Mysterious bursts of radio waves originating from billions of light years away have left the international team of scientists speculating about their origins.
The burst energetics indicate that they originate from an extreme astrophysical event involving relativistic objects such as neutron stars or black holes.
Study lead Dan Thornton, a PhD student at England's University of Manchester and Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, said the findings pointed to some extreme events involving large amounts of mass or energy as the source of the radio bursts.
"This paper describes four more bursts, removing any doubt that they are real. The radio bursts last for just a few milliseconds and the furthest one that we detected was several billion light years away," he said.
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Astonishingly, the findings - taken from a tiny fraction of the sky - also suggest that there should be one of these signals going off every 10 seconds.
The team, which included researchers from the UK, Germany, Italy, Australia and the US, used the CSIRO Parkes 64 metre radio telescope in Australia to obtain their results.
Author Professor Matthew Bailes, from the Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, thinks the origin of these explosive bursts may be from magnetic neutron stars, known as 'magnetars'.
The researchers say their results will also provide a way of finding out the properties of space between the Earth and where the bursts occurred.
"We are still not sure about what makes up the space between galaxies, so we will be able to use these radio bursts like probes in order to understand more about some of the missing matter in the Universe," Dr Ben Stappers, another author from Manchester's School of Physics and Astronomy, said.