http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/090107-aas-loud-cosmic-noise.html

Mystery Roar from Faraway Space Detected

By Andrea Thompson
Senior Writer

posted: 07 January 2009


LONG BEACH, Calif. -- Space is typically thought of as a very quiet place.
But one team of astronomers has found a strange cosmic noise that booms
six times louder than expected.

The roar is from the distant cosmos. Nobody knows what causes it.

Of course, sound waves can't travel in a vacuum (which is what most of
space is), or at least they  can't very efficiently. But radio waves can.

Radio waves are not sound waves, but they are still electromagnetic waves,
situated on the low-frequency end of the light spectrum.

Many objects in the universe, including stars and quasars, emit radio
waves. Even our home galaxy, the Milky Way, emits a static hiss (first
detected in 1931 by physicist Karl Jansky). Other galaxies also send out a
background radio hiss.

But the newly detected signal, described here today at the 213th meeting
of the American Astronomical Society, is far louder than astronomers
expected.

There is "something new and interesting going on in the universe," said
Alan Kogut of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

A team led by Kogut detected the signal with a balloon-borne instrument
named ARCADE (Absolute Radiometer for Cosmology, Astrophysics, and Diffuse
Emission).

In July 2006, the instrument was launched from NASA's Columbia Scientific
Balloon Facility in Palestine, Texas, and reached an altitude of about
120,000 feet (36,500 meters), where the atmosphere thins into the vacuum
of space.

ARCADE's mission was to search the sky for faint signs of heat from the
first generation of stars, but instead they heard a roar from the distant
reaches of the universe.

"The universe really threw us a curve," Kogut said. "Instead of the faint
signal we hoped to find, here was this booming noise six times louder than
anyone had predicted."

Detailed analysis of the signal ruled out primordial stars or any known
radio sources, including gas in the outermost halo of our own galaxy.

Other radio galaxies also can't account for the noise - there just aren't
enough of them.

"You'd have to pack them into the universe like sardines," said study team
member Dale Fixsen of the University of Maryland. "There wouldn't be any
space left between one galaxy and the next."

The signal is measured to be six times brighter than the combined emission
of all known radio sources in the universe.

For now, the origin of the signal remains a mystery.

"We really don't know what it is,"said team member Michael Seiffert of
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

And not only has it presented astronomers with a new puzzle, it is
obscuring the sought-for signal from the earliest stars. But the cosmic
static may itself provide important clues to the development of galaxies
when the universe was much younger, less than half its present age.
Because the radio waves come from far away, traveling at the speed of
light, they therefore represent an earlier time in the universe.

"This is what makes science so exciting," Seiffert said. "You start out on
a path to measure something - in this case, the heat from the very first
stars - but run into something else entirely, some unexplained."

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