zpostcode
Contact
Jan 28, 2026 4:56 PM

  

Contact1

  Carl SaganCarl Sagan (1934–96), American astronomer and science writer.(more)Contact, science-fiction novel by Carl Sagan, published in 1985.

  (Read Carl Sagan’s Britannica entry on extraterrestrial life.)

  

Contact2

  Britannica Quiz Famous Novels, First Lines Quiz Sagan, an astronomer at Cornell University who was inextricably tied to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (the SETI program), was one of the most famous popular scientists of the last century, as respected by his fellow professionals as he was by the public. A major proponent of the search for extraterrestrial life, Sagan designed a special plaque for the exterior of NASA spacecraft. It bore a universal message for spacecraft bound outside the solar system, which could be understood by any extraterrestrial intelligence that might find it. He was also one of the first scientists, along with Frank Drake, to use a radio telescope to search for deliberate signals from nearby galaxies, estimating that our galaxy was home to more than a million civilizations.

  The highly successful novel Contact, which was adapted for screen a year after Sagan died in 1996, was Sagan’s best-known foray into the world of fiction, bringing scientific principles to mainstream entertainment. Perhaps ironically, Sagan envisioned the novel as a film first, completing numerous drafts of a script treatment before turning to novel form. It proved a wise decision financially, for, before he began to work on the book, publisher Simon & Schuster offered him a $2 million advance (about $7.9 million in 2024 dollars). Simon & Schuster’s investment in turn proved to be well founded, for Contact sold 1.75 million copies in the first two years after its release as a hardcover in 1985.

  Unsurprisingly, the overriding theme of the novel is that of extraterrestrial contact. The main character, astronomer Ellie Arroway, detects a signal from a nearby star, a repeating sequence of the first 261 prime numbers, which she deduces could only be sent from an intelligent civilization. It turns out that the message is more complex than initially realized; it actually contains a blueprint for an advanced space traveling machine. Religious fundamentalists, scientists, and governments argue over whether to build it and, in the end, a multinational team is chosen to make the trip. Throughout the story, Sagan intertwines complex mathematics with fiction, and through the knots in his story come hints of deep questions about the meaning of religion and spirituality, humanity, and social consciousness. Of particular interest to critics has been the implication that the universe is a created thing, a seemingly improbable tack for Sagan, an avowed atheist, to take. Sagan offered as evidence, at least within the bounds of the novel, a message that Arroway finds inside the mathematical constant pi: “Deep inside the transcendental number was a perfect circle, its form traced out by unities in a field of noughts. The universe was made on purpose, the circle said.” Much commentary has been devoted to this matter ever since Sagan’s book appeared, and it continues decades afterward.

Comments
Welcome to zpostcode comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Recommend >
Ewha Womans University
  Ewha Womans University, private institution of higher learning in Seoul. It was one of Asia’s earliest institutions dedicated to women’s higher education. Located in the Seodaemun district of Seoul, it remains one of South Korea’s most prestigious universities and a significant institution in the global landscape of women’s education. As of 2021, total enrollment was about 21,000. Ewha was founded...
Deaths in 2024
  Below is a list of notable deaths in 2024, arranged in chronological order. (The age of the individual is in parentheses.) • Herbert Kroemer (95): German-born physicist who was a corecipient of the 2000 Nobel Prize for Physics • Thomas Stafford (93): American astronaut who flew on a number of missions and notably commanded the Apollo 10 mission (1969) •...
Interactive Periodic Table of the Elements
  Above is an interactive periodic table of the elements. Clicking on one of the types of elements at the top will emphasize those elements in the table and give some information about what those elements have in common. Clicking on one of the elements will bring up a larger tile with that element’s atomic number, atomic weight, symbol, electron configuration,...
Deepest blue hole in the world discovered, with hidden caves and tunnels believed to be inside
Mexico's Taam Ja' Blue Hole is the deepest known underwater sinkhole in the world, researchers have discovered and they haven't even reached the bottom yet. New measurements indicate the Taam Ja' Blue Hole (TJBH), which sits in Chetumal Bay off the southeast coast of the Yucatan Peninsula, extends at least 1,380 feet (420 meters) below sea level. That's 480 feet...
Information Recommendation
nightmare
  nightmare, disturbing dream that provokes a strong negative emotional reaction. Nightmares differ from other dreams in that they typically cause the sleeper to awaken because of emotional distress. An upsetting dream that does not cause the dreamer to awaken is usually not considered a nightmare. Although the causes of nightmares remain unclear, nightmare occurrence and frequency are associated with various...
Titan submersible implosion
  More than 100 years after sinking, the Titanic continues to capture the public’s imagination. It has inspired numerous books, TV shows, and films—as well as a highly lucrative tourism industry. For hundreds of thousands of dollars, Titanic enthusiasts can travel in submersible vehicles to the wreckage, which lies approximately 12,500 feet (3,800 meters) below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean....
art and cultural property repatriation
  art and cultural property repatriation, the return of art or other cultural objects to their country or culture of origin. It differs from art restitution, which is typically used to describe instances in which a piece of art or other cultural object is returned to an individual, rather than to a country or people. Many discussions of repatriation focus on...
7 benefits of good credit for your financial well-being
     You’ve probably heard that having a good credit score is important if you want access to favorable mortgage terms or hope to get a better rate on your next auto loan. But the benefits of a good credit score go beyond borrowing money to meet financial and life milestones.   Your credit history can influence employment, your ability to get...
Khmer empire
  Date: 802 - 1431 (Show more) Related Places: Vietnam Thailand Cambodia Laos (Show more) Khmer empire, ancient Cambodian state that ruled vast areas of mainland Southeast Asia from about 802 ce to 1431, reaching its peak between the 11th and 13th centuries. Also known as the kingdom of Angkor, it was the successor state of the earlier kingdoms of Funan...
Earth from space: Lava bleeds down iguana-infested volcano as it spits out toxic gas
Quick factsWhere is it? Fernandina Island, Galpagos Islands [-0.3738657, -91.5395414]. What's in the photo? The erupting La Cumbre volcano. Which satellite took the photo? Landsat 8. When was it taken? March 7, 2024. This striking image captures the initial lava flow from the ongoing eruption at La Cumbre volcano. The active fissure is located on Fernandina Island the third largest...
The big 3 credit bureaus and the info they gather about you
     Credit reporting agencies exert a major influence on consumers’ lives in the United States. The big three credit bureaus—Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax—and the credit scores they calculate affect your economic fate in numerous ways, including which loans and bank accounts you can get, and possibly even where you’ll live and work.   Most of the information used to calculate your...
assassination of Yitzhak Rabin
  assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, mortal shooting of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin following a mass peace rally on November 4, 1995 in Tel Aviv’s Kings of Israel Square (later renamed Rabin Square). Rabin was killed by a Jewish extremist, Yigal Amir, who was angry about the Oslo Accords, in which Rabin agreed to cede some of the territory occupied in...