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Alien construction project or unknown natural phenomenon? Astronomers still have no solution for mysterious observations from star KIC 8462852. Photograph: JPL-Caltech/NASA
You remember the alien megastructure.
No? Let me refresh your memory. Back in October 2015, the internet nearly broke
when astronomers announced they had detected a strange signal that stood a
remote chance of being a vast extraterrestrial construction - dubbed
the alien megastructure.
It was discovered using Nasa’s
Kepler Space Telescope, which was designed to look for the slight
drop in light caused when a planet passes in front of its star. In this case,
the telescope gave astronomers much more than they bargained for.
The brightness of star KIC 8462852
dropped by 15% in March 2011 then by 20% in February 2013 then returned to
normal. Given that a planet dims the light by a mere 1%, whatever was producing
this signal was absolutely huge.
Although astronomers talked a lot
about natural explanations, such as a cloud of thousands of comets around the
star or a disintegrating planet, nothing truly fitted the bill. So they went on
to speculate that the signal could be produced by a vast artificial
construction that had been placed in orbit to harvest energy from the star’s
light.
Such constructions are known as Dyson
spheres, after physicist Freeman Dyson, who published on the
possibility of their existence in 1960. He himself credited his
inspiration as coming from science fiction writer Olaf Stapeldon’s 1937 science
fiction novel Starmaker.
Things got exciting again last month,
when astronomer Tabetha Boyajian from Louisiana State University, who headed
the analysis of the original signals, announced that the star was dimming
again. Releasing a world-wide call for other astronomers to turn their
telescopes towards the star, she and colleagues began a vigil.
Instead of a nose-dive in brightness,
however, the star dropped just 2.5% and then returned to normal after a
few days. Nevertheless, the additional data may be enough for them to work out
what is going on, or at least whittle down the possibilities.
Sadly, one of the explanations that
is looking ever more unlikely is the megastructure. As it absorbs sunlight
(causing the dips), so the structure would naturally warm up and give off
excessive infrared radiation. This would make the star brighter than normal at
infrared wavelengths – but this has not been seen.
Yet, all is not lost for those hoping
to find alien megastructures. In the first of a brace of recent
papers, astrophysicist Zaza Osmanov, Free University of Tbilisi, Georgia, has
pointed out that it would be better to build such a thing around the decaying
cinder of a once giant star, rather than a star itselves.
Known as a pulsar, the dead stellar
heart is left behind after a star explodes. It still seethes with energy,
beaming radio and X-ray emission into the cosmos. Osmanov proposes that
migrating to these places to harvest this energy would be a better bet for
extraterrestrials than building a Dyson sphere around a normal star.
This is because pulsars emit their
energy in narrow beams that sweep through space like a lighthouse. So the
resulting megastructure would only need to be a ring around the star, rather
than something designed to encapsulate the whole thing.
Turning this from speculation into a
testable hypothesis, in his second paper on the subject he calculates
that the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) in Chile, and the orbiting
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) could be used to look at nearby
pulsars for the infrared signature of megastructures.
Even if there are no such things as
aliens and megastructures, such calculations are valid he told me during a
Skype conversation, because they have the power to capture our imagination and
demonstrate that rational scientific thinking can be applied to even wild
ideas.
But just before we rule out the alien
megastructure as the answer to the original KIC 8462852 data altogether, it’s
worth remembering that the lack of an infrared excess goes against most of the
natural explanations as well. Large clouds of comet dust or a disintegrating
planet (Death Star test?) should also give off a detectable infrared signal.
As a result, the astronomical smart
money is now wondering whether smaller clouds of dust or gas lying
along our line of sight to the star, rather than something giant in orbit
around it, could provide the answer. But the truth is that at this stage the field
remains wide open.
To paraphrase Boyajian from
a TED talk on the subject: either this is a natural phenomenon we
don’t understand, or it’s an alien construction we don’t understand. Either
way, it’s exciting news.
Stuart Clark is the author
of The Search for Earth’s Twin (Quercus). He will be delivering
the Guardian masterclass on Is there life beyond Earth?.
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Friday, 16 June 2017
Huge extraterrestrial construction projects should leave detectable traces that astronomers could see
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