
Eleven point nine light-years away, in the constellation of a mythological sea monster, sits a star that astronomers, SETI researchers, and science fiction writers have been collectively obsessed with since 1960.
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In this episode of The Multiverse Employee Handbook, we visit Tau Ceti — the Sun-like neighbour that has everything you'd want in a nearby stellar system: stability, age, a habitable zone, and almost certainly planets. Almost certainly. We explore the full and rather remarkable story of this ancient star, from Johann Bayer's 1603 star atlas and Frank Drake's original SETI search, through decades of planet hunting, a debris disk of genuinely alarming proportions, and the latest findings from the ESPRESSO spectrograph, which has made everything considerably more complicated. We also ask whether Tau Ceti represents a genuine opportunity for life beyond our Solar System — and why, despite everything, it refuses to stop being interesting. Plus: Ryan Gosling, the Kobayashi Maru, and the nine-billion-year question the universe is still sitting on.
Peer-reviewed papers
Refining the Stellar Parameters of τ Ceti (2023) — https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.10394
Integrated Analysis of the Tau Ceti Planetary System (2020) — https://arxiv.org/abs/2010.14675
Debris Disk of τ Ceti — Herschel Observations — https://arxiv.org/abs/1408.2791
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The narrator, David, is a professional voice actor who has digitized his voice using ElevenLabs’ voice-cloning technology and is fairly compensated for his vocal performance. Thumbnails are created using OpenArt, and music and sound effects come from Pixabay.
Everything else—the research, the writing, jokes, sound editing, and interdimensional coffee consumption—is 100% human-made by a human.
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