrestrial) civilizations. Last November (1974)  a group of scientists at Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico sent a three -minute message beamed at Messier 13, and this represented man’s first attempt to take the initiative in communicating with another civilization. The project was conducted by the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center, which operates the Arecibo Observatory for Cornell University and the National Science Foundation. Actually, the main purpose of the experiment was to dramatize the capabilities of the world’s  largest antenna at the Arecibo Observatory at that time. The message, consisting of 1271 binary digits or “bits,” is shown in Figure 1. Since 1271 has but two prime factors, 31 and 41, we would naturally be lead to write out the message in raster form, in 41 lines of 31 bits each, or in 31 lines of 41 bits each; the latter case reveals a greater non-randomness in the patterns disclosed, indicating that these are the correct dimensions.

Figure 1 (See Original Document Link)

If another (extraterrestrial) civilization were trying to establish communication with us, it would first embark on attention-getting signals of such a nature that we could distinguish them from random cosmic noise; once we receive a recognizable signal, we have a good chance of understanding the message. For example, they could start with trains of signals corresponding to the natural number 1, 2, 3…, followed perhaps by prime numbers. They might continue with equal-length extended signals consisting of start and stop impulses, with occasional pulses in between; when these signals are aligned flush over one another, they would show a circle, the Pythagorean Theorem, or similar geometric design. ”these attention-getting signals would be followed by what amounts to early “language lessons,” interspersed with items of technical information to help bring us up to the level of our superiors, “them.”

In Figure 2 is shown the write-out of the message, in which the binary 1’s have been replaced by a dot and the 0’s left as blank spaces.

Figure 2 (See Original Document Link)

Now for its interpretation: (Way too Complicated)

There are dots at the four corners of the pictogram as reference points, marking the outlines of the rectangle. At the upper left is a representation of the sun; directly underneath in a column are dots representing 8 planets, identified by the appropriate binary coding to their left, preceded by a binary point as a marker. The erect, two-legged beings illustrated are obviously bisexual and mammalian.  One hand of the male figure points to the fourth planet where they apparently reside. At the top of the pictogram may be seen representations of hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen atoms, indicating that the chemical structure of life on their planet is similar to ours.  From the third planet there emerges a wavy line, showing that it is covered with water; the fish shows that they must have visited us and therefore have space travel. One hand of the female figure points to a six (preceded by the usual binary point), perhaps implying that there are six fingers on each hand;  we  could   therefore  assume  that  their number system is probably to the base 12. At the right of the female figure may be seen a bracket, in the middle of which is eleven in binary form (preceded by a binary point): this implies that the beings are 11 units high. A reasonable interpretation is that the unit is 21 cm, the wave length of the transmission, making them about 2-feet tall, which should be all right for average Martians.

In 1952 the British scientist Lancelot Hogben delivered an address before the British interplanetary Society entitled “Astraglossa”, or First Steps in Celestial Syntax. Hogben pointed out that number is the most universal concept for establishing communication between intelligent beings, therefore mathematics forms the basis for the first steps in extraterrestrial communication;  he then illustrated how he could transmit pulses representing integers, and distinctive signals or “radioglyphs” representing ” —{- ”, ”— ”, ”= “, and so on. Morrison later carried out the basic idea a little further, using different pulse shapes to represent elementary mathematical symbols. An entirely different approach was developed by Hans Freudenthal, Professor of Mathematics at the University of Utrecht, who in 1960 published a book entitled Lincos- Design of a Language for (osmic Intercourse. ”Lincos,” an acronym of “lingua cosmica,” tries to establish a communication of ideas through symbolic logic, but the general consensus of those who have taken the trouble to study his book is that his plan is too difficult. After all, the object of the exercise is getting ideas across to another party, whose thinking processes may be entirely different from our own. In other words, what we need to develop is an “inverse cryptography,” or communication symbolism specially designed, not to hide meaning, but to be as easy as possible to comprehend. Cleverness on the part of the sender is then the important factor, not reliance on ingenuity of the recipient. (Back to Basics Approach)

The inverse cryptographer—somehow, this term doesn’t  sound quite right—must make his meaning clear to the recipient, even if the latter does not possess a cosmic equivalent of the Rosetta Stone.

