New SETI research suggests space weather like solar winds could be interfering with alien radio signals, making them harder to detect.
The first unmistakable sign of extraterrestrial technology may not arrive as a calm greeting. It may look more like a flare.
A recent SETI Institute study suggests that space weather could blur and weaken extraterrestrial radio signals long before ...
If advanced aliens lived on a planet within a few hundred to a thousand light years away from Earth, then vast numbers of their signals must already have crossed Earth without being noticed, a new ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Turbulent star environments may broaden alien radio signals, making them harder for SETI to detect. (CREDIT: Shutterstock) Radio ...
For four decades, many SETI experiments have focused on finding sharp spikes in frequency but the new study says signals may ...
The search for alien life no longer feels like pure speculation. This video walks through the strongest signs ever put forward, from the Wow Signal to Martian fossil claims and other near-breakthrough ...
Turbulent plasma near distant stars could blur ultra-narrow signals before they leave their home star systems - making them ...
For over two decades, millions of people volunteered the computational capacity of their computers to help UC Berkeley scientists in their search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI). The goal of ...
Advanced aliens could be chatting with each other using light flashes in plain sight, similar to how fireflies communicate, according to a new study that could lead to new approaches in finding ...
Scientists believe turbulent “space weather” around distant stars could be scrambling potential alien signals before they ...