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Mysterious Radio Waves Lurking Under Arctic Ice Baffle Scientists | Law Enforcement Today
ANTARCTICA – Results published in the Physical Review Letters indicate that a group of researchers in Antarctica have found strange radio waves coming from below the ice.
The mysterious radio waves were discovered by the Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna (ANITA), according to the New York Post. During the experiment, the researchers analyzed signals traveling to Earth using a variety of instruments.
The researchers used balloons to send the instruments up high into the atmosphere in an effort to gain new understandings of cosmic events throughout the universe.
The reason Antarctica is the chosen site for these experiments is because there is little to no interference from other radio waves.
However, the researchers found radio waves transmitting from under the ice.
Stephanie Wissel, associate professor of physics, astronomy and astrophysics from Penn State, and one of the researchers discussed in a release by the college, revealed that they discovered the radio waves while searching for a particle known as neutrinos.
“The radio waves that we detected were at really steep angles, like 30 degrees below the surface of the ice,” Wissel said.
She explained that the radio waves should have been undetectable. The waves would have had to go through thousands of kilometers of rock and would have been absorbed into the rocks, as noted in the release. She also said that the team of researchers had no answer about how these neutrinos were detected.
According to Wissel, neutrinos are important to the understanding of the universe because they are emitted by high-energy sources and are typically hard to detect.
She said you could have a billion neutrinos passing through you at any moment but they don’t interact with you.
“So, this is the double-edged sword problem. If we detect them, it means they have traveled all this way without interacting with anything else. We could be detecting a neutrino coming from the edge of the observable universe,” she said.
Once discovered, these particles can reveal data and information about cosmic events that even the most powerful telescopes cannot.
Wissel said that the balloon is sent up 40 kilometers or 29 miles above the ice to catch emissions signals.
However, the researchers cross-referenced their findings with two other experiments and found that their results did not match up.
This means that what they found were not neutrinos but something else entirely.
Wissel said there have been some theories that this could be dark matter, but it still cannot be confirmed and remains a mystery.
“My guess is that some interesting radio propagation effects occur near ice and also near the horizon that I don’t fully understand, but we certainly explored several of those, and we haven’t been able to find any of those yet either,” Wissel said.
This latest signal could mark the beginning of a paradigm shift in physics, according to Slay News.
The radio waves appear to have come from below the ice, not from space. The anomaly has scientists asking whether they are on the verge of discovering a new kind of particle or even a whole new set of physical laws.
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