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Something in space is changing alien signals before they can reach Earth, new paper claims
New research suggests that alien radio signals may be transformed by plasma from their home stars — and scientists on Earth ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists scanned an interstellar visitor for alien signals... what they found was unexpected
A rare visitor from another star system has undergone one of the most extensive technosignature searches ever conducted on an ...
Here's what they found. The post Scientists Release Results After Scanning 3I/ATLAS for Alien Signals appeared first on Futurism.
A comet from another star system does not arrive every year. That is part of what made 3I/ATLAS so compelling when it appeared in July 2025.
Scientists have updated global guidelines for announcing possible evidence of intelligent alien life, aiming to prevent misinformation, panic and confusion in the age of social media and AI.
A new SETI study suggests we may be overlooking alien signals not because they aren't there, but because their own stars are scrambling them before they escape into space. Turbulent plasma and ...
What steps can be taken to identify why we haven’t received radio signals from an extraterrestrial intelligence, also called technosignatures? This is what a recent study published in The ...
The search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) has yet to detect alien technosignatures like radio waves, but the cosmos is vast, and there are plenty of places left to look. New research ...
If it were a phone call, we might call it a butt dial: A strong radio signal that set off questions about whether it emanated from an advanced alien race earlier this week is now believed to have come ...
The moment of first contact with extraterrestrials is a staple of science fiction. It usually involves a frantic scientist ...
The IAA SETI Committee has updated rules for evaluating and revealing the detection of extraterrestrial intelligence. A University of Manchester astronomer has led a major international overhaul of ...
On August 15, 1977, the Big Ear Radio Telescope in Delaware, Ohio, received the most powerful signal it would ever detect during its decades of observations. The signal lasted just 72 seconds, but ...
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