NASA scientists observed the sound of a black hole at the center of the Perseus galaxy group more than 200 million light years from Earth, recorded by the Chandra X-ray observatory that looked like music.
- The sound waves were recorded in the NASA Space Telescope
- in the form of astronomical data, and then translated into sound that humans could hear
- although there were "A common misconception" that "there is no sound in space"
- because there is no means of transmitting sound waves
the newly released sound is very similar to the result of the composer Hans Zimmer's tunes, who composed and tuned the soundtrack to several films about outer space.
Astronomers at the space agency realized that hot gas cladding Perseus, an 11 million-year-wide galaxy package, could be translated into sound, and that gas surrounding hundreds and even thousands of galaxies provided an intermediary during which sound waves would travel.
- The sonication was created by recombining the sound waves of the human hearing range.
- by raising the volume up by "57 or 58 octava" above the true sound layer.
- Composer Hans Zimmer, who wrote the soundtrack to the Oscar
- winning science fiction film Interstellar, created music that closely resembled that of NASA.
Comments
Post a Comment