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In September 2019, my colleague Anna Kapinska gave a presentation showing interesting objects she had found while navigating our new radio astronomy data. He had begun to notice very strange shapes that he could not easily adapt to any known type of object.
Among them, Anna labeled as WTF?, was the image of a ghostly circle of radio emissions, suspended in space like a cosmic smoke ring. Neither of us had ever seen anything like it before and we had no idea what it was. A few days later, our colleague Emil Lenc found a second one, even more disturbing than Anna’s.
Anna and Emil were examining new images from our pilot observations for the Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU) project, made with CSIRO’s revolutionary new Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) telescope.
The EMU intends to boldly probe parts of the Universe where no telescope has gone before. It can do this because ASKAP can detect large swaths of the sky very quickly, probing to a depth previously reached only in tiny areas of the sky and being particularly sensitive to faint and diffuse objects like these.
I predicted a couple of years ago this exploration of the unknown would likely make unexpected discoveries, which I called WTF. But none of us expected to discover something so unexpected, so quickly. Due to the huge volumes of data, I expected the discoveries to be made using machine learning. But these discoveries were made with a good old-fashioned look.
ORC hunting
Our team searched the rest of the data by eye and we found some other mysterious round blobs. We dubbed them ORC, which stands for “strange radio circles”. But the big question, of course, is “what am I?”
At first we suspected an image artifact, possibly generated by a software error. But we soon confirmed that they are real, using other radio telescopes. We still have no idea how big or how far they are. They could be objects in our galaxy, perhaps a few light years in diameter, or they could be distant in the Universe and perhaps millions of light years in diameter.
When we look into the images taken with optical telescopes in the position of the ORCs, we see nothing. The radio emission rings are likely caused by electron clouds, but why don’t we see anything in the visible wavelengths of light? We don’t know, but finding a puzzle like this is every astronomer’s dream.
We know what they are not
We have ruled out several possibilities for what ORCs might be.
Could it be the supernova remnants, the clouds of debris left behind when a star in our galaxy explodes? No. They are far from most of the stars in the Milky Way and there are too many.
Could it be the radio emission rings sometimes seen in galaxies that undergo intense bursts of star formation? Again, no. We don’t see any underlying galaxy that will host star formation.
Could it be the giant lobes of radio emission we see in radio galaxies, caused by jets of electrons splashing out of the environment of a supermassive black hole? Not likely, because ORCs are distinctly circular, unlike the tangled clouds we see in radio galaxies.
Could they be Einstein’s rings, in which radio waves from a distant galaxy are bent into a circle by the gravitational field of a cluster of galaxies? Not yet. ORCs are too symmetrical and we don’t see a cluster at their center.
A real mystery
In our article on ORCs, which will be published in the Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia, we examine all the possibilities and conclude that these enigmatic blobs do not resemble something we already know about.
So we need to explore things that may exist but have not yet been observed, such as a vast shockwave from an explosion in a distant galaxy. Such explosions may have something to do with fast radio bursts or collisions between neutron stars and black holes that generate gravitational waves.
Or maybe they are something else entirely. Two Russian scientists even suggested that ORCs could be wormhole “throats” in spacetime.
From the handful we’ve found so far, we estimate there are around 1,000 ORCs in the sky. My colleague Bärbel Koribalski notes that research is now underway, with telescopes around the world, to find more ORCs and understand their cause.
It’s a complicated job, because ORCs are very weak and hard to find. Our team is brainstorming all of these ideas and more, hoping for the eureka moment when one of us, or maybe someone else, suddenly has the flash of inspiration that solves the puzzle.
It is an exciting time for us. Most astronomical research is intended to refine our knowledge of the Universe or to test theories. Very rarely do we have the challenge of coming across a new type of object that no one has ever seen before and trying to understand what it is.
Is it a completely new phenomenon or something we already know but viewed in a strange way? And if it’s really completely new, how does our understanding of the Universe change? Look at this space!
Ray Norris, Professor, School of Sciences, Western Sydney University
This article was republished by The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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