Almost 50 years after the WOW! signal stunned astronomers in Ohio, 3I/Atlas reappears in the same sky region, raising ...
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What is the Wow! Signal and could it have been sent from 3I/Atlas? Scientists revisit the 1977 mystery
The Wow! Signal, a mysterious 1977 radio burst, is being revisited by scientists who explore a potential link to the ...
On August 15, 1977, the Big Ear Radio Telescope in Delaware, Ohio, received the most powerful signal it would ever detect during its decades of observations. The signal lasted just 72 seconds, but ...
The most mysterious interstellar visitor of our time has just spoken. After months of exhibiting bizarre behaviour—including ...
The effort to monitor the comet, estimated to be the size of a city block, was spurred on by Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb, a vocal proponent of the theory that 3I/Atlas could have an ...
Radio Signals MeerKAT’s 64-antenna array in South Africa detected hydroxyl absorption lines at 1665 and 1667 MHz—the same “water-hole” frequencies long proposed for interstellar communication. Harvard ...
LaserSETI instruments at Isla Magueyes, Puerto Rico. From left to right: Dr. Abel Méndez, student Francisco Pacheco-Vellón, Dr. Franck Marchis, Dr. Lauren Sgro, and LaserSETI Principal Investigator ...
In May 2022, the International Journal of Astrobiology published a paper suggesting a candidate source of the WOW! Signal: a possible Sun-like star in the Gaia Archive, 2MASS 19281982-2640123, located ...
Charlie has an undergraduate degree in Forensic Psychology and writes on topics from zoology and psychology to herpetology.View full profile Charlie has an undergraduate degree in Forensic Psychology ...
On Aug. 15, 1977, astronomers using Ohio State University’s Big Ear radio telescope detected the famous "Wow!" signal. To this day, it is one of the strongest pieces of evidence that we are not alone ...
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