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Astronomers detect regular rhythm of radio waves, with origins unknown
Posted on 6/20/20 at 8:13 pm
Posted on 6/20/20 at 8:13 pm
Science Daily
This new FRB source, which the team has catalogued as FRB 180916.J0158+65, is the first to produce a periodic, or cyclical pattern of fast radio bursts. The pattern begins with a noisy, four-day window, during which the source emits random bursts of radio waves, followed by a 12-day period of radio silence.
The astronomers observed that this 16-day pattern of fast radio bursts reoccurred consistently over 500 days of observations. "This FRB we're reporting now is like clockwork," says Kiyoshi Masui, assistant professor of physics in MIT's Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research. "It's the most definitive pattern we've seen from one of these sources. And it's a big clue that we can use to start hunting down the physics of what's causing these bright flashes, which nobody really understands."
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Maybe by now the're watching I Love Lucy reruns ?
This new FRB source, which the team has catalogued as FRB 180916.J0158+65, is the first to produce a periodic, or cyclical pattern of fast radio bursts. The pattern begins with a noisy, four-day window, during which the source emits random bursts of radio waves, followed by a 12-day period of radio silence.

The astronomers observed that this 16-day pattern of fast radio bursts reoccurred consistently over 500 days of observations. "This FRB we're reporting now is like clockwork," says Kiyoshi Masui, assistant professor of physics in MIT's Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research. "It's the most definitive pattern we've seen from one of these sources. And it's a big clue that we can use to start hunting down the physics of what's causing these bright flashes, which nobody really understands."
______________________________________________
Maybe by now the're watching I Love Lucy reruns ?
Posted on 6/20/20 at 9:26 pm to Trumansfangs
The way things are going, we'll decode the message the day before the gamma ray burst hits.
Posted on 6/20/20 at 11:15 pm to Trumansfangs
Obviously a rotating source.
Posted on 6/21/20 at 1:48 pm to PrivatePublic
quote:
Obviously a rotating source.
Big-arse Leslie.
The band is epic.
Posted on 6/21/20 at 4:08 pm to Trumansfangs
Typical Romulan pattern.
Posted on 6/21/20 at 4:33 pm to Trumansfangs
quote:
regular rhythm of radio waves, with origins unknown
The aliens like to party


Posted on 6/21/20 at 5:18 pm to PrivatePublic
quote:
Obviously a rotating source.
That is indeed, an astute observation.
Posted on 6/21/20 at 10:44 pm to Trumansfangs
Ra-Sun
Dio-Ronnie James
mystery solved
Dio-Ronnie James
mystery solved
This post was edited on 6/21/20 at 11:14 pm
Posted on 6/27/20 at 8:50 am to Trumansfangs
Here’s another article about the discovery.
Enigmatic magnetars are the likely sources of the signals. We’re on the verge of understanding yet another wonder of the Universe.
Enigmatic magnetars are the likely sources of the signals. We’re on the verge of understanding yet another wonder of the Universe.
Posted on 6/27/20 at 2:15 pm to Kentucker
Thanks my friend. Thats a good read !
(With so many scenarios on the table, I couldn’t resist asking astronomers about the option at the very edge of possibility, unlikely but also impossible to rule out: aliens. I admit that, despite knowing better, when I learned that astronomers had detected a distinct pattern emanating from outside the solar system, my mind jumped to Contact, the ’90s classic starring Jodie Foster as Ellie Arroway, a scientist obsessed with extraterrestrial life. When Li told her colleagues about the signals she saw, did they sprint from console to console in an operating room like Arroway did, scrambling to turn up the signal louder, clearer?
No, because the story with FRBs—the story with most mystifying astrophysical phenomena—is that it’s never aliens. Although, people more qualified than I am are also considering that, okay, maybe, these might, on the off chance, be alien signals: Avi Loeb, the Harvard astrophysicist known for entertaining ET explanations, this week drew a connection between Li’s FRB and a planet in the habitable zone of Proxima Centauri, the star closest to our sun. The planet takes 16 days to orbit its star, the same period observed in the FRB’s behavior, and Loeb suggested that perhaps the radio waves come from that planet, whose inhabitants have figured out how to harness and beam starlight, when their world turns our way.
But although the newly found FRB is indeed weird, it’s probably not a beacon from an advanced civilization. “This shares a lot of properties with other sorts of FRBs, which are not regular at all, so we don’t have any reason to believe that this one in particular is special,” Vikram Ravi, an astronomy professor who wasn’t involved in the research but who has discovered several FRBs, told me. )
(With so many scenarios on the table, I couldn’t resist asking astronomers about the option at the very edge of possibility, unlikely but also impossible to rule out: aliens. I admit that, despite knowing better, when I learned that astronomers had detected a distinct pattern emanating from outside the solar system, my mind jumped to Contact, the ’90s classic starring Jodie Foster as Ellie Arroway, a scientist obsessed with extraterrestrial life. When Li told her colleagues about the signals she saw, did they sprint from console to console in an operating room like Arroway did, scrambling to turn up the signal louder, clearer?
No, because the story with FRBs—the story with most mystifying astrophysical phenomena—is that it’s never aliens. Although, people more qualified than I am are also considering that, okay, maybe, these might, on the off chance, be alien signals: Avi Loeb, the Harvard astrophysicist known for entertaining ET explanations, this week drew a connection between Li’s FRB and a planet in the habitable zone of Proxima Centauri, the star closest to our sun. The planet takes 16 days to orbit its star, the same period observed in the FRB’s behavior, and Loeb suggested that perhaps the radio waves come from that planet, whose inhabitants have figured out how to harness and beam starlight, when their world turns our way.
But although the newly found FRB is indeed weird, it’s probably not a beacon from an advanced civilization. “This shares a lot of properties with other sorts of FRBs, which are not regular at all, so we don’t have any reason to believe that this one in particular is special,” Vikram Ravi, an astronomy professor who wasn’t involved in the research but who has discovered several FRBs, told me. )
Posted on 6/28/20 at 7:09 am to Trumansfangs
Besides.
A truly advanced life form wouldn't broadcast their location, they'd know better than beacon to just anyone. And if by slight/slim chance it's of intelligent design, I'm guessing they'd fashion something we'd never pin point, unless it t'was bait
.
A truly advanced life form wouldn't broadcast their location, they'd know better than beacon to just anyone. And if by slight/slim chance it's of intelligent design, I'm guessing they'd fashion something we'd never pin point, unless it t'was bait

