####### Video #######
Scientists working in Antarctica have picked up some truly ‘bizarre’ radio signals coming from beneath the ice and these signals are so strange that they seem to go against what we currently know about particle physics.

The discovery was made using ANITA, which stands for Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna. It’s a special setup of instruments that are flown on balloons high above Antarctica. The goal is to detect radio waves that are created when cosmic rays hit our planet’s atmosphere.

To dig deeper into what might be going on, researchers sent equipment up into the sky on a giant balloon — flying it about 40 kilometers (or 29 miles) above the Earth. From there, they could gather more data about the cosmic events happening all around the universe.

But instead of what they expected, the researchers stumbled upon something surprising. They found that the radio waves were actually coming from below the ice — not just above the Earth’s surface.

They had chosen Antarctica for this study specifically because it’s one of the quietest places on Earth when it comes to outside radio signals. That made it a perfect spot to look for cosmic activity without a lot of background noise.

Stephanie Wissel, one of the scientists involved in the study, explained that their mission had been to track down a particle known as a neutrino when they picked up these odd signals instead.

ANITA was placed on a massive balloon to detect radio wavesStephanie Wissel / Penn State. Creative Commons
“The radio waves that we detected were at really steep angles, like 30 degrees below the surface of the ice.” shared Wissel, who works as an associate professor in physics, astronomy, and astrophysics at Penn State.

Neutrinos are an important piece of the cosmic puzzle and can help us understand how the universe works. But they’re incredibly hard to detect. These radio waves shouldn’t have shown up the way they did. They would have needed to pass through thousands of kilometers of rock and that should have absorbed them entirely.

Wissel also added that right now, there could be billions of neutrinos passing through our bodies. But because they rarely interact with matter, we never feel or notice them.

Researchers were shocked by the findingsStephanie Wissel / Penn State. Creative Commons

“So, this is the double-edged sword problem.” she continued. “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.”

Still, when the researchers sent their balloon up and later cross-checked the new data with findings from two earlier experiments, the results didn’t line up. This created even more questions than answers.

All signs started pointing to the idea that what they had found might not have been neutrinos at all, but possibly something else entirely.

There has been some talk that the signals might be related to dark matter, which is one of the biggest mysteries in modern physics. But so far, there’s no confirmation, and the real explanation remains unclear.

In a press release where the findings were discussed, Wissel shared this insight: “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.”

The full study and its results have since been published in the journal Physical Review Letters, where researchers hope others will help dig deeper into the mystery.

####### Rewarded #######

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *