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originally posted by: 1ofthe9
www.newscientist.com...
Paging JadeStar. Benford beacon type stuff?
Mysterious radio wave flashes from far outside the galaxy are proving tough for astronomers to explain. Is it pulsars? A spy satellite? Or an alien message?
BURSTS of radio waves flashing across the sky seem to follow a mathematical pattern. If the pattern is real, either some strange celestial physics is going on, or the bursts are artificial, produced by human – or alien – technology.
Telescopes have been picking up so-called fast radio bursts (FRBs) since 2001. They last just a few milliseconds and erupt with about as much energy as the sun releases in a month. Ten have been detected so far, most recently in 2014, when the Parkes Telescope in New South Wales, Australia, caught a burst in action for the first time. The others were found by sifting through data after the bursts had arrived at Earth. No one knows what causes them, but the brevity of the bursts means their source has to be small – hundreds of kilometres across at most – so they can't be from ordinary stars. And they seem to come from far outside the galaxy.
The weird part is that they all fit a pattern that doesn't match what we know about cosmic physics.
originally posted by: 1ofthe9
www.newscientist.com...
Paging JadeStar. Benford beacon type stuff?
originally posted by: JadeStar
originally posted by: 1ofthe9
www.newscientist.com...
Paging JadeStar. Benford beacon type stuff?
No. Artificially produced radio signals would be narrow band because they allow the easy encoding/decoding of information.
Narrow band signals are not produced by nature so they'd pop out as not natural even after travelling hundreds of thousands of lightyears. Useful for a beacon.
Fast radio bursts are wide-band noise, like the other radio noise natural objects like lightning, the Sun and Jupiter produce.
Nature produces lots of wide-band noise type radio "signals". Fast radio bursts, like pulsars before them are almost certainly produced by some sort of natural object like neutron stars, colliding black holes, etc.
There have already been several threads in the Space Exploration forum on ATS on Fast Radio Bursts where I discussed this. Most recently, this one.
originally posted by: bullcat
originally posted by: JadeStar
originally posted by: 1ofthe9
www.newscientist.com...
Paging JadeStar. Benford beacon type stuff?
No. Artificially produced radio signals would be narrow band because they allow the easy encoding/decoding of information.
Narrow band signals are not produced by nature so they'd pop out as not natural even after travelling hundreds of thousands of lightyears. Useful for a beacon.
Fast radio bursts are wide-band noise, like the other radio noise natural objects like lightning, the Sun and Jupiter produce.
Nature produces lots of wide-band noise type radio "signals". Fast radio bursts, like pulsars before them are almost certainly produced by some sort of natural object like neutron stars, colliding black holes, etc.
There have already been several threads in the Space Exploration forum on ATS on Fast Radio Bursts where I discussed this. Most recently, this one.
Not if it is using spread spectrum. The point of spread spectrum is to have signals appear as background noise so not to interfere with other signals on the same bands, that is why the early WiFi mandated the use of Spread Spectrum in the early days.
Michael Hippke of the Institute for Data Analysis in Neukirchen-Vluyn, Germany, and John Learned at the University of Hawaii in Manoa found that all 10 bursts' dispersion measures are multiples of a single number: 187.5 (see chart). This neat line-up, if taken at face value, would imply five sources for the bursts all at regularly spaced distances from Earth, billions of light-years away. A more likely explanation, Hippke and Lerned say, is that the FRBs all come from somewhere much closer to home, from a group of objects within the Milky Way that naturally emit shorter-frequency radio waves after higher-frequency ones, with a delay that is a multiple of 187.5 (arxiv.org/abs/1503.05245).
On June 2, 1875, while working in one room with their experimental telegraphic device, Watson tried to free a reed that had been too tightly wound around the pole of its electromagnet. He inadvertently plucked the reed, which produced a twang that Bell heard on a second device in another room. This discovery led Bell to change his focus from improving the telegraph to figuring out a way to realize the potential for voice transmissions
originally posted by: JadeStar
originally posted by: bullcat
originally posted by: JadeStar
originally posted by: 1ofthe9
www.newscientist.com...
Paging JadeStar. Benford beacon type stuff?
No. Artificially produced radio signals would be narrow band because they allow the easy encoding/decoding of information.
Narrow band signals are not produced by nature so they'd pop out as not natural even after travelling hundreds of thousands of lightyears. Useful for a beacon.
Fast radio bursts are wide-band noise, like the other radio noise natural objects like lightning, the Sun and Jupiter produce.
Nature produces lots of wide-band noise type radio "signals". Fast radio bursts, like pulsars before them are almost certainly produced by some sort of natural object like neutron stars, colliding black holes, etc.
There have already been several threads in the Space Exploration forum on ATS on Fast Radio Bursts where I discussed this. Most recently, this one.
Not if it is using spread spectrum. The point of spread spectrum is to have signals appear as background noise so not to interfere with other signals on the same bands, that is why the early WiFi mandated the use of Spread Spectrum in the early days.
Spread spectrum still contains a narrowband component carrier. (Actually many of them).
See the waterfall plots below to see this visualized:
These fast radio bursts are pretty much noise, they contain no narrowband components nor information. No more than the static you hear on the radio from the spark plug in your car or when lightning strikes.
originally posted by: 1ofthe9
originally posted by: JadeStar
originally posted by: bullcat
originally posted by: JadeStar
originally posted by: 1ofthe9
www.newscientist.com...
Paging JadeStar. Benford beacon type stuff?
No. Artificially produced radio signals would be narrow band because they allow the easy encoding/decoding of information.
Narrow band signals are not produced by nature so they'd pop out as not natural even after travelling hundreds of thousands of lightyears. Useful for a beacon.
Fast radio bursts are wide-band noise, like the other radio noise natural objects like lightning, the Sun and Jupiter produce.
Nature produces lots of wide-band noise type radio "signals". Fast radio bursts, like pulsars before them are almost certainly produced by some sort of natural object like neutron stars, colliding black holes, etc.
There have already been several threads in the Space Exploration forum on ATS on Fast Radio Bursts where I discussed this. Most recently, this one.
Not if it is using spread spectrum. The point of spread spectrum is to have signals appear as background noise so not to interfere with other signals on the same bands, that is why the early WiFi mandated the use of Spread Spectrum in the early days.
Spread spectrum still contains a narrowband component carrier. (Actually many of them).
See the waterfall plots below to see this visualized:
These fast radio bursts are pretty much noise, they contain no narrowband components nor information. No more than the static you hear on the radio from the spark plug in your car or when lightning strikes.
Ah nuts.
At least I'm picking up tons of cool stuff about radio. Didn't know we had a space exploration forum - I'll have to swing by...