News

When the New York Times first wrote about "mysterious radio waves" from the cosmos in 1933, they made sure to note one fundamental caveat: "No Evidence of Interstellar Signaling." Indeed, the ...
A cosmic enigma Now, researchers are trying to figure out the source of ASKAP J1832-0911’s radio waves and X-rays, which don’t fit into a neat box for categorization, and whether it’s truly ...
The new research, now published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, identifies the slowest ever radio burst of its kind, which releases minute-long pulses about once every three hours. It is ...
A group of researchers in Antarctica have found strange radio waves coming from below the ice. According to the results published in the Physical Review Letters, the mysterious radio waves were ...
To U. S. pioneers in the old West, there seemed to be land enough for everybody. So, too, to radio pioneers there seemed to be wave lengths enough for all comers. Firstcomers, who had their pick, ...
Physicists can’t explain mysterious radio wave emissions in Antarctica. Andrew Paul. Mon, June 16, 2025 at 6:54 PM UTC. 4 min read.
PanoRadar's radio imaging works a lot like LIDAR. On a motor sits a cylinder of 1,200 tiny synthetic antennae, which each emit radio waves. As the motor spins, so does the cylinder, flinging radio ...
Physicists can’t explain mysterious radio wave emissions in Antarctica The anomalous readings ‘appear inconsistent with the standard model of particle physics.’ By Andrew Paul ...