*PLOT TWIST: the ailens accidentally made a signal whilst going in to earth and to cover it up they sent in 2 comets that fit the signal they activated*
The comet hypothesis was actually discarded because the comets weren't in the exactly right location at the time of observation and on top of that a comet doesn't emit a strong signal at that frequency So we still don't have a conclusive explanation!
This is what I was going to say! It’s good to see at least one comment on here that’s not a brain dead attempt at getting likes or to be funny. It’s so hard to read any comments on these RU-vid shorts, they’re so terrible.
Actually, the comets were not in the telescope range when the signal was captured according to new research, and it lasts 72s because that was the range of that radio telescope, the wow signal probably last way more time. And so it gets weird again, opening the door to an alien communication.
It wasn't a comet because if a comet sent out radio signals it would have been read on other bandwidths but the Wow signal was detected on only one frequency and likely only artificial radio waves can do that.
In 2017, Antonio Paris, Assistant Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics at St. Petersburg College, Florida,[36] proposed that the hydrogen cloud surrounding two comets, 266P/Christensen and 335P/Gibbs, now known to have been in the same region of the sky, could have been the source of the Wow! signal.[37][38][39] This hypothesis was dismissed by astronomers, including members of the original Big Ear research team, as the cited comets were not in the beam at the correct time. Furthermore, comets do not emit strongly at the frequencies involved, and there is no explanation for why a comet would be observed in one beam but not in the other
When ohio was said, i already felt the swag like ohio vibe lol. Edit: dang can't even have a normal comment in ohio 💀 2.1k ohio enjoyers, update 3.3k Ohio's Cult 💀
Idk why people think that aliens would have built radios like how would 2 different orginizations from 2 different galaxys and different climates ever even think or invent radios?
"The team reports that radio signals from 266/P Christensen matched those from the Wow! signal 40 years ago. To verify their results, they tested readings from three other comets, as well, and found similar results. The researchers acknowledge that they cannot say with certainty that the Wow! signal was generated by 266/P Christensen, but they can say with relative assurance that it was generated by a comet."
In 2017, Antonio Paris, Assistant Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics at St. Petersburg College, Florida,[36] proposed that the hydrogen cloud surrounding two comets, 266P/Christensen and 335P/Gibbs, now known to have been in the same region of the sky, could have been the source of the Wow! signal.[37][38][39] This hypothesis was dismissed by astronomers, including members of the original Big Ear research team, as the cited comets were not in the beam at the correct time. Furthermore, comets do not emit strongly at the frequencies involved, and there is no explanation for why a comet would be observed in one beam but not in the other. (As taken from Wikipedia page regarding Wow Signal)
@@tizwah If you would care to read and compare both the statements carefully you would notice that both of them contrast. Your statement in a nutshell says that the Wow signal was generated by a comet if not 266/P Christensen. The statement i have provided you *as taken directly from Wikipedia* clearly states that the possibility of the Wow signal being generated by 266/P Christensen or in expansion any other comet was dismissed by large portions of the astronomy community and the original ground zero research team. Furthermore, no solutions, let alone solutions consisting of statements that say that the signal was naturally or human emitted have been able to satisfy the specific details of the signal. For now it remains an anomaly, remaining unsolved.
@@aleksavasic2612 no, hear. You can't hear the radio because of all the screaming which prevents you from understanding what the dude on the radio says.