bendedreality.com
| Remember KIC 8462852? Researchers Just Found a Second 'Dyson Sphere' Star
But still no aliens. (YET) When astronomers discovered a strange pattern of light near a distant star called KIC 8462852 back in October, it was like nothing anyone had observed before. When a planet passes in front of star, the star's brightness usually dips by around 1 percent, but KIC 8462852 has been experiencing dips of up to 22 percent, suggesting that something huge is zooming past. And now a second star with strange dips in brightness has been identified. Named EPIC 204278916, the star is estimated to be about the size of our Sun in diameter, but has only half its mass. It was discovered by NASA's Kepler spacecraft in 2014, and ever since, a team of astronomers led by Simone Scaringi from the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Germany have been keeping tabs on its dips in light, or 'light curves'. And this thing is even stranger than KIC 8462852. The researchers report that over 78.8 days of observations, EPIC 204278916 displayed irregular dimming of up to 65