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Who or what is sending mysterious radio signals from a star lying 11 light years away?

The signals came from a red dwarf star – Ross 128 (GJ 447) – which is around 2,800 times dimmer than the Sun and is not yet known to have any planets, researchers said.

Who or what is sending mysterious radio signals from a star lying 11 light years away? (Representational image)

New Delhi: The possibility of life on other planets has been a long-standing obsession with scientists, astronomers and alien/UFO-hunters alike.

While alien hunters are convinced that extraterrestrial life does exist, scientists are still quite indifferent to the claims.

However, it seems that there might just be something to those claims. Astronomers at the University of Puerto Ricohave detected mysterious radio signals coming from outer space.

The source of the strange signals seems to be a small, dim star located about 11 light-years from Earth.

The red dwarf star – Ross 128 (GJ 447) – which is around 2,800 times dimmer than the Sun, is not yet known to have any planets, researchers said.

The "strange" radio signals were detected using the Arecibo Observatory, which is a massive radio telescope built inside of a Puerto Rican sinkhole.

Although unlikely, the possibility that signals came from intelligent extraterrestrial life cannot be ruled out yet, said Abel Mendez, an astrobiologist at the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo.

"In case you are wondering, the recurrent aliens hypothesis is at the bottom of many other better explanations," Mendez told 'Business Insider'.

He said the signals may have come from some kind of man-made object in space, such as a satellite.

"The field of view of (Arecibo) is wide enough, so there is the possibility that the signals were caused not by the star but another object in the line of sight," Mendez said.

(With PTI inputs)