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Mysterious radio signal from space with 'heartbeat' pattern detected

A mysterious radio explosion with a pattern similar to a heartbeat has been detected in space. Astronomers estimate that the signal came from a galaxy about a billion light years away, but the exact location and cause of the explosion is unknown. A study detailing the findings published Wednesday in the journal Natural . Rapid radio bursts, or FRBs, are intense, millisecond-long bursts of radio waves of unknown origin. The first FRBs were discovered in 2007, and since then, hundreds of these rapid cosmic flashes have been detected coming from various distant points throughout the universe. Watch the latest News on Channel 7 or stream for free on 7plus >> Many FRBs release super-bright radio waves that last only a few milliseconds before disappearing completely, and about 10 percent of them are known to repeat and have patterns. Fast radio bursts are so fast and unpredictable that they are difficult to observe. One of the sources used to find them is a radio telescope called th

American bond and currency markets signal a global recession

Another record inflation reading against the backdrop of a tight labor market and rising food and goods prices will, despite the recent declines in oil and therefore gasoline prices, leave the Fed with no choice but to continue raising rates aggressively, even if it does. risk of pushing interest rates up. US economy into recession. In fact, the drop in oil prices – dropping below $100 a barrel on Tuesday for the first time since dropping briefly below that level in April – also reflects the view among traders in commodity markets that a recession and falling demand are imminent. . With inflation at an unprecedented rate and such a raw tool monetary policy, it is almost inevitable that [Fed] must induce a recession to try to control inflation. There are those, including the Fed, who believe that a two-year/10-year inversion, because of their imperfect record in predicting a recession, is less useful as a guide to the economy’s future than a three-month/10-year yield relationship, in