We introduce the concept of a one-way, broadband information package, the Cosmic Illuminating Gift, intended to provide distant intelligences with fundamental empirical data about the Universe. Unlike previous messaging to extraterrestrial intelligences (METI) that emphasized greetings or cultural identity, the Gift aims to transmit unbiased, universally interpretable information that recipients could not otherwise obtain due to their distinct spacetime position and epoch. By emphasizing raw observations, rather than human interpretations or cosmological models, the Gift aspires to serve as a neutral and enduring resource. A central assumption of the project is that any potential recipients are likely to possess a level of intelligence and technological sophistication far beyond our own. Accordingly, the content and encoding of the Gift are not designed to “teach” fundamentals, but to deliver compact, logically structured packets that such civilizations could decode even at extremely low signal-to-noise levels. This perspective shifts the challenge from brute-force transmission to ensuring that photons arrive in spectrally quiet windows and that the format is unmistakably artificial and distinguishable from astrophysical backgrounds. We outline strategies for content selection, encoding, and transmission that reflect this assumption. Practical implementation is feasible with current or near-term infrastructure, and future advances will only improve the quality of subsequent Gifts. Ultimately, the endeavor is unique among scientific projects in that it anticipates no feedback or measurable result within the span of our civilization’s timeline. Its significance lies instead in the act of contribution itself: offering a durable, universal dataset as a gesture of intellectual solidarity across cosmic distances.
Arman Shafieloo (Tue,) studied this question.