New Scientist: First spotted by NASA’s Kepler space telescope, KIC 8462852 drew scientific attention because of its erratic changes in brightness. The star dimmed at irregular intervals by up to 20%, whereas most of the stars Kepler saw dimmed regularly and by no more than 1%. One astronomer suggested the variations were caused by aliens constructing a Dyson sphere, a proposal that garnered widespread popular attention. Since then another researcher has dug up archival images revealing a gradual decrease in the star’s brightness over the past 100 years. Now, Benjamin Montet of Caltech and his colleagues have examined more Kepler data and found a different dimming behavior. For the first 1000 days of the Kepler mission, KIC 8462852 dimmed at roughly 0.34% per year, twice the rate indicated by the archival images. Then, in just 200 days, the brightness dropped another 2.5% before beginning to level out. The new result makes it even more difficult to find a known phenomenon or combination of phenomena to explain the behavior. The leading explanations include a comet swarm or gas cloud around the star.
Despite the tumultuous history of the near-Earth object’s parent body, water may have been preserved in the asteroid for about a billion years.
October 08, 2025 08:50 PM
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Physics Today - The Week in Physics
The Week in Physics" is likely a reference to the regular updates or summaries of new physics research, such as those found in publications like Physics Today from AIP Publishing or on news aggregators like Phys.org.