This post was edited on 6/28/20 at 7:10 am
Posted on 6/28/20 at 7:43 pm to awestruck
If evolution is the same everywhere, and there’s no reason to think it isn’t, then intelligent life elsewhere in the Universe became the apex life form the same way we did: Eat or be eaten.
We should expect that any aliens who come to earth will likely be more interested in eating us than educating us. After all, that they will have gotten here indicates that they are far more technologically advanced and won’t need anything we have other than our flavor.
We have humans, an intelligent species, that eats other mammals and considers their babies to be delicacies, such as veal and even slink veal which is unborn calves. There’s every reason to think that an advanced species might consider us to be their favorite dish and the occasional human infant and/or fetus might be prepared for special events.
We should expect that any aliens who come to earth will likely be more interested in eating us than educating us. After all, that they will have gotten here indicates that they are far more technologically advanced and won’t need anything we have other than our flavor.
We have humans, an intelligent species, that eats other mammals and considers their babies to be delicacies, such as veal and even slink veal which is unborn calves. There’s every reason to think that an advanced species might consider us to be their favorite dish and the occasional human infant and/or fetus might be prepared for special events.
Posted on 6/28/20 at 9:11 pm to awestruck
quote:
A truly advanced life form wouldn't broadcast their location, they'd know better than beacon to just anyone. And if by slight/slim chance it's of intelligent design, I'm guessing they'd fashion something we'd never pin point, unless it t'was bait .
my understanding is that we (humans, here in the US & other places as well) actually have broadcast radio waves into space in the hope that some aliens would pick it up
anyone else remember reading/hearing about this before?
Posted on 6/29/20 at 9:32 am to dcbl
Yes, deliberate messages have been sent into space. The first one was sent in 1974. It’s now almost 46 light-years out from earth.
Other nations, such as China and Russia, may be actively sending messages as well. China now has the biggest radio telescope in the world. It went online in 2018 and can send signals as well as receive.
Of course, we’ve been sending unintentional signals for over 100 years. Aliens may be able to detect them but they’re too weak to decipher. Even at Alpha Centauri they become too weak.
The Arecibo message may be detectable at 100 light years, however. Humans now have the ability to send decipherable messages out to about 400 light years.
Other nations, such as China and Russia, may be actively sending messages as well. China now has the biggest radio telescope in the world. It went online in 2018 and can send signals as well as receive.
Of course, we’ve been sending unintentional signals for over 100 years. Aliens may be able to detect them but they’re too weak to decipher. Even at Alpha Centauri they become too weak.
The Arecibo message may be detectable at 100 light years, however. Humans now have the ability to send decipherable messages out to about 400 light years.
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