NASA distributes stellar symphony by turning telescope data into beautiful, haunting music – RT World News


Not satisfied with the mentally blown material around the world with incredible images of our universe, NASA has taken data from binoculars observing the center of the Milky Way galaxy and created a celestial symphony.

NASA regularly takes digital data from remote telescopes and converts them into compelling images. These images are a combination of different wavelengths of light and radiation that the human eye cannot see.

In an effort to further themselves, NASA’s Boffins have taken things to the next level using the same digital telescope data to create short cosmic concerts and ‘sonify’ the stars.

Sonification is the process by which data is translated into sound, instead of an image, in the form of binary code or in the form of many and zero.



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To reference the information, NASA has created an audio visual pleasure in which the pitch and volume are controlled by the position and intensity of the stars found in the images of the Galactic Center.

Individual notes are assigned to the stars and individual bright lights, while clouds of gas and dust produce atmospheric drone sounds that develop in part as well as in images, from left to right.

Naturally, the episode ends when the four million-solar mass black hole hits Sagittarius A *. The short audio dio part covers the area of ​​our galaxy which is around 400 light years.

The galaxy, which has been running from Earth for about 26,000 light years, has been ‘demonstrated’ by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, Spitzer Space Telescope and the Lunar X-Ray Observatory.

Each telescope plays its own ‘instrument’, which is connected to the data it collects.

The Hubble Galaxy’s get-togethers include regions where stars are born, where delicate pizzas are strings.

Spitzer ‘plays’ the ethereal infrared spectrum, belting the glowing clouds of dust to make everyone listen.

Last but not least, the luscious X-ray ‘sings’ from the ultra-gated gas resulting from lunar supernova explosions.

The project also includes sonicized versions of the supernova explosion Cassiopeia A and the remains of the world-famous image ‘The Pillars Cref Creation’.

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