An international group of scientists has updated a message for alien beings written decades ago and is pushing a controversial plan to beam the interstellar calling card to a ring of stars near the center of our galaxy some 13,000 light-years from Earth
Their plan is to beam details about human civilization–and Earth’s location in space–to region of our galaxy that might contain potentially habitable exoplanets
The most distant individual star ever seen has been spotted by the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA said Wednesday. The star is believed to be 12.9 billion light-years from Earth and about 50 times as massive as the sun. Photo: NASAfor alien beings sent decades ago and is proposing a plan to beam it to a ring of stars near the center of our galaxy some 13,000 light-years from Earth.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Complex Life May Have Started on Earth Much Earlier Than We ThoughtAll life on Earth likely emerged from one spark in Earth's early history. Some time later, it diversified, branching off into lineages that helped it survive.
Read more »
US military confirms an interstellar meteor collided with EarthA meteor crashed into the Pacific Ocean in 2014, but it wasn't until Harvard scientists researched its velocity and trajectory five years later that they learned it came from outside our solar system.
Read more »
Declassified government data reveals an interstellar object that exploded over EarthA memo from the USSC confirms the discovery of the first interstellar object, a small meteor that exploded over Earth in 2014.
Read more »
China Is Hatching a Plan to Find Earth 2.0A satellite will scour the Milky Way for exoplanets orbiting stars just like the sun
Read more »
A 4 billion-year-old comet 80 miles wide is headed toward EarthAn ancient comet is hurtling towards Earth from the Oort Cloud and astronomers say that it is the largest comet we've ever discovered.
Read more »
Google Earth time-lapse tool takes users 37 years back in timeThat’s right! Google Earth is now able to take its users 37-years back in time. Without the use of a time machine.
Read more »