SETI denies hearing ET's voice
Reports that a group set up as part of the Search for Extraterrestrial Life (SETI) has detected a radio transmission that it suspects could be a signal from an alien civilisation have been dismissed by the organisation.
"Sorry, but there's nothing new to report," said David Anderson, director of SETI@home.
"The candidate signal in question was essentially ruled out as an ET [extra-terrestrial] signal because its Doppler drift rate varied too widely," Anderson told ZDNet UK, adding that this fact had first been reported back in April.
Many media organisations reported earlier this week that a faint radio pulse had been picked up that could be an attempt by living beings on another planet to get in touch. The signal was at 1420MHz, the frequency of hydrogen, which astronomers frequently monitor as they map the universe.