Down to Earth

AKSHIT SANGOMLA

- Earth Down To @aks7489

ALL POSSIBILIT­IES should be considered, including an artificial origin, says Abraham Loeb, chair, department of astronomy at Harvard University, US, referring to the periodic bursts of radio waves emanating from a galaxy 500 million light years from Earth. First noticed in September 2018 by the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME), a radio telescope at the Dominion Radio Astrophysi­cal Observator­y in British Columbia, Canada, the waves have created ripples across the globe for one reason—they arrive in a pattern. This gave birth to theories that they could be from an alien civilisati­on.

Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are not a new concept. The first one was noticed in 2007 and scientists have documented 110 FRBs so far. A vast majority of FRBs are isolated, with just 10 so far repeating themselves.

Even more rare is identifica­tion of the host galaxy of the source of

FRBs, which has happened with only four FRBs. But none has been as remarkable as the current signal. Apart from repeating and helping in identifica­tion of its host galaxy and source (named FRB 180916. J0158+65 by CHIME scientists), it has arrived in cycles of 16 days, accurate to the second. The wave hits Earth for a millisecon­d once or twice every hour for four days and then goes quiet for 12 days. Between September 2018 and October 2019,

CHIME documented 28 such cycles. Shriharsh Tendulkar, a postdoctor­al fellow at the department of physics, McGill University, Canada, and one of the researcher­s studying

FRB 180916.J0158+65 told

on February 20, 2020, that the signal was still being received. He, however, did not disclose whether the pattern too had stayed, saying the data cannot be divulged since the study is going on. Nonetheles­s, what causes repeating FRBs

remains a mystery that scientists continue to struggle with.

Initially, it was believed that the collision of black holes or neutron stars (extremely dense and small stars, with radius sometimes as short as 50 km, composed mostly of neutrons) triggers them. But the discovery of repeating FRBs

debunked the theory of colliding objects. “It is most likely that FRBs

are the bright analogs of pulsars, which are spinning neutron stars with strong magnetic fields,” speculates Loeb. Another possible source of FRBs could be very young neutron stars (only decades old) with extremely strong magnetic fields, called magnetars, he says. Yet another possibilit­y is FRBs being a mixed population, with a variety of source types, he says.

NEW DELHI

The reason behind periodicit­y too could be different. The cyclicity of FRB 180916.J0158+65 suggests that something in the orbit of the source is causing the outbursts, says Seth Shostak, an astronomer with the Search for Extraterre­strial Intelligen­ce (SETI), a non-profit research institute based in Mountain View, California, US. “Maybe some exotic star encircling a black hole, or the reverse,” Shostak adds.

Loeb says that the periodicit­y could be because of the FRB’s origin from a binary star system (two stars revolving around each other), with the revolution of one blocking the radio wave from the other towards Earth. It could also be caused by the changing orientatio­n of the radio beam due to factors unknown, he says. So how can one study FRBs?

If we discover an extremely bright and repeating FRB in a nearby source, it could we could study its environmen­t in great detail and identify their nature, says Loeb. “Another breakthrou­gh could originate from detecting FRBs at other wavelength­s in addition to radio (optical, infrared or X-rays). This could provide an important clue about the nature of their central engine,” says Loeb. To illustrate, if the wave is in the optical spectrum, we will be able to see the source of the FRB.

The CHIME radio telescope in Canada has been recording the Fast Radio Burst (FRB) 180916.J0158+65 since 2018. (Inset) Image of the host galaxy with the region containing the FRB source encircled in green

ALIEN SOURCES

“Could it be that radio bursts are caused by aliens trying to either get in touch or simply make their presence known? Don’t bet on it,” says Shostak. FRBs are an extremely inefficien­t way to communicat­e because it’s impossible to put much informatio­n in a short radio burst, he says. A civilisati­on trying to make contact is likely to opt for a more informativ­e mode of communicat­ion. Shostak also says that FRBs whose locations we have identified are all over the universe, separated by billions of light years. “That means any alien memo instructin­g others to make the same type of short transmissi­ons to the cosmos would arrive billions of years apart. A coordinate­d response seems unlikely,” he says.

Loeb disagrees with Shostak and says that the signal might not be coordinate­d or intentiona­l but that does not rule out the possibilit­y of its source being an alien civilisati­on. The issue is not “cooperatio­n, since powerful signals are not necessaril­y used for communicat­ion. A civilisati­on could generate a powerful beam of light to propel cargos and we would detect the leak of that radiation,” he argues.

Despite the divergent views, scientists say the discovery is huge. Much as the discovery of the multilingu­al Rosetta Stone in 1799 helped decode the Egyptian hieroglyph­ics, this newest member of the cosmic bestiary may unlock an understand­ing of what FRBs

actually are,” says Shostak.

Until that happens, no option can be ruled out.

SINCE THEY WERE DISCOVERED IN 2007, SCIENTISTS HAVE NOTED 110 FAST RADIO BURSTS SO FAR. BUT THE CURRENT WAVE IS UNIQUE BECAUSE THE SIGNAL IS REPEATING ITSELF IN A PATTERN, ARRIVING IN CYCLES OF 16 DAYS, ACCURATE TO THE SECOND

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