As an illustration of how much information could be conveyed with a minimum of material, and as an example of facile inverse cryptography, let us consider a message I have devised to be typical of what we might expect of an initial communication from outer space. In Figure 3 is shown a series of transmissions which could have come from another inhabited planet, many light years away.

Figure 3 (See original Document Link- Still way too Complicated)

The 32 arbitrary symbols are representations for the 32 different signals (combinations of beeps, or distinctive pulse shapes) heard on a frequency of 1420.4 megacycles.

The punctuation marks are not part of the message, but here represent different time lapses: adjacent symbols are sent with a short pause (1 unit) between them; a space between symbols   means   a   longer   pause   (2   units); commas, semicolons, and periods indicate pauses of 4, 8, and 16 units, respectively.  Between transmissions (numbered here for reference purposes) there is a time lapse of 32 units.

The first transmission, (1), is obviously an enumeration of the 32 different symbols which will be used in the communications; in transmission (2) is the clear implication that A represents the integer 1, B the integer 2, and so on to J being the integer 10. In transmission (3), the symbols K for a plus sign and L for “equals” are introduced; in (4), the symbol M stands for “minus”; in (5), the symbol N stands for the concept and sign for zero. In (6), the concept of decimal notation is introduced; in (7), the symbol O must stand for the multiplication sign; in (8), the symbol P must stand for sign for division; in (9), the symbol Q must represent a sign for the reciprocal; and in (10), the symbol R must stand for a decimal point. In the next ten transmissions there are introduced the concepts and symbols for inequalities, approximations, nested parentheses and brackets, powers and roots, factorials, and infinite series defining pi and e. Transmission (21) adds nothing new to the 31 symbols recovered thus far, but  it does quote one of the most beautiful concepts in pure mathematics, Euler’s identity, e —[-  1  =  0.   With this they are telling us that, if they can teach us such a complex notion at this early stage, we will be staggered by what they will teach us by the 200th or 2000th transmission.

Beginning   with   transmission   (22), words and word-cluster concepts are introduced, so that by the time we come to transmission (30) we are now understanding, in a manner of   speaking,    pure    Venerean   sentences. Greater than 2 can be expressed as the sum of two primes. Furthermore,  we can  now see  how we could  recover the It will not be difficult for “them” (extraterrestrials)  to demonstrate their code  they  are  using  on  us,  and   which  will  obviously intellectual and technological superiority (first of all, consist of thousands  upon  thousands of code groups with don’t forget it was they who were able to call us!). If different  meaning;  this  is  easily  appreciated by anyone “they” but know the seventh digit of the “fine” structure who  takes  the  trouble  to  fathom  the  meaning of all 30 constant, ” they are ages ahead of us (we know only the transmissions in the foregoing example first five for  sure,  suspect  the  sixth). This  number, even  right after  this first series of transmissions, if we 137.039…, is the ratio, among  others,  of  the speed  of are  in  direct  communication  with  that  planet,  we shall light to the speed of the hydrogen electron; it may take a have questions  to  put  to  ”them” (extraterrestrials):  the  proof of Fermat’s century to calculate this constant to 9 digit. And after we Last  Theorem,  Goldbach’s  conjecture,  and  many other resolve our pressing scientific questions, it might be unsolved    problems   in   mathematics   and   the   natural appropriate to make discrete inquiries as to how we could sciences.  By the way, Goldbach’s  ’ notorious” conjecture live in harmony and peace with our fellow man—that is, is called by that adjective only because other if we aren’t eaten or otherwise ingested by the superior mathematicians weren’t  imaginative  enough  to make the civilization that had the good fortune to contact us. But as conjecture themselves; it states that every even number far as the cryptologist is concerned, he (and generations of his descendants who might  experience  the  supreme  thrill of their lives when we hear from  “them” (extraterrestrials)  must  keep  a  level head, not get excited, and be prepared to cope with problems the likes of  which  he  has  never  seen. 

Mr. Callimahos won world renown as a flute virtuoso before serving in the Army cryptologic unit in World Wars II. The author of many textbooks, monographs, studies and articles, including the ones on cryptology in the World Book Encyclopedia, Collier’s Encyclopedia, and the Encyclopedia Britannica, he has for twenty years taught NSA’s senior course in cryptanalysis.