We all knew it was coming, and it might finally be here - scientists say they have a solution to the 'alien mega structure' star that doesn’t involve aliens, and unlike previous explanations, this one is extremelyconsistent with previous observations of the star’s activity. The solution doesn’t involve dubious comet swarms or interstellar junk,
but instead suggests that the star is undergoing an internal phase
transition, which is causing powerful outbursts on the surface that are
occasionally blocking the light emissions that our telescopes detect.
In other words, instead of something else getting in the way of the star
and blocking its light from us, this new study suggests that internal
conditions in the star itself are causing the dips in its brightness. In
case you have no idea what all this 'alien mega structure' business is,
back inOctober 2015,
scientists discovered a strange pattern of light surrounding a distant
star called KIC 8462852, and it was like nothing we’d ever seen before.
When a planet orbits a star, the star’s brightness will periodically dip
by around 1 percent, but KIC 8462852 has been experiencing erratic dips
of up to22 percent. This immediately got scientists speculating that something very, very big had been zooming past it.
A massive swarm of comets was thrown out there as an explanation, but that’s been more or less debunked. More recently, researchers have suggested that the bizarre dimming is the result of some kind of clutter
in interstellar space. Then there was the now-notorious suggestion from
Jason Wright, an astronomer from Penn State University, that the
solution could be something from the realm of science fiction - a
gigantic Dyson Sphere made of solar panels that completely encircles a star.
"Aliens should always be the very last hypothesis you consider, but this
looked like something you would expect an alien civilization to build,"
he told The Atlantic last year.
But no explanation - aliens or otherwise - has fit the data well enough
to convince the scientific community to run with it, so the 'alien mega
structure' star remained shrouded in mystery. Until now, perhaps,
because a team from the University of Illinois says we’ve been looking
at the problem all wrong, and a different perspective could give us a
pretty solid answer to KIC 8462852’s weirdness.
The researchers have been studying how the star's large and small dips
in brightness relate to each other, and when they applied a number of
mathematical models to the data, they came up with patterns that also
appear in what's known as avalanche statistics. Avalanche statistics
have turned up in all kinds of natural phenomena, including solar flares, gamma-ray bursts, and neural activity in the brain,
and while the math’s is pretty complicated, in basic terms, it reveals
patterns where small dips in the data occurring between the larger dips
ultimately equate to even larger dips.
Avalanche statistics appear to be associated with things going through certain phase transitions
- most commonly between solid, liquid, and gaseous states of matter,
and in rare cases, plasma. "Examples of such transitions are magnetic
systems that are slowly driven with a magnetic field, or the slow
deformation of somewhat brittle materials where there is often first
little crackling that gets louder and louder until there is a big snap
when the material breaks," says one of the team, Karin Dahmen.
"The small events in our star analysis would be like the little crackles
while the large events would be the analogue of the big snap." Phase
transitions are thought to be associated
with solar activity such as solar flares and solar storms, so it could
be that KIC 8462852's internal materials are transitioning, and the
result is erratic outbursts that block its light. "Their analysis shows
that the avalanche model is extremely consistent with what's observed," astrophysicist Ethan Siegelexplains for Forbes.
"In other words, this could just be a star that's intensely active in
some poorly understood way, giving off periodic massive outbursts that
cause a dimming of the light. And the fact that stars like these are
rare is what's been fooling us all along." Only time will tell if this
is the right answer, but it's fitting the existing data pretty nicely so
far. And even if KIC 8462852 doesn't ultimately live up to its
"Aliens!" hype, we still have a phenomenon on our hands that's like
nothing we've ever seen before, and that's awesome.
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