Scientists found a strange object emitting signals in our galaxy
Strange object

Astronomers found a strange object emitting signals every 44 minutes in its most active state. The object is rare because of the types of signals it sends.
Right in our backyard

According to the AP News, the researchers found the object right in our backyard: in our galaxy, the Milky Way, 15,000 light years from the Earth.
LPT

Researchers explained to the news agency that the object type was not unknown: it is called a long-period transient. It usually emits radio wave light in time intervals.
X-Rays and Radio Waves

However, this object emitted X-ray light and radio waves light simultaneously. The first type of light carries high energy, while the second one carries low energy.

According to Scientific American, this is the first time astronomers have spotted an LPT doing that. The new observation adds more mystery to an already poorly understood phenomenon.
Photo: X-ray: Chandra: NASA/CXC/SAO,
A coincidence

AP News reported that NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory detected the X-ray emissions coincidentally while observing a remnant supernova.
A star?

Ziteng Andy Wang, from Curtin University in Australia, told the news agency that the object could be a “highly magnetized dead star like a neutron or white dwarf.”
Something new

However, he also said the object could be “something exotic,” never spotted before by astronomers. Still, he told Scientific American, it could hold the answers for all LPTs.
Irregular intervals

According to the magazine, these objects intrigue scientists because they switch the signals on and off. The origin of the emissions is also unknown.
There could be more

The object emitted X-ray signals for only a month, so the team told AP News that other LPTs could do the same. Scientific American said there are only ten registered LPTs.