scientific breakthrough reveals how anyone can listen
to alien communications
For decades scientists have relentlessly searched for signs of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe. Programs such as SETI (Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence) have, for over half a century, utilized highly sensitive radio telescopes to systematically survey the skies for radio transmissions from interstellar civilizations. Yet, except for one anomalous ‘beep’, known as the ‘WOW signal’, received on August 15, 1977, no discernibly intelligent communication has ever been detected.
Unbeknownst to science, the very signals they have so fervently sort after have been here all along, under our very noses. You do not need millions of dollars worth of equipment or a PhD in astrophysics to tune into them. Your humble car radio or TV are capable of receiving extraterrestrial transmissions. These alien signals are commonly referred to as static: the electrical disturbance or hissing noise that is found between your radio or TV stations.
Static has long been attributed, in part, to Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMB), which is the omnipresent form of electromagnetic radiation left over from the Big Bang. Recent studies have discovered that static holds a complex mathematical code cunningly concealed within what appears to be no more than a random electrical disturbance. This code has been deciphered using high-powered government computers to unveil prolific extraterrestrial communications in the air all around us. Confidential government sources have revealed that an expert team of over 200 technicians, mathematicians and linguists are currently engaged in interpreting the alien language hidden in these static transmissions. Although these alien messages are readily available to all, it may be some time before we know what they actually mean.