35 Years Later, the ‘Wow!’ Signal Still Tantalizes
Since the SETI program first began searching for possible alien radio  signals a few decades ago, there have been many false alarms but also  instances of fleeting signals of interest which disappeared again as  quickly as they had appeared. If a potential signal doesn’t repeat  itself so it can be more carefully observed, then it is virtually  impossible to determine whether it is of truly cosmic origin. One such  signal in particular caught astronomers’ interest on August 15, 1977.  The famous “Wow!” signal was detected by the Big Ear Radio Observatory  at Ohio State University; it was thirty times stronger than the  background noise but lasted only 72 seconds and was never heard again  despite repeated subsequent searches.
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35 Years Later, the ‘Wow!’ Signal Still Tantalizes

Since the SETI program first began searching for possible alien radio signals a few decades ago, there have been many false alarms but also instances of fleeting signals of interest which disappeared again as quickly as they had appeared. If a potential signal doesn’t repeat itself so it can be more carefully observed, then it is virtually impossible to determine whether it is of truly cosmic origin. One such signal in particular caught astronomers’ interest on August 15, 1977. The famous “Wow!” signal was detected by the Big Ear Radio Observatory at Ohio State University; it was thirty times stronger than the background noise but lasted only 72 seconds and was never heard again despite repeated subsequent searches.

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