Filmmakers set up their cameras where Earth’s beauty is a backdrop for the desire to reach extraterrestrial lands.
For the past few days, the media has been abuzz with one of the most peculiar astronomical observations for many years.
Is it possible that we are overlooking extraterrestrial signals in our search of the skies for intelligent alien life? If alien life does exist in our galaxy and beyond, is it possible that its signals could be similar to what we detect and label as pulsars? We see pulsars as a natural phenomenon, but what if that’s not the case?
On Aug. 15, 1977, a 72-second radio signal from space stirred up the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI). It is exactly the kind of signal we would expect from aliens.
Astronomers have for the first time discovered a rocky, Earth-sized exoplanet that might hold liquid water—a necessary ingredient for life as we know it.
What do you think? Could these reports be evidence of extraterrestrial life?
Filmmakers set up their cameras where Earth’s beauty is a backdrop for the desire to reach extraterrestrial lands.
For the past few days, the media has been abuzz with one of the most peculiar astronomical observations for many years.
Is it possible that we are overlooking extraterrestrial signals in our search of the skies for intelligent alien life? If alien life does exist in our galaxy and beyond, is it possible that its signals could be similar to what we detect and label as pulsars? We see pulsars as a natural phenomenon, but what if that’s not the case?
On Aug. 15, 1977, a 72-second radio signal from space stirred up the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI). It is exactly the kind of signal we would expect from aliens.
Astronomers have for the first time discovered a rocky, Earth-sized exoplanet that might hold liquid water—a necessary ingredient for life as we know it.
What do you think? Could these reports be evidence of extraterrestrial life?