NASA Releases New Black Hole 'Sounds'

2022-05-16

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  • The American space agency NASA has released sounds it created with data collected from black holes.
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  • The sound production process is called sonification.
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  • NASA says it used astronomical data recorded by its Chandra X-ray Observatory.
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  • Special equipment then translates the data into audible sound.
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  • NASA says the Chandra orbiting observatory is the world's most powerful X-ray telescope.
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  • One of the black holes studied sits at the center of the Perseus galaxy cluster, or group.
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  • The Perseus cluster is home to hundreds of galaxies.
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  • They are 240 million light years from Earth.
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  • Black holes are areas in space where gravity is so strong that nothing - not even light - can escape them.
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  • They are believed to be formed by collapsed stars.
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  • The presence of black holes affects the surrounding environment in extreme ways.
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  • But black holes are not easy to capture with a camera.
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  • This is because they are surrounded by thick dust and extremely hot gases.
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  • NASA says it discovered in 2003 that the black hole deep inside the center of the Perseus galaxy cluster was linked to sound.
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  • Astronomers had earlier found that "pressure waves" sent out by the black hole caused ripples in the cluster's hot gas.
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  • Astronomers found that they could translate those ripples into a note of sound.
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  • But the note was at a very low range that humans cannot hear.
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  • Using new sonification methods, NASA says it was able to produce sounds from the ripples that we could hear.
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  • In a statement, the space agency said that in some ways, the latest sonification was "unlike any other done before."
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  • This is because the process "revisits the actual sound waves discovered in data" from the Chandra telescope.
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  • NASA explains that there is a popular misconception that there is no sound in space.
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  • It notes that it is true that most of space exists in a vacuum, meaning it is separated from outside events or influences.
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  • But a galaxy cluster contains large amounts of gas that surrounds the many galaxies within it.
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  • This, NASA says, "provides a medium for the sound waves to travel."
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  • For the new sonification of the Perseus black hole, the NASA team used the sound waves they had collected in the past.
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  • But the astronomers then had to put the signals into a range that the human ear could hear.
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  • To do this, they greatly raised the pitch of the waves to a level far above their own frequency.
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  • NASA published the sounds on its website.
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  • They are contained in videos that show visual representations of the X-ray data collected by Chandra.
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  • The video images can be used to follow the waves, which NASA says were sent out in different directions.
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  • The space agency also released a new sonification of a black hole that became famous in 2019.
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  • That black hole sits at the center of the Messier 87 galaxy, about 55 million light years from Earth.
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  • It gained fame when astronomers announced they had successfully produced the first image of a black hole.
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  • NASA says that sonification was based on X-ray data collected by Chandra, light captured by the Hubble Space Telescope, as well as radio waves from the Atacama Large Millimeter Array in Chile.
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  • The black hole sounds were released as part of NASA's Black Hole Week.
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  • As part of that event, the agency also released new "data visualizations" of black holes based on telescope observations.
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  • I'm Bryan Lynn.