Imagine dining in a European capital where you do not know the local language. The waiter speaks little English, but by hook or by crook you manage to order something on the menu that you recognise, eat and pay for. Now picture instead that, after a hike goes wrong, you emerge, starving, in an Amazonian village. The people there have no idea what to make of you. You mime chewing sounds, which they mistake for your primitive tongue. When you raise your hands to signify surrender, they think you are launching an attack.
Communicating without a shared context is hard. For example, radioactive sites must be left undisturbed for tens of thousands of years; yet, given that the English of just 1,000 years ago is now unintelligible to most of its modern speakers, agencies have struggled to create warnings to accompany nuclear waste. Committees responsible for doing so have come up with everything from towering concrete spikes, to Edvard Munch’s “The Scream”, to plants genetically modified to turn an alarming blue. None is guaranteed to be future-proof.
Some of the same people who worked on these waste-site messages have also been part of an even bigger challenge: communicating with extraterrestrial life. This is the subject of “Extraterrestrial Languages”, a new book by Daniel Oberhaus, a journalist at Wired.
Nothing is known about how extraterrestrials might take in information. A pair of plaques sent in the early 1970s with Pioneer 10 and 11, two spacecraft, show nude human beings and a rough map to find Earth—rudimentary stuff, but even that assumes aliens can see. Since such craft have no more than an infinitesimal chance of being found, radio broadcasts from Earth, travelling at the speed of light, are more likely to make contact. But just as a terrestrial radio must be tuned to the right frequency, so must the interstellar kind. How would aliens happen upon the correct one? The Pioneer plaque gives a hint in the form of a basic diagram of a hydrogen atom, the magnetic polarity of which flips at regular intervals, with a frequency of 1,420MHz. Since hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe, the hope is that this sketch might act as a sort of telephone number. | 有朝一日,赴欧洲之都用餐,言语不通,殊为不便。侍者不晓通用语,点膳费心费力,按图索骥,不知其味,餐后结账,难言称心。又一日,远足亚马逊原始村落,饥渴疲惫。化外之民,蒙昧未脱。拟声乞食,不知其意。举手示之,疑为攻击。 语境不同,难以沟通,此非妄言。以辐射场为例,万年不可触之。然,语言演变,未及千年,面目全非,及至万年,无人解惑,遑论警醒后人核废料之危害。督导委员会穷尽心机,水泥道钉,爱氏「呐喊」,转基因植物警示蓝,种种举措,不一而足。皆徒劳也。 废料警示用语,犹可为之;地外生命沟通,量力难为。《连线》记者奥氏新作《外星语言》详叙此题。 天外来客,行踪莫测,通信手段,不得而知。七零年代,先锋十号、十一号升空,所携金匾雕刻裸男裸女,绘制地球方位,尽皆基础信息,冀望异族识之。此举成功几率甚微,诉诸光速发射无线电波,或可图之。星际电波需调至适当频率,未知地外生命心有灵犀乎?先锋金匾所绘氢原子,磁极自旋频率一四二零兆赫。浩瀚宇宙,氢含量之巨,无出其右,以其频率为信,可待异域「来电」矣。 |