| 
			  
			
 
  by Eric Mack
 December 18, 
			2019
 from 
			CNET Website
 
 
 
			
 
  A star visible in an old image
 
			(left, 
			seen as the bright source at the center of the square)  
			has 
			disappeared in a later image.Stockholm University/Villarroel et al.
 
			(2019)
			
 
 
 Astronomers compare
 
			old views of the 
			sky  
			with what we see 
			today  
			and find that at 
			least 100 stars  
			appear to have 
			vanished,  
			or were perhaps 
			covered up... 
			
 
 On March 16, 1950, astronomers at the US Naval Observatory pointed a 
			telescope roughly in the direction of the
			
			constellation Lupus, 
			the wolf, and took a picture.
 
				
				When scientists look 
				at that same patch of sky today, something is missing, and it 
				could be evidence of something else lurking out there.
 Back in 2016, researchers in Sweden reported that a star had 
				been lost.
   
				One of the roiling 
				distant suns visible in that 
				
				USNO image from the previous 
				century could no longer be seen, even with the more advanced and 
				sensitive digital sky surveys in use today.  
			The team published
			
			a paper on the discovery, but called it "very uncertain" at the 
			time, resolving to do more follow-up work and to continue scouring 
			old USNO observations for other celestial objects that seem to have 
			gone missing.     
			Three years later, 
			it's still unclear what happened to that star spotted in 1950, but 
			the team behind the "Vanishing & Appearing Sources during a Century 
			of Observations" (VASCO) 
			project now says they've found a hundred more missing stars like it 
			by comparing old and new observations.    
			While they've seen
			'no signs' of aliens just yet, 
			they say parts of space where multiple stars seem to disappear could 
			be the best places to look for extraterrestrial intelligence 
			(ETI). 
				
				"Unless a star 
				directly collapses into a black hole, there is no known physical 
				process by which it could physically vanish," explains a new 
				study published in the Astronomical Journal (The 
				Vanishing and Appearing Sources during a Century of Observations 
				Project) and led by Beatriz Villarroel of 
				Stockholm University and Spain's Instituto de Astrofísica 
				de Canarias.    
				"The 
				implications of finding such objects extend from traditional 
				astrophysics fields to the more exotic searches for evidence of 
				technologically advanced civilizations."    
			The project team 
			believes their search for vanishing stars could be useful in the 
			search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) 
			by identifying "hot spots" in space where an unexpectedly large 
			number of stars seem to be missing.  
				
				"Zooming in on 
				the (hot spots) in our SETI (or technosignature) 
				searches, we can identify the most probable locations to host 
				extra-terrestrial intelligence," they write. 
			The idea here is 
			that a very advanced alien civilization may be able to construct a 
			hypothetical megastructure called a 'Dyson 
			sphere' that completely encompasses a star in order to 
			capture a large portion of its energy.  
				
				Think of it as 
				converting a star into a gargantuan battery.    
				It's 
				far-fetched, but technically it would explain the sudden 
				disappearance of a star.  
			For now, though, 
			the hundred or so stars that have been seen going dark so far 
			don't appear to host aliens.  
				
				"But we are 
				clear that none of these events have shown any direct signs of 
				being ETI,"
				
				says co-author Martin López Corredoira in a statement.
				   
				"We believe 
				that they are natural, if somewhat extreme, astrophysical 
				sources." 
			
			
			Alien megastructures have been 
			suggested as plausible explanations for other strangely behaving 
			stars, like with erratically dimming and brightening
			
			
			Boyajian's Star, but so far other natural explanations 
			are more readily accepted by most scientists.    
			Next, the 
			researchers hope to enlist the help of both citizen scientists and 
			artificial intelligence to continue examining images for possible 
			stars gone missing.  
				
				"Finding an 
				actually vanishing star - or a star that appears out of nowhere 
				- would be a precious discovery," Villarroel says, "and 
				certainly would include new astrophysics beyond 
				the one we know of today."      
			    |