Scientists used the world's largest single-dish radio telescope to scan comet 3I/ATLAS for signs of extraterrestrial life, but found no artificial radio emissions.
Astronomers scanned the interstellar object 3I/ATLAS for alien signals using the Green Bank Telescope, but found none. The ...
The observations were carried out by the Breakthrough Listen program as the object neared its closest approach to Earth on ...
Scientists used the 100-metre Green Bank Telescope to look for alien signals but detected no radio signals from 3I/ATLAS.
It is unclear whether a [3I/ATLAS] would transmit radio signals … such signals would take tens of thousands of years to cross ...
A dedicated scan for signs of radio-transmitting technology in interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS has come back with absolute ...
An international team of researchers pointed the largest single-dish radio telescope in the world at 3I/ATLAS.
NASA has selected advanced technologies to power a future space telescope designed to image Earth-like planets and search ...
Interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS sheds millions of tons of water as it leaves our solar system. New radio scans find no signs of ...
Data from the James Webb Space Telescope on exoplanet K2-18b has revealed the "strongest hints yet of biological activity ...
Data from the James Webb Space Telescope on exoplanet K2-18b has revealed the "strongest hints yet of biological activity outside the solar system," according to a University of Cambridge study.
Researchers used Green Bank Telescope to detect radio signals from 3I/ATLAS just before its closest approach to Earth.