Mysterious Heartbeat Radio Burst Discovered in Space

Astronomers have detected a mysterious fast radio burst in space with a pattern similar to a heartbeat with a signal estimated to come from a faraway galaxy roughly a billion light-years away.

In a study detailing the findings published in the journal Nature on Wednesday, researchers noted that the exact location and cause of the burst is unknown, but it displays the clearest periodic pattern for a fast radio burst (FRB) found so far.

FRBs are intense, millisecond-long bursts of radio waves in space. The first FRB was discovered in 2007, and since then, hundreds of these quick, cosmic flashes have been detected coming from unspecified, distant points across the universe.

“We don’t know what these explosions are, [but] they are so powerful that we can see them from across the universe,” Daniele Michilli a postdoctoral scholar at MIT’s Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research noted.

“Imagine a very distant galaxy,” she added. “And sometimes, some huge explosions happen that emit huge blasts of radio waves.”

While monitoring the data as it came in from CHIME, when the burst occurred, Michilli noted that the signal named FRB 20191221A lasted for up to three seconds, which is about a thousand times longer than typical fast radio bursts making it the longest-lasting fast radio burst to date.

In addition, the researchers found that the radio wave bursts repeated every 0.2 seconds, similar to the pattern of a “heartbeat.”

Fast Radio Burst (FRB) source unknown

Just like other FRBs, the source of FRB 20191221A is unknown, but researchers noted that its emissions are similar to a radio pulsar or a magnetar, two types of neutron stars formed after giant stars die and the cores collapse.

Magnetars are neutron stars with incredibly powerful magnetic fields while radio pulsars release radio waves that appear to pulse as the neutron star rotates. Both stellar objects create a signal akin to the flashing beam from a lighthouse.

Michilli said, “We think this new signal could be a magnetar or pulsar on steroids,” as the fast radio burst appears to be more than a million times brighter than these emissions.

FRB 20191221A was first detected in December 2019 by a radio telescope called Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment, or CHIME, at the Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory in British Columbia, Canada.

The team doesn’t know which galaxy FRB 20191221A originates from, but they estimate that it’s about one billion light years away.

Still, Daniele Michilli said, that’s a “very rough estimate” and much remains unknown.

Related Posts

Former soldier releases NASA video showing a 3,200km spacecraft of unknown origin near Saturn

A former NASA engineer turned whistleblower, who has claimed that NASA has known about the existence of extraterrestrial life for decades, recently released a video of a…

NASA Successfully Makes Oxygen On Mars And It Will Eventually Sustain Human Exploration

NASA claimed a few months ago that it had successfully created oxygen on Mars for the first time.   The Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment (MOXIE)…

Earth just received a radio signal sent from a galaxy that is 9 billion light years away

It is the first time that scientists have detected a signal that originates from another galaxy located 9 billion light years away from Earth.   The radio…

Astrobiologists Say Planet Earth Itself Might Actually Be An Intelligent Being

Do planets have intelligence? That seems to be the main idea behind a new hypothesis put forth by astrobiologists: that planets are also intelligent beings. This thought…

Scientists Have Just Found 430,000-Year-Old Asteroid In Antarctica

A multinational team of researchers led by academics from the University of Kent and Imperial College London has detected extraterrestrial particles in Antarctica, suggesting the continent was…

A Star the Size of the Sun Survives a Supermassive Black Hole

Astronomers observe how a star the size of our sun survives a close encounter with a supermassive black hole. In a galaxy far, far away, a fascinating…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *