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Sound In Space

All articles tagged with #sound in space

space1 day ago

The Silent Knock: Unexplained Sound from China's First Spaceflight

During China’s 2003 inaugural manned mission (Shenzhou 5), astronaut Yang Liwei reported a rhythmic knocking inside the capsule about 300 km above Earth. Despite checks, attempts to reproduce it, and later missions (2005, 2008) reportedly hearing similar sounds, no physical source or telemetry evidence has been found. Theories include thermal expansion, micrometeoroid impacts, or perceptual distortion, but none have been confirmed. The incident remains an unresolved mystery in space history, with no official procedural changes tied to it and no acoustic signals captured by instruments.

space-science2 years ago

The Silent Void: Debunking the Myth of Soundless Space

While there is no sound that humans can hear in the vacuum of space, there are still waves that propagate through the low-density plasma in interplanetary space. The solar wind, released by the Sun, creates plasma waves that can be converted into radio waves and then back into sound when they reach Earth's ionosphere. These waves have implications for star formation and can be used in asteroseismology to study the interior properties of stars. Additionally, supermassive black holes can generate plasma ripples that produce musical notes, although they are too deep for humans to hear. In the Solar System, there are possibilities of finding extraterrestrial sounds on planets with atmospheres, such as Venus and Mars.