But the scientists in the Hawthorn room not only want to spot one; they hope to find out what causes the bursts. Fast radio bursts – astronomers refer to them as FRBs – are extremely short and powerful bursts of radio waves originating from somewhere outside the Milky Way. Some contain more energy within a moment than our sun produces in decades. “It’s a millisecond burst that goes off once, unpredictably. And you have no idea when. Trying to catch that, it’s hard,” says Jeff Cooke, chief investigator at the ARC Centre for Excellence in Gravitational Wave Discovery. He has spent the past half-decade pulling all this together. "It’s a millisecond burst that goes off once, unpredictably. And you have no idea when. Trying to catch that, it’s hard," says Professor Cooke. Credit:Justin McManus Last week's telescope global hook-up finished on Saturday. The team hasn't spotted anything thus far, but there were problems with one of the radio telescopes and data analysis will continue to see if anything was missed.

No one knows what the bursts are. Most scientists agree they are not linked to aliens. Each astrophysicist in the control room last week at Swinburne University’s Hawthorn campus has their own favourite theory. Professor Cooke hopes they come from magnetars, a kind of neutron star with a super-powerful magnetic field. An incredibly intense "star-quake" on its surface might produce an FRB. Sara Webb hopes the answer is a blitzar, a pulsar that explodes then collapses into a black hole. And Igor Andreoni hopes FRBs come from colliding neutron stars, which generate explosions so powerful they warp the space-time fabric.

FRBs are powerful bursts of energy, visible clear across the universe. Credit:Danielle Futselaar To find out, the three have spent five years wrangling telescopes around the world to work together. The global coalition ranged from the high-tech – like IceCube, a sensor embedded deep under the Antarctic ice, and the Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope, flying in a low orbit of Earth – to decidedly low-tech: a telescope set up in a Pakenham backyard by an amateur astronomer. The telescopes have been looking at the same patch of sky. But – and here’s the trick – they all look with different eyes. The X-ray Modulation Telescope, for example, sees in X-rays, while IceCube’s one-kilometre-wide sensor is designed to pick up neutrino signatures. Different signals can travel through space at different speeds. Radio waves typically are the slowest. This means by the time a radio telescope detects a fast radio burst, all the other signals – things that could tell us what the FRB actually is – may have already gone racing past the Earth.

This graphic, from the Deeper, Wider, Faster team, shows the huge number of telescopes harnessed together. Credit:Deeper Wider Faster / Supplied The hope for last week's hook-up was that by looking with about 64 sets of different eyes, when an FRB fired off the other telescopes would spot something – a burst of light, or X-rays, or anything at all– that gave a clue as to what the FRB really is. The researchers have done six runs at this in the past four years, each time harnessing more and more telescopes. So far, nothing. Data flowed last week from the telescopes around the world to a supercomputer able to pick out anything that could possibly be a signal – like a space explosion – that could generate an FRB. The probabilities told the scientists their radio telescopes would spot one or two FRBs last week. The supercomputer, however, could identify tens of thousands of possible signals every day.

The aim was for humans to check any signals within minutes of their happening in order to send a quick command to giant telescopes in Chile and South Africa that stood ready to try to get a good image of the FRB. However, the team will now need to go back over some of the results due to problems with a telescope not providing needed data. Many scientists don’t even believe an FRB will come with another signal. “So that makes it even harder,” Dr Andreoni says. The IceCube Lab at the South Pole is part of the search. Credit:Icecube/NSF In the control room one day early last week, in charge of assessing the thousands of possible FRBs is that crack team of astrophysicists – and a few work experience students. There are six of the latter, all here for the day from school. They are joined by Blake Iscaro, a 12-year-old with a deep interest in space who matter-of-factly says he is using scavenged parts to build a radio-telescope in his backyard.

The supercomputer sprays the data up on the wall. Then it's up to the team to spot something. Fast. “Computers find things you know pretty well. They don’t find things you have not ever seen before,” Professor Cooke says. “If you’re going to trigger these gigantic telescopes, which cost a ridiculous amount of money, you don’t want them to point at something that wasn’t real.” Two stations down from Professor Cooke, year 10 student Max Petschack leans closer to his screen, face screwed up in concentration, staring at what looks like a yellow blob. The light curve shows the blob became dramatically brighter between measurements. “This one’s interesting,” he says. Michelle Ko leans over to look. “Wow,” she says.