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Friday, November 15, 2024

The historic ‘Wow!’ sign might lastly have a supply. Sorry, it isn’t aliens


The unique “Wow!” sign was detected a long time in the past by the Huge Ear radio telescope at Ohio State College. Because the telescope scanned the sky, a pc program transformed incoming radio indicators to a collection of letters and numbers representing their intensities and printed it out in a single day.

Within the morning, astronomer Jerry Ehman and his colleagues would look over the printouts for something fascinating. When Ehman noticed a sign from the night time of August 15, 1977, he acknowledged it as one thing exceptionally brilliant.

Much more intriguingly, it was in a slender wavelength vary related to impartial hydrogen atoms. Different astronomers within the seek for extraterrestrial intelligence, or SETI, had recommended this wavelength could possibly be a pure calling frequency for alien civilizations. Ehman circled the sign and wrote “Wow!” within the margin in pink pen.

The sign has by no means been seen once more. Astronomers have recommended a number of nonalien explanations for the unique, together with comets in our photo voltaic system and interference from Earth-orbiting satellites or house particles. However none of them absolutely maintain up.

In quest of comparable indicators, Méndez and colleagues sifted by a number of the final information taken by the Arecibo radio telescope earlier than it collapsed in 2020 (SN: 12/4/20). Between February and Might 2020, Arecibo’s antenna tracked the sky much like how the Huge Ear had within the Seventies, letting the researchers evaluate the info straight.

A view from beneath the collapsed dish of the Arecibo Observatory radio telescope.
The enduring Arecibo Observatory’s radio dish, which collected information of a sign much like the “Wow!” sign, was broken by falling cables in 2020 and has since shut down over security issues.AO/UCF

Méndez wasn’t anticipating to search out a lot. “I knew concerning the ‘Wow!’ sign for a very long time, like everyone. However I dismissed it, in all probability like many astronomers, as some fluke,” Méndez says. “Not an astronomical occasion. And positively even much less, aliens.”

However to his shock, the Arecibo information confirmed a number of indicators that seemed loads like “Wow!” — solely dimmer. He realized that the indicators corresponded to clouds of chilly atomic hydrogen scattered across the galaxy.

“I stated, ‘Wait, wait, wait!’ That was the second,” Méndez says. “If it was brighter for a second, that might be it. That will be the ‘Wow!’ sign.”

The following query was methods to briefly brighten clouds of hydrogen. The main points nonetheless should be ironed out, however Méndez and colleagues have an thought: A brilliant radio supply, from one thing like a magnetized useless star, a magnetar, may emit a flare and zap the cloud with vitality. That vitality may excite the hydrogen atoms in a selected method and set off a laserlike impact, the place all of the atoms emit mild in the identical wavelength on the identical time (SN: 4/23/10).

That will be an uncommon phenomenon, Méndez admits. Such hydrogen masers have been in-built labs on Earth, however few have been noticed in house, and none at this frequency. The proper alignment of a magnetar, a chilly hydrogen cloud and the Huge Ear would have been fortunate, too — though that would assist clarify why the sign was seen solely as soon as.

If this rationalization seems to be right, it may pose an issue for SETI searches (SN: 9/30/18). If astronomers ever detect one other robust sign at this frequency, it might be unclear whether or not it was from aliens or glowing hydrogen clouds.

“The SETI mission has been wanting exactly for this type of occasion,” Méndez says. “If we’ve got a pure course of that may produce that, that could possibly be a false optimistic.”

Different astronomers are reserving judgement till the main points of the maser impact are fleshed out extra, which Méndez and colleagues plan to do in a follow-up paper.

“He’s suggesting a phenomenon that has by no means been noticed,” says SETI astronomer Jason Wright of Penn State, who was not concerned within the new work. “The set of bodily circumstances is extraordinarily delicate and particular, and it’s not clear if that’s even doable.”

However even when the “Wow!” sign was naturally occurring, “that might be cool,” Wright says. “The false positives of SETI can result in superb science.” For instance, when astronomers first noticed pulsars, they known as the spinning stellar corpses “LGM” for “Little Inexperienced Males” (SN: 3/8/18). The seminal paper on their discovery devoted a complete part to ruling out ET.

“It wasn’t aliens,” Wright says, “but it surely was nonetheless a Nobel prize.”


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