SETI Part 1: Macro-Engineering in the Galactic Context: 7/2/25

SETI Part 1: Macro-Engineering in the Galactic Context: 7/2/25

Turning outer space into a place that humanity, or humanity's children, can call home is a formidable challenge.

By SUNY Poly Spotlight Series

Date and time

Wednesday, July 2 · 6 - 7:30pm EDT

Location

SUNY Polytechnic Institute

100 Seymour Road Utica, NY 13502

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes

👽 SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Technological Intelligence) Part 1: Macro-Engineering in the Galactic Context: 7/2/25

Date: Wednesday, July 2
Time: 6 p.m.
Location: Student Center, Multi-Purpose Room, SUNY Polytechnic Institute, 100 Seymour Road, Utica, NY 13502
Presenter: Dr. Emilio Cobanera, Professor of Physics and Director of the Center for Safe and Secure AI Robotics at SUNY Polytechnic Institute
Description: Turning outer space into a place that humanity, or humanity's children, can call home is a formidable challenge, but it is not beyond current science, engineering, and the power of our imagination. It will all start with planetary-wide engineering, first on Earth to control global weather and then on Mars and Venus to make these planets again suitable for life. After that, humanity might graduate to stellar engineering, with projects like rejuvenating the Sun and maybe turning whole stars into efficient engines for energy, computation, or transportation. In this talk, I look at these ideas closely and rigorously from the point of view of current science and engineering. There are important immediate consequences. Observational astronomy is now sensitive enough to analyze the chemistry of exoplanets and constrain the median age of the abundant Earth-like planets in the Milky way. The conclusion is that technological civilizations could well exist in the Milky Way that are one to two billion years older than ours, and we might be at the threshold for observing soon their macro-engineering projects. To help this prospect, we must have the best possible idea of what these projects might be and their observational signatures.
Fee: Free/RSVP Required
Deadline: Register by Tuesday, June 1 at Noon
Participants: 30 (Max)

Organized by

The SUNY Polytechnic (SUNY Poly) Spotlight Series is a robust collection of workshops for kids and teens and events for people of all ages. Showcasing the expertise of faculty, staff, and community members, the series provides opportunities for fun and learning in the areas of STEM, the arts, athletics, wellness, and more.

FreeJul 2 · 6:00 PM EDT