Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Mysterious Fast Radio Bursts Discovered From Deep Space ‘Could Be Aliens’

IANS, 10 Jan, 2019 07:56 PM

    Astronomers, including some of Indian origin, have detected repeating energy bursts from a single source from deep space for the second time in history -- giving impetus to theories that there could be evidence of advanced alien life.


    A Canadian-led team of scientists found the second repeating fast radio burst (FRB) from the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) telescope located in the mountains of British Columbia's Okanagan Valley.


    Of the more than 60 FRBs observed to date, repeating bursts from a single source had been found only once before -- a discovery made by the Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico in 2015, the team said in a paper published in the journal Nature and presented at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Seattle on Wednesday.


    FRBs are short bursts of radio waves coming from far outside our Milky Way galaxy and scientists believe FRBs emanate from powerful astrophysical phenomena billions of light years away.


    "Whatever the source of these radio waves is, it's interesting to see how wide a range of frequencies it can produce. There are some models where intrinsically the source can't produce anything below a certain frequency," said team member Arun Naidu of McGill University.


    The repeating FRB was one of a total of 13 bursts detected over a period of just three weeks during the summer of 2018. It came six times from the same location, 1.5 billion light-years away.


    Additional bursts from the repeating FRB were detected in following weeks.


    "Until now, there was only one known repeating FRB. Knowing that there is another suggests that there could be more out there," added Ingrid Stairs, a member of the CHIME team and an astrophysicist at University of British Columbia (UBC).


    Most of the FRBs previously detected had been found at frequencies near 1400 MHz, well above the Canadian telescope's range of 400 MHz to 800 MHz.


    The majority of the 13 FRBs detected showed signs of "scattering," a phenomenon that reveals information about the environment surrounding a source of radio waves.


    "That could mean in some sort of dense clump like a supernova remnant," says team member Cherry Ng, an astronomer at the University of Toronto. "Or near the central black hole in a galaxy. But it has to be in some special place to give us all the scattering that we see".


    Ever since FRBs were first detected, scientists have been piecing together the signals' observed characteristics to come up with models that might explain the sources of the mysterious bursts.


    The detection by CHIME of FRBs at lower frequencies means some of these theories will need to be reconsidered.


    "(We now know) the sources can produce low-frequency radio waves and those low-frequency waves can escape their environment, and are not too scattered to be detected by the time they reach the Earth.


    "That tells us something about the environments and the sources. We haven't solved the problem, but it's several more pieces in the puzzle," noted Tom Landecker, a CHIME team member from the National Research Council of Canada.


    In 2017, Professor Avi Loeb from the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics his colleague Manasvi Lingam proposed that FRBs could be leakage from planet-sized alien transmitters, reported The Guardian.


    ""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," said Loeb in a statement after the publication of a previous paper in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.


    "An artificial origin is worth contemplating and checking," he added.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Indian Professionals 'Most Confident' Globally: Survey

    Indian Professionals 'Most Confident' Globally: Survey
    Indians have the highest confidence level in the world when it comes to talking about their achievements both online and in person, compared to professionals globally, reveals a survey.

    Indian Professionals 'Most Confident' Globally: Survey

    Indian-Origin Student Anushka Gaikwad Tops CBSE Class 12 Exam In Singapore

    Indian-Origin Student Anushka Gaikwad Tops CBSE Class 12 Exam In Singapore
    Anushka Gaikwad, who moved to Singapore in 2010 with her working parents from India, scored 98.2 per cent marks. Shubham Saraf, also an Indian-origin, came second by scoring 98 per cent marks.

    Indian-Origin Student Anushka Gaikwad Tops CBSE Class 12 Exam In Singapore

    Elders Ban Music, Dance At Weddings In Pakistan Village

    Elders Ban Music, Dance At Weddings In Pakistan Village
    The announcement was made through loudspeakers in Sheikhan village of Punjab province on Friday, Express News reported. 

    Elders Ban Music, Dance At Weddings In Pakistan Village

    This Prosthetic Foot To Help Disabled Women Wear Heels

    This Prosthetic Foot To Help Disabled Women Wear Heels
    A team of students has developed an early version of a foot that enables women adjusting to life with a prosthetic limb to wear heels up to four inches high.

    This Prosthetic Foot To Help Disabled Women Wear Heels

    Facebook Most Preferred Among US Citizens To Get News: Survey

    Facebook Most Preferred Among US Citizens To Get News: Survey
    Nearly 62 percent Americans get news from various social media platforms like Reddit, Facebook and Twitter and social networking giant Facebook is leading the pack, according to a new survey.

    Facebook Most Preferred Among US Citizens To Get News: Survey

    Florida 6th-Grader Rishi Nair Wins National Geographic Bee And $50000 College Scholarship

    Florida 6th-Grader Rishi Nair Wins National Geographic Bee And $50000 College Scholarship
    Nair gets a $50,000 scholarship, a trip to Alaska and Glacier Bay National Park and a lifetime membership in the National Geographic Society

    Florida 6th-Grader Rishi Nair Wins National Geographic Bee And $50000 College Scholarship