All posts tagged: Beams

High-Intensity Beams, Not Whispers: Study Suggests Aliens Would Send Strong Signals

High-Intensity Beams, Not Whispers: Study Suggests Aliens Would Send Strong Signals

Authored by Rupendra Brahambhatt via Interesting Engineering, For more than half a century, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence has been built on the assumption that if aliens exist and try to communicate, their signals will be faint, scattered, and easy to miss.  An alien doll.James Bat Barrera/Pexels So astronomers have spent decades scanning narrow slices of the radio spectrum, hoping to catch a weak signal buried in cosmic noise. However, a new study suggests something totally different-if an advanced civilization actually wanted to be noticed, it would not broadcast weak, unfocused emissions.  It would do the opposite – concentrate its power into tightly aimed, high-intensity beams directed at specific targets.  “Our principal assumption is that a purposely communicative technological civilization will do its technological best to establish communication with other extraterrestrial technological intelligences (ETIs),” Benjamin Zuckerman, study author and an astrophysicist from the University of California, Los Angeles, said. If this idea is even roughly right, then the silence in our data is not just a lack of evidence. It actually limits how many nearby civilizations …

Beams, Japan’s Coolest Department Store, Just Went Online in the States

Beams, Japan’s Coolest Department Store, Just Went Online in the States

Every now and then, a new brand pops up on our radar that we feel compelled to tell you about immediately. This isn’t one of those times, and Beams isn’t a new brand. It is, however, newly available in the US—or at least, newly available on a scale inconceivable even a few years ago. To understand why this is a big deal, let’s backtrack for a second. Beams opened in Tokyo’s Harajuku neighborhood exactly 50 years ago. At the time, it sought to offer the type of breadth available at a typical department store, if a typical department store applied an atypical degree of consideration to the inventory it stocked. Soon enough, one store became many, and eventually Beams started producing clothes under its own name, via a few distinct sub-labels. Those clothes were (and are) really good: practical but not at all boring, somehow both classic-leaning and forward-looking in nature, and priced for a pittance compared to the majority of hard-to-find Japanese menswear. While there’s a decent chance you’ve encountered the Ivy-inflected Beams Plus …