It’s no rare occurrence in science fiction: The introverted
researcher working the graveyard shift at a SETI radio observatory jumps
out of his seat in surprise when the red light blinks on the control
panel. “We’re getting a signal!” he shouts into a phone as needles dance
across paper chart recorders, and scientists rapidly converge on the
scene. At some point someone yells, “Get me the President!” at the
person whose job it is to get presidents.
On August 15th, 1977, such a signal was received at the Big Ear radio
observatory in Ohio, though the ensuing drama was considerably more
subdued. The volunteer who spotted the pattern on the paper logs circled
the data and wrote “Wow!” in the margin.That person was none other than Dr. Jerry Ehman . The radio telescope was
observing space as part of the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence
(SETI) program, and it was the most compelling signal the receiver had
recorded in its fourteen years of operation. It was powerful enough to
push the Big Ear’s monitoring device off the charts.
The signal came from the direction of the constellation Sagittarius, and lasted seventy-two seconds at about 1420.456 MHz before it faded away. The volunteer who found and circled the data in the paper printout was Jerry Ehman, who was amazed at the signal’s intensity and what a narrow range of frequencies it appeared in. Seventy-two seconds also happened to be the exact length of time it would take for the Earth to rotate the Big Ear through a signal from space. He did some analysis of the data, and by all indications this powerful, narrowband radio signal was from outside of our solar system. But was it sent by an advanced civilization?
The signal came from the direction of the constellation Sagittarius, and lasted seventy-two seconds at about 1420.456 MHz before it faded away. The volunteer who found and circled the data in the paper printout was Jerry Ehman, who was amazed at the signal’s intensity and what a narrow range of frequencies it appeared in. Seventy-two seconds also happened to be the exact length of time it would take for the Earth to rotate the Big Ear through a signal from space. He did some analysis of the data, and by all indications this powerful, narrowband radio signal was from outside of our solar system. But was it sent by an advanced civilization?
Curiously, the signal was picked up by only one of the scope’s two
detectors. When the second detector covered the same patch of sky three
minutes later, it heard nothing. This indicated either the unlikely
possibility that the first beam had detected something that wasn’t
there, or that the source of the signal had been shut off or redirected
in the intervening time. The observatory researchers trained their
massive scope on that part of the sky for a full month, watching closely
for a repeat of the mysterious signal. Nothing interesting was observed
during those thirty days, yet scientists were at a loss for an
explanation of the original event. Planning to return to that patch of
sky periodically, the Big Ear continued its broader purpose.
Several times over the next twenty years, longtime SETI researcher
Robert Gray and his colleague Kevin B. Marvel arranged for further scans
of that region of space. They managed to obtain some time on the META
array at the Oak Ridge Observatory in Massachusetts, and the extremely
sensitive Very Large Array (VLA) in New Mexico, which is made up of
twenty-seven 25-meter radio dishes. They detected some extremely faint
sources of radio emissions in the infamous patch of sky, but nothing
like that of the “Wow!” signal. However
their findings did essentially disprove the only working theory as to
the cause of the original event: “interstellar scintillation.” It was
thought that perhaps some weaker radio signal from space had been
temporarily focused on the Big Ear in a way similar to stars twinkling…
but the VLA is sensitive enough that it would have detected such a
source, and it did not.
The Big Ear maintained its periodic scan of that part of space for
almost forty years, and never again came across such a compelling
signal. It was dismantled in 1998 to make way for a golf course.
“Wow” remains the strongest and clearest signal ever received from an
unknown source in space, as well as the most fascinating and
unexplainable. The signal’s original discoverer Jerry Ehman doesn’t care
to speculate on its source, and he remains scientifically skeptical.
“Even if it were intelligent beings sending a signal,” he said in an
interview, “they’d do it far more than once. We should have seen it
again when we looked for it 50 times.”
Perhaps. But consider that when humankind used the Arecibo radio telescope to send a message out into space in 1974, it was only sent once.
Thanx to Kwl3rin for article.







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