Japanese scientists admit that they probably get a signal from aliens

some time ago Japanese stargazers Masaki Morimoto, Hisashi Hirabayashi sent a message into space


Japanese scientists admit that they probably get a signal from aliens


As researchers try to find life on various planets in the universe, they also believed that they would sometimes receive a sign from alien animals and this time they agree that they are close to receiving a message from space, Free revealed.


Although there are fewer options since the message from Earth was sent from the star Altair, there will only be an hour window to hear the message.


some time ago, Japanese cosmologists Masaki Morimoto and Hisashi Hirabayashi communicated something concrete to space - about what humans are - using the Stanford College telescope and impressed Altair - 16.7 light-years away - that they believed there could be life there. .


Shinya Narusawa 

A group led by Shinya Narusawa at the College of Hyogo used a huge Japanese telescope to try to check if there was any answer.


Japanese scientists admit that they probably get a signal from aliens


As the scientists suggested, it is possible that the answer will come now, given the distance to the star and the time that has passed.


Narusawa admitted that there were aliens out there and that the message might indeed have been sent to alien life around a distant star.

 

The Asahi Shimbun:


Japanese scientists admit that they probably get a signal from aliens


Narusawa told the Japanese newspaper The Asahi Shimbun: "Since the 1990s, a huge number of exoplanets have been identified. Altair may have a planet whose climate can support life."


Regardless of the effort, those who are included need not be frustrated in light of the seriousness of reaching out to outsiders.


Gizmodo revealed that in 2008, when the email was revealed, Hirabayashi admitted that the pair were drunk when they devised the message to be sent.


"I believe in aliens, but it's extremely difficult to track them down," he said at the time.


He received various messages from school children about the message, so it was worth the trouble to send it, he was quoted.


Japanese stargazers left to read outsiders after 40 years


In 1983, two alcohol researchers beamed something specific into space, expecting the answer to appear this week in 2023 - unfortunately, they won't know yet


Japanese scientists admit that they probably get a signal from aliens


It is hard to imagine that we are the only organic life forms in the universe. Whether we are the main intelligent life is a more contentious topic, and in 1983 a couple of Japanese cosmologists set out to disprove the cynics. Frankly, they had a few drinks while shooting their message to a gorgeous star named Altair. Still, if they did get a reaction, it would be the very first recorded confirmation of alien life.


It was recently (August 22) expected to be the earliest we could see such a response sent across the vast distances of the room. In this feature, a group of Japanese researchers enthusiastically filtered the sky the previous evening to see what alien life might say. Tragically, ET apparently didn't phone home.


Shinya Narusawa's group 


Japanese scientists admit that they probably get a signal from aliens


Despite transporting a gigantic receiving wire in the mountains, Shinya Narusawa's group had apparently found nothing at the College of Hyogo. Of course, that doesn't mean there's nothing out there, or that they won't respond from now on. Maybe the aliens couldn't care less about the message we sent a long time ago, containing 13 simple drawings designed to develop life on the planet, as well as a Japanese word that generally means "good health". Maybe they are actually struggling with their sincere love letter to humanity! Maybe it just got mixed up in the DM!


Altair is about 16.7 light-years from Earth, and it has been hypothesized that it could hold one of the many planets that actually support life in its ring, but experts currently believe that this is highly unlikely. The first message was also sent to coincide with the August 22nd celebration celebrating the gods being addressed by Altair and another star named Vega (so presumably these two pissed off space experts).


From that point on, of course, we were shooting signals into space left, right, and focused. These include two adaptive messages (and some actual relics and fine art) and typical radio and transmissions that most likely passed through a large number of star structures as they "spill" into space.


Once again, we don't know anything yet, but there are many hypotheses and conjectures about the continuous silence. Maybe the outsiders receiving the messages aren't advanced enough to beam anything back. Perhaps they have progressed to the point where our messages read like the screams and cries of innocent little monkeys and are not worth wasting time on. Maybe the aliens would rather not risk getting into that frame of mind by exposing their area, or maybe they're walking among us right now…

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