China has said its giant Sky-E telescope may have picked up signals of alien civilizations, according to a report by the state-backed Science and Technology Daily, and it may have The report and publications related to the discovery have been deleted.
According to Arab Net, the report, quoting the chief scientist of the extraterrestrial civilization research team, Zhang Tongji, revealed that the narrow-band electromagnetic signals detected by Sky Eye - the world's largest radio telescope - differ from the previous signals that were captured, and the team is examining them further. The telescope was manufactured by Peking Normal University, the National Astronomical Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of California, Berkeley.
It is not clear why the report was apparently removed from the website of Science and Technology Daily - the official newspaper of China's Ministry of Science and Technology - although the news had already been reported on the social network Weibo and reported by other media, including state-run ones.
In September 2020, the Sky Eye telescope, located in southwest China's Guizhou Province and with a diameter of 500 meters, was officially launched in search of extraterrestrial life.
Zhang said the team detected two sets of strange signals in 2020 while processing data collected in 2019, and found another suspicious signal in 2022 from the observation data of exoplanet targets.
The Chinese Sky-E telescope is very sensitive to low-frequency radio signals and plays an important role in the search for space civilizations, according to the report published by Bloomberg and seen by Al-Arabiya.net.
The report added that suspicious signals could also be a type of radio interference and require further investigation.