Jaks, do you honestly think that the human eye, unaided, can see something 2.6 million light years away? This is surely misinformation. Outy, do you have any ideas on that one?
The most distant 'object' that has been seen by the naked eye was a stellar explosion from some 7.5 billion light years away (and, the speed of light being what it is, 7.5 billion years ago, as well). Of course, to the naked eye it was just a faint twinkle in the sky, but various telescopes were able to categorise it as by far the brightest object ever recorded, two and half million times brighter than the previous brightest supernova.
There had been 'brighter' objects than that supernova, but their emissions were not in the visible spectrum - gamma-ray bursts are typically the highest energy outputs that astronomers find on a semi-regular basis.
1500 Light years away apparently, interesting.
Really? So, is there equipment that can pick-up stuff that far away?
Outy.... over to you...
Depends on the distance, but yes. Whilst luminous intensity is susceptible to all sorts of intervening matter - that's why the best telescopes are those outside of the atmosphere - a lot of information can be discerned from both changes in that intensity, and changes to the frequency distribution.
We can't see the structure, we can only make deductions from the pattern of the 'light' that reaches the telescope, but measuring the rates of change of various frequencies across the spectrum we can model what might be causing the interruptions.
Of course, as a structure, it would need to be immense, far in excess not just of anything we've put into space, but in excess of anything we've built at all as a single structure.
O.