It’s not aliens. It’s never aliens. MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
If there ever was an alien megastructure orbiting Tabby鈥檚 Star, it has long since crumbled to dust. The dips in the weird star鈥檚 light are almost definitely caused by a ring of dust, not a huge opaque object between us and the star.
In 2015, a team of astronomers led by Yale鈥檚 saw the light from the star KIC 8462852 suddenly and repeatedly dip in brightness. The star, nicknamed Tabby鈥檚 star after Boyajian, dimmed by up to 22 per cent over several days before it returned to normal.
In May 2017, the star began to dim again. Boyajian, at Pennsylvania State University, and their colleagues called on operators using telescopes around the world to look at Tabby鈥檚 star. They got the most detailed data we鈥檝e ever had on how its light changed while the dips were occurring.
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They found that the light was not dimming in all wavelengths, indicating that whatever keeps blocking out the star can鈥檛 be a solid, opaque structure. This means that the idea that this dimming could be caused by an alien megastructure is now even more unlikely.
Instead, the researchers say that there are probably dense pockets of dust encircling the star, likely caused by comets or asteroids that leave a trail of dust as they orbit. This dust blocks more blue light than red light.
鈥淚t鈥檚 for sure not aliens, as much as I can prove that anything鈥檚 not an alien,鈥 says Wright. 鈥淚t looks like it鈥檚 boring old dust, which is what most people have thought it was this whole time.鈥
Read more: Triple signal of 鈥榓lien megastructure鈥 star baffles astronomers
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