Australien Telescopes doubles the number of mysterious alien signals

Australien Telescopes doubles the number of mysterious alien signals https://i0.wp.com/www.eresviral.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/1539252269_Australien-Telescopes-duplica-el-número-de-señales-alienígenas-misteriosas.jpg?fit=260%2C137&ssl=1

Australien Telescopes doubles the number of mysterious alien signals




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Australien Telescopes doubles the number of mysterious alien signals


The number of rapid radio explosions detected has doubled thanks to the Australian telescope.

The number of strange and fast radio bursts that have been detected has doubled thanks to the CSIRO radio telescope in Western Australia. Scientists do not know what is sending the radio bursts; They are flashes of radio waves that come from deep. space.

The fastest and brightest radios have been discovered

With the help of telescopes in Australia, the team has found some of the brightest along with the closest fast radio bursts ever discovered. The explosions come from across the sky and last just milliseconds and baffle scientists due to the fact that they involve huge amounts of energy. To put the amount of energy they use in perspective, it is approximately the same as the Sun launches in 80 years.

Dr. Ryan Shannon of Swinburne University of Technology together with the OzGrav Center of Excellence ARC said:

"We found 20 fast radio bursts in a year, almost doubling the number detected worldwide since they were discovered in 2007. By using Australia's new technology Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (ASKAP), we have also shown that the fast burst radio they come from the other side of the Universe instead of our own galactic neighborhood. "

Rapid radio bursts travel for billions of years

Dr. Jean-Pierre Macquart, from the Curtin University node of the International Center for Radio Astronomy Research, is the co-author. According to Macquart, radio explosions can travel for billions of years, occasionally passing through clouds of gas. He said:

"Each time this happens, the different wavelengths that make up a burst slow down in different amounts." Finally, the burst reaches the Earth with its propagation of wavelengths that reach the telescope at slightly different times, like swimmers in a The goal line of the different wavelengths tells us how much material the burst has traveled on its journey, and as we have shown that fast radio bursts come from far away, we can use them to detect all the missing matter in the space between the galaxies - which is a really exciting discovery. "

The ASKAP is located at the CSIRO Murchison Radioastronomy Observatory in Western Australia. Next will be the Square Kilometer Array telescope in the future. When it arrives, the SKA will see a large number of fast radio explosions, which would allow astronomers to study the primitive Universe in great detail.


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