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Alien hunter steps down from extraterrestrial search

Posted at 4:05 PM, May 28, 2012
and last updated 2012-05-28 17:28:49-04

By Elizabeth Landau, CNN

(CNN) – Remember the character Jodie Foster played in the movie “Contact,” based on the book by Carl Sagan? She wasn’t entirely invented; her character’s basis was astronomer Jill Tarter.

Tarter, 68, has spent more than three decades leading the search for intelligent non-Earthly life at the SETI Institute, a nonprofit organization that devotes itself to scientific research, education and outreach on the subject of life in the universe. [BONUS: Neighbors swear they saw UFO]

This week, Tarter announced her retirement from directing the research side of SETI; she will now focus on fundraising, she told CNN Light Years in a recent interview.

From the time she was about 8 years old, Tarter thought she wanted to be an engineer. She got an engineering degree at Cornell at a time when she was the only woman in a class of 300 engineering students. She also believed the curriculum needed a serious overhaul.

“If engineers were as boring as my professions, I was going to find some other interesting problems to do,” she said.

She came across the problem of star formation, and then got interested in SETI after reading a 1971 NASA report called “Project Cyclops.” It talked about how radio telescopes could be utilized for finding life on other worlds.

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“I realized that I was alive in the very first generation of humans that could try and do an experiment to this old question, and we could stop asking the priests and philosophers what we should believe, and actually go and see what the answer is,” she said.

Sagan’s novel “Contact” is an accurate portrayal of how SETI works, including the funding and credibility problems the organization has had, Tarter says. But in that story, the main character finds a signal from outside Earth – that hasn’t happened in real life (yet).

Tarter remembers reading the opening scene describing driving a Thunderbird convertible toward an observatory and hitting a rabbit, she thought, “Wait, wait this is too real! I’ve done that!”