Current:Home > NewsWhat does a black hole sound like? NASA has an answer -FundGuru
What does a black hole sound like? NASA has an answer
View
Date:2025-04-19 08:19:09
For the first time in history, earthlings can hear what a black hole sounds like: a low-pitched groaning, as if a very creaky heavy door was being opened again and again.
NASA released a 35-second audio clip of the sound earlier this month using electromagnetic data picked from the Perseus Galaxy Cluster, some 240 million light-years away.
The data had been sitting around since it was gathered nearly 20 years ago by the Chandra X-Ray Observatory. The decision to turn it into sound came only recently, as part of NASA's effort over the past two years to translate its stunning space photography into something that could be appreciated by the ear.
"I started out the first 10 years of my career really paying attention to only the visual, and just realized that I had done a complete disservice to people who were either not visual learners or for people who are blind or low-vision," NASA visual scientist Kimberly Arcand told NPR in an interview with Weekend Edition.
While the Perseus audio tries to replicate what a black hole actually sounds like, Arcand's other "sonifications" are more or less creative renditions of images. In those imaginative interpretations, each type of material — gaseous cloud or star — gets a different sound; elements near the top of images sound higher in tone; brighter spots are louder.
For more examples of NASA's sonifications, go to the agency's Universe of Sound web page. Or read on to learn more from Arcand about the venture.
Interview Highlights
On how the black hole audio was made
What we're listening to is essentially a re-sonification, so a data sonification of an actual sound wave in this cluster of galaxies where there is this supermassive black hole at the core that's sort of burping and sending out all of these waves, if you will. And the scientists who originally studied the data were able to find out what the note is. And it was essentially a B-flat about 57 octaves below middle C. So we've taken that sound that the universe was singing and then just brought it back up into the range of human hearing — because we certainly can't hear 57 octaves below middle C.
On sonifying an image of the center of the Milky Way Galaxy
So, we actually take the data and we extrapolate the information that we need. We really pay attention to the scientific story to make sure that conversion from light into sound is something that will make sense for people, particularly for people who are blind or low vision. So our Milky Way galaxy — that inner region — that is this really sort of energetic area where there's just a whole lot of frenetic activity taking place. But if we're looking at a different galaxy that perhaps is a little bit more calm, a little bit more restive at its core it could sound completely different.
On the sonification of the "Pillars of Creation" photograph from the Eagle Nebula in the Serpens constellation:
This is like a baby stellar nursery. These tall columns of gas and dust where stars are forming and you're listening to the interplay between the X-ray information and the optical information and it's really trying to give you a bit of the text.
These soundscapes that are being created can really bring a bit of emotion to data that could seem pretty esoteric and abstract otherwise.
veryGood! (33472)
Related
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- The Missouri governor shortens the DWI prison sentence of former Chiefs assistant coach Britt Reid
- Q&A: Maryland’s First Chief Sustainability Officer Takes on the State’s Climate and Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Goals
- Blizzard hits California and Nevada, shutting interstate and leaving thousands without power
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Men's March Madness bubble winners, losers: No doubt, Gonzaga will make NCAA Tournament
- United Nations Official Says State Repression of Environmental Defenders Threatens Democracy and Human Rights
- Horoscopes Today, March 2, 2024
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- The enduring story for Underground Railroad Quilts
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Voucher expansion leads to more students, waitlists and classes for some religious schools
- Cancer patient dragged by New York City bus, partially paralyzed, awarded $72.5 million in lawsuit
- More mountain snow expected even as powerful blizzard moves out of Northern California
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Nikki Haley rejects third-party No Labels presidential bid, says she wouldn't be able to work with a Democratic VP
- Where are people under the most financial stress? See the list of top 10 American cities
- Two fragile DC neighborhoods hang in the balance as the Wizards and Capitals consider leaving town
Recommendation
Could your smelly farts help science?
Item believed to be large balloon discovered by fishermen off Alaskan coast
Oklahoma softball upset by Louisiana as NCAA-record win streak ends at 71 games
Want Your Foundation to Last? Selena Gomez's Makeup Artist Melissa Murdick Has the Best Hack
'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
Chris Mortensen, an award-winning reporter who covered the NFL, dies at 72
What to know about viewing and recording the solar eclipse with your cellphone camera
Freddie Mercury's London home for sale after being preserved for 30 years: See inside