These pulses, dubbed the , occur every 47 hours and are not random. Mathematicians at MIT’s Haystack Observatory have identified a pattern in the prime numbers: the pulses encode the first twelve prime numbers (2, 3, 5, 7, 11… up to 37) before repeating.
For now, the object drifts silently through the black, flaunting the laws of physics with every heartbeat of its twelve-toned song. Astronomers will continue to watch, calculate, and argue. The rest of us will look up at the constellation Draco on cold, clear nights and wonder: is something looking back?
Reddit’s r/DrakorkitaTwelve community has grown to 1.2 million members, dedicated to decoding the signal, creating art of the rogue planet, and sharing “sky watch” schedules for amateur astronomers hoping to glimpse the anomaly. One user famously claimed to have heard the twelve tones on a shortwave radio during a geomagnetic storm—a story widely debunked but never forgotten. You might wonder: why does a dark, wandering planet 430 light-years away matter? Because Drakorkita Twelve is challenging the very definition of a "natural object." drakorkita twelve
Recent data from the James Webb Space Telescope’s secondary mission (JSWT-Deep) suggests that Drakorkita Twelve’s core is composed of a metastable form of carbon—what researchers are calling "ferro-ice diamond." This substance cannot form naturally under known thermodynamic laws unless the core was artificially compressed or unless the planet is significantly older than the universe itself (a hypothesis currently being debated in The Astrophysical Journal Letters ).
In the vast, silent expanse of the cosmos, most celestial bodies play by the rules. Planets orbit stars in predictable ellipses. Main-sequence stars fuse hydrogen into helium in their cores. Black holes consume and evaporate within well-understood parameters. But every few decades, astronomers stumble upon an anomaly—an object that seemingly breaks the laws of physics as we know them. Enter Drakorkita Twelve . These pulses, dubbed the , occur every 47
The leading fringe hypothesis is that Drakorkita Twelve is not a planet at all, but a —a "black hole mimic." This would explain its density, its rogue nature, and the strange trajectory. A black hole fragment of sufficient mass could perform gravitational slingshot maneuvers around dark matter clumps invisible to our telescopes.
Unless… something is pushing it.
Meanwhile, the data keeps coming. Last month, a new paper published in Nature Astronomy revealed that Drakorkita Twelve’s twelve radio tones have changed . The prime number sequence has been replaced with a new sequence: the first twelve digits of pi (3.141592653589). If the signal was a beacon before, it is now a mathematical challenge. “It’s as if something learned our number system and is showing off,” says Dr. Voss. Drakorkita Twelve remains one of the most compelling unsolved mysteries in modern astrophysics. Is it a freak of nature—an impossible alignment of mass, composition, and electromagnetic luck? Or is it a relic, a cosmic ark, or a weapon left over from a war fought before the Earth had cooled?
| Телефон * | |