I’m not saying it wasn’t aliens… but… it wasn’t aliens.
“Just the fact that you so desperately attempt to dismantle our theory proves that we are on the right track. Otherwise you would not feel so threatened by our theories!” –Giogrio Tsoukalos (in a letter to Jason Colavito)
In 2012, a series of nine bursts were observed by both the Very Large Array and Arecibo, four of which were seen simultaneously.
For the first time, this allowed us to pinpoint the location of a FRB’s source: a dwarf galaxy 3 billion light years away.
Last month’s reinvestigation discovered a series of 15 repeating FRBs from the same source, each lasting under 300 microseconds.
Is it advanced, powerful aliens? There are five reasons why that’s likely untrue.
1.) They’re too common. Based on the bursts we’ve seen, there are over 10,000 unique FRBs, every day, over the entire sky.
2.) The FRB signal is variable. The energy density, signal strength, and time intervals are all irregular, evidence of a natural phenomenon.
3.) Active galaxies have produced similar radio signals. Flickering, feeding, supermassive black holes can cause them. The galaxy housing these FRBs possesses exactly this.