Mysterious Radio Waves , Seem to Defy Physics.<br />The Byte reports that scientists have been <br />stumped since detecting a series of large, <br />low frequency radio wave-emitting objects. .<br />The Byte reports that scientists have been <br />stumped since detecting a series of large, <br />low frequency radio wave-emitting objects. .<br />According to researchers, <br />the objects were found in a galaxy cluster<br />about 800 million light-years away. .<br />The signal appears to defy the laws of physics.<br />Researchers discovered a fossil radio<br />emission, a radio relic and a radio halo <br />within the Abell 3266 galaxy cluster.<br />The radio relic, a sonic boom-like<br />arc of radio waves, caught <br />the researchers' attention.<br />According to the team, <br />the relic is unlike any other <br />radio object detected before.<br />If it's a shock wave, <br />you might think it would <br />bend down like an arc around <br />the edge, but this one is flipped around, Tessa Vernstrom, The University <br />of Western Australia, via ABC Australia.<br />Our best physical models <br />simply can’t fit the data, Tessa Vernstrom, The University <br />of Western Australia, via ABC Australia.<br />Our best physical models <br />simply can’t fit the data, Tessa Vernstrom, The University <br />of Western Australia, via ABC Australia.<br />The Byte reports that the discovery <br />may cause the team to rethink <br />our understanding of physics.<br />Maybe there's some kind <br />of new physics going on there <br />that we haven't fully understood, <br />when our models can't <br />match the observations, Tessa Vernstrom, The University <br />of Western Australia, via The Byte.<br />Maybe there's some kind <br />of new physics going on there <br />that we haven't fully understood, <br />when our models can't <br />match the observations, Tessa Vernstrom, The University <br />of Western Australia, via The Byte