I can say with near complete certainty that this is not the case. Think about it. They wouldn't be transmitting in English, much less the name of the station and not coordinates or something.
I'm pretty sure that it's just radio chatter I picked up from the station![]()
Agreed - I think we can conclude that the station name is part of the ambient noise from the sector, definitely not the Artefact.
- The audio is present without the Artefact,
- The audio is not present on other recordings.
= Evidence wins
Forgive me for the next part, but indulge me for but a moment!
I've been thinking about the fact that the purrs speed up over time - It's very odd that the howls don't follow this pattern. They remain static at 30 second intervals, while the purrs become quicker and higher pitched.
It could be that the pace quickens because the Artefact is decaying, or 'dying' in open space.
But what if that's not the case? What if it's part of a 'spin up' process? One could extrapolate from this that the longer the recording goes on, the more bits you'd be able to cram in between each howl, theoretically. The bandwidth between each howl is increasing.
I suspect that once we find a way to stabilise the Artefact in order to obtain a longer recording, we may be able to test this theory.
Last edited: