Frank Donald Drake (May 28, 1930 – September 2, 2022) was an American astrophysicist and astrobiologist.

He began his career as a radio astronomer, studying the planets of the Solar System and later pulsars. Drake expanded his interests to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI), beginning with Project Ozma in 1960, an attempt at extraterrestrial communication. He developed the Drake equation, which attempts to quantify the number of intelligent lifeforms that could potentially be discovered. Working with Carl Sagan, Drake helped to design the Pioneer plaque, the first physical message flown beyond the Solar System, and was part of the team that developed the Voyager Golden Record. Drake designed and implemented the Arecibo message in 1974, an extraterrestrial radio transmission of astronomical and biological information about Earth. He is the father of Advanced SETI.

Drake worked at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Cornell University, University of California at Santa Cruz, and the SETI Institute.

Early life and education

Born on May 28, 1930, in Chicago, Illinois, Drake showed an early interest in electronics and chemistry. His father was a chemical engineer, and his mother a music teacher. He had two younger siblings. After receiving a B.A. in Engineering Physics, Drake served briefly as an electronics officer on the heavy cruiser USS Albany.<!--NYT obituary writes about 3 years

In April 1959, Drake obtained approval from the director Otto Struve of NRAO to begin Project Ozma, a search for extraterrestrial radio communications. Drake began his Project Ozma observations in 1960, using the NRAO 26-meter radio telescope, by searching for possible signals from the star systems Tau Ceti and Epsilon Eridani. No extraterrestrial signals were detected and the project was terminated in July 1960. After learning about Project Ozma, Carl Sagan (then a graduate student) contacted Drake, initiating a lifelong collaboration between them.

In 1963, Drake served as section chief of Lunar and Planetary Science at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He returned to Cornell in 1964, this time as a member of the faculty, where he would spend the next two decades. He was promoted to Goldwin Smith Professor of Astronomy in 1976. Drake served as associate director of the Cornell Center for Radiophysics and Space Research, as director of the Arecibo Observatory from 1966 to 1968, and as director of the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center (NAIC, which includes the Arecibo facility), from its establishment in 1971 to 1981. In 1974, Drake wrote the Arecibo message, the first interstellar message transmitted deliberately from Earth. He later served as technical director, with Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan, in the development of the Voyager Golden Record, an improved version of the Pioneer plaque which also incorporated audio recordings.

In 1984, Drake moved to the University of California at Santa Cruz (UCSC), becoming their Dean of Natural Science. The non-profit SETI Institute was founded the same year, with Drake as president of its board of trustees. Drake left his role as dean in 1988, but remained a professor at UCSC while also becoming director of the SETI Institute's Carl Sagan Center. In 1991, Drake served on an expert panel assembled by the United States Department of Energy with the aim of assessing the effectiveness of various long-term nuclear waste warning messages to be implemented at New Mexico's Waste Isolation Pilot Plant. He retired from teaching in 1996 but remained emeritus professor of astronomy and astrophysics at UCSC. In 2010, Drake stepped down as director of The Carl Sagan Center but continued to serve on the SETI Institute's board of trustees.

On the subject of the search for the existence of extraterrestrial life, Drake said: "[A]s far as I know, the most fascinating, interesting thing you could find in the universe is not another kind of star or galaxy … but another kind of life."

Personal life

Drake's hobbies included lapidary and the cultivation of orchids.

Drake married musician Elizabeth Bell in 1953; they divorced in 1976.

Honors

  • Asteroid 4772 Frankdrake is named after him.
  • Elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1972
  • Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1974.
  • 2001 Drake award from the SETI Institute
  • 2018 National Space Society's Space Pioneer Award for Science and Engineering
  • The Drake Lounge at the Green Bank Observatory is named after him

See also

  • Lick Observatory
  • The Farthest, a 2017 documentary on the Voyager program
  • The Search for Life: The Drake Equation

References

  • Frank Drake's academic tree
  • "Estimating the Chances of Life Out There" brief biography for astrobiology workshop at the NASA Ames Research Center.
  • Frank Drake's 2010 article on "The Origin of the Drake Equation"
  • <span class="plainlinks">"Finding Aliens 'Only a Matter of Time', Says Father of SETI"</span> A Q&A with Frank Drake about his famous equation and the meaning of SETI, from an interview in February 2010, leading up to the 50th birthday of SETI
  • <span class="plainlinks"></span> A public talk by Frank Drake in the Silicon Valley Astronomy Lecture Series
  • 2012 Interview with Frank Drake looking back on his career
  • 2014 closertotruth.com Interview with Frank Drake looking at the question of Intelligent E.T. and a Space based Radio Telescope
  • <span class="plainlinks">"The Drake Equation"</span>Astronomy Cast transcript (html), Fraser Cain and Southern Illinois University Edwardsville professor, Dr. Pamela Gay, Monday February 12, 2007. (<span class="plainlinks">Full pdf transcript </span>)