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Monitoring signals may be from advanced space civilizations
Space astronomers and astronomers monitored the signals of a mysterious fast-moving radio, originating from deep-space, earlier this October.
Experts believe that these signals may be evidence of the existence of advanced space civilizations, noting that some of these signals were very close to the ground.
Scientists trace the source of these signals, and found that they belong to a galaxy about 120 million light-years away from Earth.
Despite this distance, scientists believe it is close to space terminology and standards, the Daily Mail reported.
Australian astronomers announced they had discovered a total of 19 high-speed radio waves emanating from deep space.
Rapid radio flow is a radio emission that appears temporarily and randomly, making monitoring difficult, as is the study.
The reason for its ambiguity is the fact that it is not known what such a short, sharp and rapid flow is.
This ambiguity has also led to expectations, with some suggesting that they may be anything from conflicting stars, or perhaps messages sent by alien and much advanced space civilizations.
It was the researchers at Swinburne University of Technology in Australia who discovered these rapid radio flows.
Experts said the space object or object responsible for it was 100 million light-years away.
Most of the previously detected high-speed radio emissions are several billion light years away from Earth, while the source of the recent flows is a galaxy called Iso 601-Goo36.
The galaxy is similar in size to the only other galaxy that has a fast radio flow, and it has a similar star in terms of proportions and amounts of oxygen from a galaxy in Origa planet, about 2.4 billion Snow Light.
The Australian research team hopes to find another wave of rapid radio flows from the galaxy itself.
"Then we can pinpoint the mystery of why these flows are," Mahoney told New Horizons.