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 radio waves weren't signals from aliens. After all, it's never aliens. Yet today, some 90 years later, you've undoubtedly seen headlines promoting more "strange radio signals coming from deep space" or "radio signals detected from another solar system." They're among the most clicked on internet space stories. In reality, our planet is constantly bombarded with radio waves, which are a type of energy or light naturally produced all over the cosmos (like visible light or X-rays). Radio waves are extremely valuable to detect using giant dished-shaped antennas because they reveal fascinating, extremely far-off events that we can't otherwise see, like stars exploding or black holes munching on cosmic dust. They are normal. And they aren't attempts at intergalactic communication. "Since the dawn of radio astronomy, this is what astronomers do. They tell people, 'It's not aliens,'" Yvette Cendes, an astronomer and postdoctoral fellow at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, told Mashable. SEE ALSO: Who owns the moon's precious water?These detected radio waves often come from almost incomprehensibly distant galaxies, many light-years away. To us, they're like whispers drifting through the wind. That's why astronomers must use behemoth antennas to find them. "Since the dawn of radio astronomy, this is what astronomers do. They tell people, 'It's not aliens.'" "If you took your cell phone and put it on the moon, it would be one of the brightest radio sources in the sky," Cendes explained. "These are very faint signals. The amount of energy collected in radio astronomy's history is less than the energy needed to melt a snowflake." Even so, they reveal momentous events in our galaxy, and beyond. ![]() What radio waves tell usIt might seem like the great, vast, black ether of space is awfully quiet. Viewed through the lens of visible light (with much shorter wavelengths than radio waves), that's true. But seen through radio waves, it's a wild universe. "The sky looks serene and calm, but if you look in the radio bands, extremely energetic phenomena are taking place in the universe," Poonam Chandra, an astronomer at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Charlottesville, Virginia, told Mashable. Chandra researches the explosion of massive stars in the cosmos. But radio astronomers don't listento radio waves, a misperception shown in the still-exceptional sci-fi film Contact. Astronomers like Cendes, who uses radio signals to research black holes that tear objects apart, rely on radio dishes like those shown above to collect these signals as they pass by, ultimately allowing them to view far-off objects or events. There are many different lengths (or "wavelengths") of radio waves — and different events in space emit different radio waves. Essentially, astronomers can "tune in" to different channels that broadcast different cosmic "shows." (To allow for more detailed views of cosmic happenings, often many large radio telescopes are pointed at the same object to essentially create a giant telescope, like at the Very Large Array in New Mexico.) ![]() "The sky looks serene and calm, but if you look in the radio bands, extremely energetic phenomena are taking place in the universe." When we look up at the sky at night normally, we see the tranquil cosmos teeming with twinkling stars and perhaps a nearby galaxy like Andromeda. But through radio telescopes, as shown in the first image below, we spy a view known as the "radio sky." All the bright spots in the image below aren't stars: they're galaxies and quasars (extremely bright objects at the center of galaxies). And that's not all: You can also see clouds of gas from exploded stars. ![]() ![]() Here are some of the common objects or cosmic events that produce radio waves: Related Stories
Want more scienceand tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newslettertoday. Indeed, objects all over the cosmos are releasing radio waves into space. "There is a lot of radio out there," Cendes emphasized. And unlike stars and most objects in our solar system (like planets and asteroids), radio waves can be viewed during both day and night, and aren't obscured by pesky weather. Radio waves often aren't too mysterious. Conversely, they're revealing; they reveal what we can't otherwise see, deep in the evolving universe. These radio signals help us understand how other galaxies and stars came to be, shining a light on our own cosmic story, out here on a spiral arm of the Milky Way galaxy. "They're not aliens, but they're equally exciting," Chandra said. This story was originally published in February 2023 and has been updated. |
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