English

Exploring nine simultaneously occurring transients on April 12th 1950

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics 2021-06-23 v1 Earth and Planetary Astrophysics High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena Space Physics

Abstract

Nine point sources appeared within half an hour on a region within \sim 10 arcmin of a red-sensitive photographic plate taken in April 1950 as part of the historic Palomar Sky Survey. All nine sources are absent on both previous and later photographic images, and absent in modern surveys with CCD detectors which go several magnitudes deeper. We present deep CCD images with the 10.4-meter Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC), reaching brightness r26r \sim 26 mag, that reveal possible optical counterparts, although these counterparts could equally well be just chance projections. The incidence of transients in the investigated photographic plate is far higher than expected from known detection rates of optical counterparts to e.g.\ flaring dwarf stars, Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs), Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) or microlensing events. One possible explanation is that the plates have been subjected to an unknown type of contamination producing mainly point sources with of varying intensities along with some mechanism of concentration within a radius of \sim 10 arcmin on the plate. If contamination as an explanation can be fully excluded, another possibility is fast (t <0.5<0.5 s) solar reflections from objects near geosynchronous orbits. An alternative route to confirm the latter scenario is by looking for images from the First Palomar Sky Survey where multiple transients follow a line.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2106.11780,
  title  = {Exploring nine simultaneously occurring transients on April 12th 1950},
  author = {Beatriz Villarroel and Geoffrey W. Marcy and Stefan Geier and Alina Streblyanska and Enrique Solano Marquez and Vitaly N. Andruk and Matthew E. Shultz and Alok C. Gupta and Lars Mattsson},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2106.11780},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

21 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. Published in Scientific Reports. Supplementary information can be found on the publishers webpage (open access)

R2 v1 2026-06-24T03:28:09.476Z