
Sounds from space recorded by NASA | What do they mean?
Thanks to modern technical equipment such as the James Webb Space Telescope, we can now hear the sounds from space, also known as cosmic noise.
The human ear is specifically designed to transmit variable pressure through the medium (i.e. sound waves). These sound waves are muted when the medium they are traveling through ends (say, when Earth's atmosphere gives way to the emptiness of space). However, there are many waves that can travel in a vacuum. We can then translate these vacuum-friendly waves into sounds that can be heard by humans (that's how things like radio transmissions work).
Furthermore, over the past few decades, we have sent several satellites to the farthest reaches of the solar system. For research and communication reasons, these craft are equipped with sensors designed to "hear" things like radio waves and free-flowing plasma in interplanetary space. Using an intermediate technology, humans can "hear" these spatial waves in the form of audible sounds.
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Cre: @TheSimplySpace (YouTube)
