Giant
cloaked Mothership parked above London - Really BIG craft!
Bizarre
signals picked up on Earth could be aliens
10
January, 2019
Is
E.T. phoning our home?
For
just the second time in history, astronomers have detected a
repeating fast radio burst (FRB) coming from outside the Milky Way.
Like
the first, the cause of the latest signal is a mystery, but it's
proof a mysterious burst detected in 2015 wasn't a one-off and has
raised hopes there could be life elsewhere in the universe.
Astronomers
in Canada picked up the signal using the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity
Mapping Experiment (CHIME), which was built to observe the early
universe but also turned out to be good at detecting FRBs.
Since
2007 when they were first discovered, about 60 FRBs have been
detected - but only two have been spotted coming again and again from
the same place in the sky. The latest one has appeared at least five
times.
"The
only other known repeating FRB is one that first appeared in 2012,"
Alexandra Witze wrote in journal Nature. "It seems to originate in a galaxy some 2.5 billion light-years from Earth. Finding a second repeater confirms that the first was not some kind of freak event."
Alexandra Witze wrote in journal Nature. "It seems to originate in a galaxy some 2.5 billion light-years from Earth. Finding a second repeater confirms that the first was not some kind of freak event."
The
CHIME telescope isn't even fully powered up yet, so even more could
be out there waiting to be discovered.
The
origin of the latest signal isn't clear, except that it's likely to
be from another galaxy altogether.
"Fast
radio bursts are exceedingly bright given their short duration and
origin at great distances, and we haven't identified a possible
natural source with any confidence," theorist Avi Loeb at the
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics said in 2017.
"An
artificial origin is worth contemplating and checking."
The
amount of energy required to send a FRB across the universe has been
estimated at the entire output of the sun for 80 years.
Theories
on possible natural origins include spinning neutron stars, black
hole collisions or explosions and massive supernovas.
Prof
Loeb has suggested FRBs could be used to propel alien spaceships with
large sails. They're unlikely to be used for communication between
galaxies, with FRBs - like everything else - bound to the speed of
light.
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