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Cosmic ray more powerful than Oh My God found by scientists in Utah

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An artist's illustration of the extremely energetic cosmic ray observed by the Telescope Array Collaboration led by the University of Utah and the University of Tokyo. It's been named the

Scientists are seeking answers to a new outer space mystery after a telescope in Utah detected the most powerful cosmic ray seen in more than three decades, according to the authors of new research published Thursday in the journal Science.

A puzzling, extremely rare, ultra-high-energy particle is believed to have traveled to Earth from beyond the Milky Way galaxy, although the exact origin of this turbocharged particle from outer space remains a mystery. Some experts have suggested that the cosmic ray, nicknamed the Amaterasu particle after the sun goddess in Japanese mythology, could have been generated by unknown physics.

According to an article published in Nature, a British scientific journal, the “amazing” discovery has left some scientists wondering “what could produce such a high energy,” said Clancy James, an astronomer at Curtin University in Perth, Australia. Cosmic rays,  invisible to the naked eye, are charged particles — often a proton — that travels through space  from other galaxies and extragalactic sources at close to the speed of light.

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