The most distant of its kind has been discovered by a team of astronomer.

If you keep count, that's 58 thousand billion billion kilometers. The time it took for the light to arrive here could be greater than the age of the solar system.

It's almost certainly not some ancient alien civilization pointing a gigantic laser at the Earth from across the universe. Astronomers suggest that the megamaser is likely the result of two colliding galaxies.

Big Collision

We already know about the evolution of galaxies and what happens when they merge with others.

A new study will be published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, which shows how dense the gas in the galaxies is.

The most violent events in the Universe, such as the Galactic collision, release unimaginable amounts of energy.

The OH megamasers act like bright lights that say: here is a collision of galaxies that is making new stars and feeding massive black holes, according to co-author Jeremy Darling from the University of Colorado.

Mere Lasers

The finding is a proof of concept for the observatory in South Africa.

This is the first hydroxyl megamaser of its kind to be seen by a telescope, and it is the most distant one to date. It shows how good the telescope is.

Scientists are excited by the prospect of future discoveries.

The number of rare phenomena will probably double with the discovery of MeerKAT.

The International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research detected a space laser.

The Hubble Space Telescope called out a hot mess.

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