2020 Archive III: The Missing Stars

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When NEMO started to correlate the arrival times of the GW and RF signals with nightly astronomical sky surveys, it was discovered that most of the signals were received on the same nights that stars had gone “missing” from the sky surveys. A single “missing” star in a survey is not a cause for alarm, as it is usually due to a damaged sensor or a software error. But these “missing” stars did not return in the next night’s survey, or in the ones that followed. NEMO began to seriously consider that these star systems may have been destroyed by extraterrestrials.

Dozens of star systems have disappeared since the summer of 2020, and the frequency with which NEMO is receiving the correlated GW and RF transmissions has accelerated, with new signals received almost nightly. The vast distance between the stars which are disappearing suggests coordination and/or communication across distances of thousands of parsecs - this may suggest that faster-than-light travel or even limited time travel are among the capabilities of the extraterrestrials.