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  • Is strange space signal a sign that ET's mother has called back?

    09/01/2004 9:31:02 PM PDT · by Bernard Marx · 35 replies · 2,029+ views
    The Scotsman ^ | 9-1-04 | James Reynolds
    JAMES REYNOLDS SCIENCE CORRESPONDENT AMATEUR radio hams are usually excited by the faint buzz of a distant shortwave station, but a group of scientists believe they have received a message from extra-terrestrials. Astronomers think that a signal picked up by a radio telescope last year shows the highest probability yet that ET’s family may have returned his call. In February 2003, scientists involved in the search for extra-terrestrial intelligence (SETI) pointed the huge radio telescope in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, at about 200 sections of the sky. Unexplained radio signals had been detected twice by the same telescope in these areas...
  • Mysterious signals from 1000 light years away

    09/01/2004 2:36:56 PM PDT · by longshadow · 78 replies · 2,307+ views
    The New Scientist ^ | 19:00 01 September 04 | Eugenie Samuel Reich
        Mysterious signals from 1000 light years away   19:00 01 September 04     In February 2003, astronomers involved in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) pointed the massive radio telescope in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, at around 200 sections of the sky. The same telescope had previously detected unexplained radio signals at least twice from each of these regions, and the astronomers were trying to reconfirm the findings. The team has now finished analysing the data, and all the signals seem to have disappeared. Except one, which has got stronger. This radio signal, now seen on three separate occasions, is...
  • Brightest supernova in a decade captured by Hubble Space Telescope

    09/07/2004 11:26:04 AM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 16 replies · 1,307+ views
    UC Berkely News ^ | 02 September 2004 | Robert Sanders, UC Berkeley, & Cheryl Gundy, STScI
    BERKELEY – A University of California, Berkeley, astronomer has turned the NASA Hubble Space Telescope on the brightest and nearest supernova of the past decade, capturing a massive stellar explosion blazing with the light of 200 million suns. The supernova, called SN 2004dj, is so bright in the Hubble image that it easily could be mistaken for a foreground star in our Milky Way Galaxy. Yet it lies 11 million light-years from Earth in the outskirts of a galaxy called NGC 2403, nestled in a cluster of mostly massive bright blue stars only 14 million years old. "This has to...