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I'm looking to create a highly advanced insect communication network that could be broadcast on an interplanetary basis.

Now, my insects communicate through chemical signals and smells which they produce themselves through secretion, so obviously the vacuum of space presents a problem.

Assuming that the chemical signals are the only way to communicate efficiently, how would I overcome this limitation in communications to allow them to be an effective space-faring race?

Edited to add: My concern is not so much for distance as it is how the signals are translated into a format my insects can understand.

  • People communicate through sound and body language and despite that we have mastered the email. Also check out smell-o-vision. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smell-O-Vision . – Raditz_35 Jun 07 '17 at 14:16
  • @Raditz_35 I'm familiar with both, I'm asking about a chemical based communication system that is two-way, not email and not a gimmick. –  Jun 07 '17 at 14:28
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    Maybe you should write that in your question then. The idea behind smell-o-vision is that you have the chemicals you need with you and they get released given a certain condition, e.g. a signal. So all you need is a system to convert a chemical signal into an electromagnetic one and you are all set. I'm afraid I don't understand how this does not work. Also I don't think it is clear why the vacuum of space is the problem, the true problem should be vast distances? – Raditz_35 Jun 07 '17 at 14:33
  • @Raditz_35 okay, thanks. I'll edit. –  Jun 07 '17 at 14:34
  • What's stopping them from evolving a biological method of radio communication? http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2011-04/study-shows-how-bacteria-could-generate-radio-waves – KareemElashmawy Jun 07 '17 at 14:43
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    Related: How could scents develop into a full language?. I guess your aliens are like this. – JDługosz Jun 07 '17 at 15:21
  • It sounds like they lack any long distance communication, this would be an issue long before they got to space. How do they communicate over miles on the planet? – John Jun 07 '17 at 20:11

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For "interplanetary", light-speed communication using radio waves or lasers would work.

Now your insects don't communicate by sound or vision, but they probably do have sensors for it - hard to imagine a species without that winning in the arms race that is evolution. I imagine that visual signals like semaphore or signal fires would be invented by your insects roughly in the same stage of technological evolution as we had them - maybe slightly later if using visual signals to communicate is a truly unknown concept before then. But as soon as one hive(?) comes up with the idea, it would have such an advantage in response time to attacks, general passing-orders-through-the-land and so on that it's sure to become a staple of successful hives everywhere soon. From that, sciences similar to our own can be born, leading to communication via radio/laser in the long term.

Whether the technical implementation calls for insects learning to read computer screens, or for computers holding cartridges of chemicals so they can produce smell-output, is up to you. Either would work.

Now if you want your insects to be a successful interSTELLAR race, they'll face the same problems that we do - the vast, vast distances making light-speed communication take 4 years to, and another 4 years back from, our nearest star.

Syndic
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    I know I suggested the same in the comments, but I want to make something clear since this is a serious answer and all of that: There is no way a space faring civilization has a language so primitive it can be done via a couple of chemicals. I suspect each sentence has to be a unique molecule. This can't work for single words for efficiency reasons. A machine is needed that can synthesize any molecule that is a legitimate sentence on the spot. This has to be made clear. Your answer could be interpreted as "8 different molecules in a box and you are all set" – Raditz_35 Jun 07 '17 at 14:49
  • for / or for computers holding cartridges of chemicals so they can produce smell-output, /
  • – Willk Jun 07 '17 at 15:20