Twitter
Advertisement

Astronomers closer to explaining mysterious radio pulses from outer space

Mysterious radio pulses that had scientists baffled for over a decade may have been coming from a highly magnetized, gas-filled region of space.

Latest News
article-main
Representational Image
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

A team of astronomers have come closer to explaining the mysterious radio pulses from the outer space.

Astronomers have tied the origin of a Fast Radio Burst to a highly magnetized, gas-filled region of space, providing a new hint in the decade-long quest to explain the mysterious radio pulses.

"We now know that the energy from this particular burst passed through a dense magnetized field shortly after it formed," says lead author Kiyoshi Masui of the University of British Columbia, adding that this significantly narrows down the source's environment and type of event that triggered the burst and means the source of the pulse likely resides within a star-forming nebula or the remnant of a supernova.

Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs), bursts of energy from space that appear as a short flashes of radio waves to telescopes on Earth, have baffled astronomers since first detected a decade ago. While only 16 have ever been recorded, scientists believe there could be thousands of FRBs a day.

"Hidden within an incredibly massive dataset, we found a very peculiar signal that matched all the known characteristics of a Fast Radio Burst, but with a tantalizing extra element that we simply have never seen before," said Jeffrey Peterson, one of the researchers.

In this case, the researchers found the FRB exhibited Faraday rotation, which is a corkscrew-like twist radio waves acquired by passing through a powerful magnetic field. Additional analysis showed that it also passed through two distinct regions of ionized gas on its way to Earth. In this case, the researchers found that one of the regions of ionized gas was very near the burst's source. In fact, the researchers were able to determine that the burst was from a nebula surrounding the source or a galactic centre.

"Taken together, these remarkable data reveal more about an FRB than we have ever seen before and give us important constraints on these mysterious events," said Masui.

The findings are published in the journal Nature.

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement