Mysterious signals detected in Antarctica

2025-06-22 22:03:28 / MISTERE&KURIOZITETE ALFA PRESS
Mysterious signals detected in Antarctica

Mysterious radio signals have been detected in Antarctica.

An experiment conducted from a flight 40 km above the white continent has managed to capture strange radio signals coming from the ice, meaning they had collided there. The scientific enigma seems set to remain so, as according to experts, these impulses are not in harmony with the current laws of physics and could pave the way for hitherto unknown phenomena.

The anomalous radio waves that were recorded by an international working group in June 2025 could be ultra-energetic subatomic particles, or cosmic neutrinos that have an extraordinary energy, but are not of terrestrial origin, despite having collided with the ice of Antarctica.

According to researchers , there are several scenarios, among which these waves could be traces of antimatter or the so-called Dark Matter. But they could also be the result of other phenomena, or cosmic particles completely unknown to us to date.

Based on the instruments that humanity and science currently have, they are able to detect signals that originate at least 10 thousand light years away from Earth, as such a signal must travel through space to leave a trace.

SETI, the program for the search for extraterrestrial life, has been searching for years with the most powerful radio telescopes to track electromagnetic signals from about a million stars closer to the Sun.
The goal is even to scan the center of the Milky Way and the 100 galaxies closest to us.

But if extraterrestrial civilizations exist, they may also be able to intercept the radio signals we use to communicate with space probes.

In fact, NASA's Deep Space Network (DSN) system has been broadcasting signals to the edges of the Solar System since 1972 to the Voyager 1 and 2 probes, New Horizons, Pioneer 10, 11, etc., missions with which communications have been maintained through radio messages for decades.

According to astronomers, based on analyses, our signals have so far reached at least 4 stars in our Galaxy, out of the 330,000 that surround the Sun, and the responses of a hypothetical alien civilization should reach us by 2029.

But why does it take so long?

The distances that light, or an electromagnetic wave, must travel vary, just as time varies greatly. A ray of light is quite fast and in just one second it completes 7 laps around the Earth, at a speed of about 300 thousand km/sec.

While light travels the distance from Earth to the Moon in 1.3 seconds, it takes 3 minutes to reach Mars, 8 minutes from the Sun to reach us, and 4 hours from Neptune, the outermost planet in the system.

But if we calculate the time beyond our borders, where the nearest star, Proxima Centauri, is 4 light years away, it takes light 4 years to travel; and from the center of the Milky Way galaxy, it takes 27 thousand years. The farthest visible ray is 13.7 billion light years away, but with a universe that is constantly expanding, the numbers could go on forever.

The search for life or civilizations beyond Earth continues. After the 1950s, numerous theories about the presence of aliens swept the globe. Most scientists say that, with probability, we are not alone in the universe, considering its vastness, where the observable cosmos alone numbers over 2 thousand billion galaxies.

Scientific programs from major space agencies are not few, but the reports speak clearly. There are also no shortage of programs launched by American defense departments or even major superpowers. In recent years, there have been at least over 120 images, videos or phenomena observed by military pilots on unidentified vehicles.

After detailed revisions, the reports have always provided technical explanations, denying in all cases the existence of UFOs, alien civilizations or unexplained phenomena, official facts which have left behind other mysteries that have fueled and continue to fuel many conspiracy theories.

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