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SETI’s Narrowband Search: Why Scientists Pointed Radio Telescopes at the Interstellar Visitor

News TeamBy News Team4 April 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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SETI’s Narrowband Search
SETI’s Narrowband Search
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The image of the world’s largest radio telescope, a half-kilometer concrete bowl wedged into a limestone valley in Guizhou Province, China, slowly tilting toward a point of light that is not part of our solar system has an almost cinematic quality. Since 3I/ATLAS first entered detectable range, scientists have been keeping an eye on it. Its trajectory didn’t sit well for some reason. For a small and obstinate group of researchers, there was something about the way it moved that seemed worth paying attention to.

Thus, they paid attention. The FAST telescope trained its massive ear on 3I/ATLAS for four months during four carefully selected observation windows: Mars closest approach, perihelion, Earth closest approach, and departure. The Beijing Normal University team used a signal-detection program called bliss to run the data through hundreds of millions of frequency channels in search of a particular type of sound: a clean, narrow tone that slides slowly up or down the dial, similar to how a siren changes pitch as an ambulance passes.

Category Details
Organization SETI Institute
Full Name Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Institute
Founded 1984
Headquarters Mountain View, California, USA
Type Non-profit, multi-disciplinary research & education
Mission To lead humanity’s quest to understand the origins and prevalence of life and intelligence in the Universe
Key Figure Bill Diamond — President & CEO
Lead Researcher (Study) Dr. Vishal Gajjar, Astronomer
Co-Author Grayce C. Brown, Research Assistant
Research Focus Technosignature detection, narrowband radio searches, stellar plasma effects on signals
Funding Program STRIDE (Support Technology, Research, Innovation, Development, and Education)
Funding Source Franklin Antonio Bequest
Key Telescope Used FAST (Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope), Guizhou Province, China
Object of Study 3I/ATLAS — interstellar visitor
Published Study DOI 10.3847/1538-4357/ae3d33
Official Website www.seti.org

That drift pattern, called a Doppler shift, is precisely what one would anticipate from a transmitter attached to a moving object.

Twenty million signal candidates returned. Twenty million was reduced to 14,292 after accounting for satellite noise, GPS interference, cell towers, and all other types of radio pollution caused by humans that overwhelm any telescope aimed at the sky. The group then went over each one by hand. 14,292 turned into five. The five survivors were discarded after being blamed for hardware malfunctions. The article was released. The media moved on.

The tension concealed in that series of events is difficult to ignore. SETI’s narrowband search, which has been used for decades to find clean, sharp frequency spikes that nature is supposedly unable to produce, was unsuccessful once more. That shouldn’t come as a surprise. The cosmos is vast and patient. However, a different and subtly important study that was released in early 2026 brought up an unanswered question: what if the approach itself contributes to the issue?

Stellar “space weather”—plasma turbulence near a transmitting planet, driven by solar winds and coronal mass ejections—may smear an otherwise razor-thin signal before it even leaves its home system, according to research published by the SETI Institute under the direction of Dr. Vishal Gajjar. We refer to this phenomenon as broadening. Cleanly leaving its planet, a perfectly narrow transmission nearly instantly collides with a wall of charged plasma close to its parent star. The jagged spike gets wider.

Its maximum power decreases. It no longer resembles what search pipelines are designed to find by the time it travels through interstellar space and reaches a radio telescope on Earth. It falls below the threshold for detection. The telescope continues to move.

“SETI searches are often optimized for extremely narrow signals,” Gajjar wrote in the research. “If a signal gets broadened by its own star’s environment, it can slip below our detection thresholds — even if it’s there.” It’s an unsettling implication. Every null result in the narrowband search’s history bears a silent asterisk: we searched for a particular shape but were unable to locate it. Saying nothing was present is not exactly the same as that.

When you take into account the stars that are being targeted, the issue becomes more acute. Approximately 75% of all stars in the Milky Way are M-dwarf stars, which are small, dim, red stars. They are the galaxy’s most prevalent type of real estate. Additionally, they are typically the most active, prone to plasma eruptions and flares, which may be particularly useful for spreading any signal that leaves a planet in their orbit.

The broadening effect alone could explain why SETI’s narrowband search has never found an M-dwarf system if it has been broadcasting for centuries.

Apart from the broadening issue, the FAST campaign aimed at 3I/ATLAS has its own methodological flaw. Using orbital data taken from JPL Horizons, the standard NASA trajectory service, the team created their search filters. This information establishes the anticipated speed of 3I/ATLAS in relation to Earth, which in turn establishes the precise frequency drift of any signal from it.

That prediction is encircled by the filter box. Signals that drift at the proper pace endure. Out-of-box signals are automatically discarded. The system is exacting, internally consistent, and totally reliant on the upstream orbital model’s accuracy.

That upstream data has a documented discrepancy. Compared to JPL’s version, which used 782 measurements, independent researchers who calculated the object’s trajectory using the entire public observation record—7,578 position measurements—arrived at a different orbital solution. It’s not a minor rounding error. The filter box is drawn incorrectly if the speed prediction is incorrect.

Since it doesn’t match the curated prediction, a signal sliding at the true rate, which is determined from the entire dataset, would be automatically discarded. None of this information was necessary for the FAST team to create a valid and well-conducted study. They applied the standard source with caution. That’s precisely the point.

Established in 1984 and currently based in Mountain View, California, the SETI Institute has spent forty years constructing the necessary infrastructure for this type of search. Its president and CEO, Bill Diamond, made headlines in April 2024 when he proposed that any advanced civilization visiting Earth would be more likely to send autonomous robotic hardware than biological crew.

This statement essentially described, nearly word for word, the idea of a Bracewell probe, which is a self-directed craft sent across interstellar distances to observe without making an announcement. Diamond used that argument to explain why he didn’t believe claims of extraterrestrial visits. The fact that the same argument could be used to question whether a narrowband radio beacon is even the right thing to search for has a subtle irony.

The discovery of BLC-1, a narrow-band signal that seemed to drift away from Proxima Centauri during observations in 2019, by the Breakthrough Listen Initiative provided a fleeting glimpse of real possibility before it disappeared and refused to recur. Decades earlier, the “Wow! signal” of 1977 accomplished the same thing. Throughout SETI’s history, disappearing signals have been a common occurrence.

The field has never been able to determine whether these signals are the result of interference, instrument artifact, or something that momentarily aligned before moving on.

Whether the current search tactics are appropriate for what may be coming from deep space is still up for debate. Dr. Gajjar and coauthor Grayce C. Brown’s recent study is a significant advancement in our knowledge of a particular failure mode. They point out that searching at higher radio frequencies could significantly lessen the broadening effect.

Maintaining sensitivity to signals that are marginally broader than the conventional spike profile may be the difference between another null result and detection. It’s possible that the universe isn’t transmitting on the frequencies and formats that made sense in 1960. It’s not giving up to adjust for that possibility. Science is catching up to itself.

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SETI’s Narrowband Search

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