Space

How did the "sound" get to our receiver?  I get that a cluster could have enough gas to be a vehicle for soundwaves, but I'm assuming there is a very large vacuum between the gas filled cluster and the receiver used to collect the data.

Please, no one take this as "scientists are lying to us!", I'm genuinely curious.
The sound doesn't reach us. Instead astronomers measure the pressure waves (I assume from x-rays since the Chandra X-ray Observatory is producing the data) and then convert that to the equivalent sound.

Edit: it's from a variety of sources: x-ray, visible light, and radio waves.

More sounds:

https://chandra.si.edu/sound/

 
Last edited by a moderator:
for_stsci_site_imagec-neptunezoom.png


https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2022/new-webb-image-captures-clearest-view-of-neptune-s-rings-in-decades

 
Back
Top