They Examined the “Alien Wow Signal” From 1977 at a Different Frequency

something else weird happened in 1977…

Can you guess what happened when they looked at the 1977 message this way?
Many of us are familiar with the S.E.T.I. program and the general search for extraterrestrials.  And the famous signal of 1977 is being examined at a different frequency in this video.  Here is an intro into what scientists did this time around in hopes of figuring out this mystery:

Lets crack this alien signal!

The Wow! signal was a strong narrowband radio signal detected by Jerry R. Ehman on August 15, 1977, while he was working on a SETI project at the Big Ear radio telescope of The Ohio State University, then located at Ohio Wesleyan University’s Perkins Observatory in Delaware, Ohio.[1] The signal bore the expected hallmarks of non-terrestrial and non-Solar System origin. It lasted for the full 72-second window that Big Ear was able to observe it, but has not been detected again.

And as a bonus, there is a related and absolutely bizarre reporting that was caught on video as well.  It is quite possibly bogus but worth a look.  if nothing else it will get a laugh.  It happened in 1977 too which is why were posting it.

Let’s see what they discovered in the videos on page 2

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24 Comments

  1. Brian Sandy said:

    I hear 3 different signals… prob audio, video, and digital. maybe compressed, to send a lot of data in a short burst. can it be slowed down and separated?

  2. Xevious Walker said:

    Compression was invented in the 00’s that would allow a movie to take in 8 kilobytes. Unfortunately that l logarithm was lost to us. Probably won’t ever uncode it.

  3. Mark Oberholtzer said:

    Humans, why would aliens be using frequencies detectable by other species? And for that matter why would they be using primitive technology like radio anymore?

  4. Brian Verhoeven said:

    The galaxy as a whole communicates in radio waves, any alien civilization would know that. Just about every object or cloud of gas gives off radio waves.

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