An international team of researchers has discovered a mystery Radio signal Is expelled from the center Milky Way.
It is a signal sent with a certain order, so far it is not known what kind of space object will cause it.
The signal was called ASKAP J173608.2-321635 and was detected several times between January and September last year. Then it disappeared for a while and came back earlier this year.
The discovery will be published in The Astrophysical Journal, where a team of astronomers describes it as “the most polarized, the most varied, and the most spectacular spectrum radio source.”
A new type of objects
The signal was discovered using Australia’s square kilometer series Pathfinder, a radio telescope series designed to analyze cosmic magnets, explore the appearance of galaxies, and map black holes.
“ASKAP J173608.2-321635 may represent part of a new type of material discovered by radio imaging studies,” the researchers explain.
Astronomers insist the source of the signal is unknown. Many types of stars, especially the frequently shining stars, have already been rejected. They have dismissed it as a pulsar, a type of neutron star with a fixed interval.
Increasing the intensity of the investigation and comparing the results of this search with other areas ASKAP J173608.2-321635 is truly unique and if it relates to the galaxy it will ultimately help calculate its nature, scientists say.
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