Date: 13/07/2014 17:10:30
From: CrazyNeutrino
ID: 558863
Subject: Something in Space Is Blasting Earth with Mysterious 'Fast Radio Bursts'

Something in Space Is Blasting Earth with Mysterious ‘Fast Radio Bursts’

That the sky is full of strange radio bursts isn’t big news. Pulsars, the rotating “radio lighthouses,” of the universe, cause a steady flicker of signals in the eyes of Earth’s radio observatories, and astrophysicists are quite good at sorting them all out, pinning individual bursts to specific pulsars and using this data to further describe our galaxy in general. While these pulsars are typically thought of as rapidly spinning tops, completing rotations in timespans ranging from milliseconds to seconds, some of them spin so slowly that we’ve yet to see them completing a full rotation at all. These are called rotating radio transients (RRATs), which are signals from pulsars that spin very irregularly or have a very irregular magnitude of electromagnetic emission, sort of like a garden hose that keeps getting stepped on.

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Date: 13/07/2014 17:19:16
From: JudgeMental
ID: 558869
Subject: re: Something in Space Is Blasting Earth with Mysterious 'Fast Radio Bursts'

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Date: 13/07/2014 17:29:08
From: CrazyNeutrino
ID: 558871
Subject: re: Something in Space Is Blasting Earth with Mysterious 'Fast Radio Bursts'

JudgeMental said:



well, it wasn’t us

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Date: 13/07/2014 21:35:32
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 559017
Subject: re: Something in Space Is Blasting Earth with Mysterious 'Fast Radio Bursts'

CrazyNeutrino said:


Something in Space Is Blasting Earth with Mysterious ‘Fast Radio Bursts’

That the sky is full of strange radio bursts isn’t big news. Pulsars, the rotating “radio lighthouses,” of the universe, cause a steady flicker of signals in the eyes of Earth’s radio observatories, and astrophysicists are quite good at sorting them all out, pinning individual bursts to specific pulsars and using this data to further describe our galaxy in general. While these pulsars are typically thought of as rapidly spinning tops, completing rotations in timespans ranging from milliseconds to seconds, some of them spin so slowly that we’ve yet to see them completing a full rotation at all. These are called rotating radio transients (RRATs), which are signals from pulsars that spin very irregularly or have a very irregular magnitude of electromagnetic emission, sort of like a garden hose that keeps getting stepped on.

more…

It’s worth repeatinbg more of this article:

“While these pulsars are typically thought of as rapidly spinning tops, completing rotations in timespans ranging from milliseconds to seconds, some of them spin so slowly that we’ve yet to see them completing a full rotation at all. These are called rotating radio transients (RRATs), which are signals from pulsars that spin very irregularly or have a very irregular magnitude of electromagnetic emission, sort of like a garden hose that keeps getting stepped on.

RRATs were first described only in 2006, and just a year later the sky got even weirder with the discovery of fast radio bursts (FRBs). This category of signal is distinctly non-repeating, or at least in any observation so far. While this wouldn’t eliminate a pulsar necessarily (as they might still be shown to repeat in future observations), they also appear to originate outside of our galaxy, which we can infer based on their relatively slow speed and wider dispersion (think electrons per unit of volume) when they reach us here on Earth, compared to typical pulsar bursts that don’t have to make the journey across the intergalactic medium and are much sharper (less dispersed) on arrival.

“A number of additional FRB observations have been made over the past several years, but, confoundingly, they’ve all come from a single telescope, the Parke Observatory in Australia, with no confirmation from any of the many other radio observatories here on Earth.”

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