The Daily Telegraph

Radio signals detected 3bn light years away

Astronomer­s say their equipment is now capable of detecting alien life – but this was not it

- By Sarah Knapton SCIENCE EDITOR

ASTRONOMER­S hunting for signs of intelligen­t alien life have recorded 15 mysterious radio signals coming from a dwarf galaxy three billion light years away. The signals were picked up by a team at the Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia, part of the Breakthrou­gh Listen project co-launched by Prof Stephen Hawking in 2015.

Although the latest fast radio bursts, or FRBS, are unlikely to have come from an alien civilisati­on, the researcher­s say it proves their equipment is working and ready to pick up signs of life if they exist.

FRBS are radio signals from somewhere in deep space that last for just millisecon­ds. The new bursts came from an unknown source, named FRB 121102, discovered in 2012. At first scientists thought the signals were the fallout from a catastroph­ic event, such as a supernova, but when they were recorded again in 2015 and 2016 it suggested that whatever object produced them was still there.

In the new experiment, scientists from the University of California scanned the same galaxy at a higher frequency to detect the original bursts, and found 15 more.

Explanatio­ns for the signals range from rotating neutron stars with extremely magnetic fields, to energy sources used by aliens to power spacecraft. Whatever they are, they left their galaxy when our solar system was just two billion years old, and life was just taking hold on Earth.

Dr Vishal Gajjar, at UC Berkeley Research Centre, said: “We really have no idea about where they come from. We currently know of 30 to exist and only one is known to repeat, which means we can look at it again and again.

“If some form of life would like to produce a signal that is detectable to another civilisati­on, this could be a way to do it, but I don’t think they are coming from intelligen­t civilisati­ons.

“There are more theories than the number of sources. As we do more study, we find more weird things.”

Martin Rees, the astronomer royal who is chairman of the $100 million (£77 million) global astronomic­al initiative, told The Daily Telegraph: “Some journalist­s have written that this is evidence for extraterre­strial intelligen­ce. Nobody is claiming this. But it confirms that their equipment is working well.”

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