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Stellar Seismologists Record "Music" From Stars
Posted by
kdawson
on Fri Oct 24, 2008 11:42 AM
from the play-here-comes-the-sun-for-me dept.
from the play-here-comes-the-sun-for-me dept.
niktemadur writes "The BBC reports that a French team of stellar seismologists, using the COROT Space Telescope, have converted stellar oscillations into sound patterns, a relatively new technique that, according to Professor Eric Michel of the Paris Observatory, is already giving researchers new insight into the inner workings of stars. The subtly pulsating, haunting sounds are very similar to artist Aphex Twin's minimalistic nineties album 'Selected Ambient Works, Vol. 2,' only stripping away what little melody it had and leaving just the beat. These and many more recordings from space can be accessed at the Jodrell Bank Center for Astrophysics website, also known as the Jodcast."
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In other news.. (Score:5, Funny)
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Wait until they know about galactic piracy.
Nothing to fear, Samus Aran is taking care of that.
Legal Question (Score:4, Funny)
If not, then would that make these seismologists Space Pirates?
It's the same, only different. (Score:2)
Re:It's the same, only different. (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually using sound to view data from anything can be quite useful. I have worked in telcomms for some time, and in days gone by listening to the demodulated data as audio from a paging signal was very useful. Engineers can listen to it and know if it is 'right' or 'wrong' without a scope, data tracer, or any equipment at all other than a pager with audio output. I've actually located faults using this.
Using charts is a way for us to 'see' data in a form that we can readily digest. Using audio to 'hear' the signals from space will allow our brains to quickly digest what the data shows. I'd like to see more of this. We use IR cameras to see wavelengths that we do not typically see with our eyes. Why not use audio to look at radiation from space?
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Now that I completely agree with. Diagnostics and data analysis via the patterns inherent in sound makes a lot of sense - the human brain is designed to do pattern recognition in raw data for starters and computers could theoretically do pattern recognition for large volumes (no pun intended) of data far more efficiently this way because you are dealing with the information holistically rather than as a serial stream. You can also identify subtle differences in stars by means of sound - a subtle variation t
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We listen to the sound the gradients in an MR scanner make all the time. You can tell what sequence someone is running by the sound. At the main annual meeting there's a presentation of recordings. I think they put out a CD.
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Stellar? (Score:2, Funny)
Man, that was confusing.
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me too (Score:2)
I also interpreted "stars" as "celebrities" and just figured this was about a new remix album by DJ Seismologist
Ancient theory proven (Score:3, Funny)
This just shows that Pythagoras and Kepler were right! [skyscript.co.uk]
After discovering The Music Of The Spheres, the pair of philosopher-scientists went on to form the ambient electronica duo P&K. After three moderately successful albums they split, citing creative differences. Pythagoras now teaches high school math in Wichita, KS. Kepler is currently in the Shady Acres Sanitarium.
Roll credits.
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goes back slightly further back than that...
Job 38:7 (King James Version)
7When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy?
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I think the Valacuenta goes back at least as far and has a slightly different take on it all.
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How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations! For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north: I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be like the most High.
And apparently there's a link to the Latin root of Lucifer. [wikipedia.org]
Conclusion: Lucifer was thrown out of heaven for singing too loud and messing up the Music of the Spheres.
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The most realistic dates for the writing of Job (http://www.jstor.org/pss/1455552) are roughly contemporary with Pythagoras (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pythagoras).
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Binaural Beats (Score:2)
Scientists would explain, but they're all apparently in the lab "tripping" out to ACID STARDUST.
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Job 38 (Score:1)
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It's not a biblical event if you use a man-made amplifier.
Why the hate against Aphex Twin? (Score:2)
I listened to the sound and there was no similarity at all. ... just like these stars "sounds" are.
They sounded like cheesy 50's sci-fi sound effects which were based on frequency modulation and oscillation
Nobody remembers Dr. Fiorella Terenzi? (Score:5, Informative)
From Wikipedia:
Dr. Fiorella Terenzi is an Italian astrophysicist, author and musician who is best known for taking recordings of radio waves from galaxies and turning them into music. She received her doctorate from the University of Milan but is currently based in the United States.
Terenzi is known for her CD-ROM Invisible Universe which combines music and poetry with astronomy lessons, and for a sexually charged 1998 book about science entitled Heavenly Knowledge. She has also released a number of albums of her music.
She is known as an Apple Computer "AppleMaster", and has collaborated with the likes of Thomas Dolby, Timothy Leary, Herbie Hancock and Ornette Coleman.
When she isn't performing, she teaches astronomy at Pierce College in Los Angeles. As of 2006, she was teaching astronomy at Brevard Community College in Cocoa, FL.
Home Page: http://www.fiorella.com/fiorprofile.htm [fiorella.com]
Videos: http://video.fiorella.com/ [fiorella.com]
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I never forget Italian bombshells!
I still remember Monica Vitti, Gina Lollobrigida, Claudia Cardinale, and Sylva Koscina, not to mention the ultimate, Sophia Loren.
Nerds! No consciousness of sex!
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That would be "kitsch".
Recording Industry Association of the Galaxy (Score:2)
aphex twin, eh? (Score:2)
Warn me about the stars that sound like "come to daddy" or "windowlicker."
I wonder what......... (Score:2)
I wonder what effect this may have had on the development of music in humans. Can we somehow discern these oscillations, like magnetic fields in the brains of pigeons?
Suppose the timing of all our music is based on oscillations of our own star, Sol. What might the effects be on a planet that orbits a much different star. A planet under the effects of multiple stars? Would an extraterrestrial culture in such a situation have more complex music if it was under such effects?
My God.... (Score:2)
My God, It's full of stars!
Mixing memes (Score:2)
I first read the title as "Stellar Scientologists Record "Music" From Stars" then read it correctly, but wondered if it had to do with the RIAA. I think this is a sign that my brain needs more sleep. ;-)
Website (Score:2)
erm... the Jodcast is the _podcast_ from Jodrell Bank, not the website. Try http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/ [man.ac.uk] for the actual website for Jodrell Bank.
But the Jodcast is well worth a listen to anyway.
Poor synthesis technique (Score:2)
From the sound of it and from looking at spectrograms of the sounds it question I can safely claim that a few things are misleading about these sounds. I have every reason to think that these sounds have been generated by spectrogram synthesis, that is they analysed the original astro-seismic signal into a spectrogram (an image which is a plot of the frequency components and their amplitude over time) and resynthesised it into a sound so that we could hear it but also so that it wouldn't be too long and bor
A better version of the sounds (Score:2)
I correctly resynthesised the two first sounds. The resulting sound can be found here [wikiupload.com] or alternatively here [soundupload.com].
As one could have expected, there's nothing remarkable about these sounds, no eerie music, no mysteriously rhythmic beat, it's just one of the band-limited noise you find everywhere in nature, be it the ambient underwater sound of the oceans, the Earth's "hum", the wind, etc...
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you might post some supporting documents to fully show you've found a flaw in the report
Well very simply, here [imageshack.us] is a spectrogram of the two first sounds. It ranges vertically from 200 Hz to 700 Hz, each vertical pixel representing 1 Hz, the horizontal scale is 10 pixels per second and the amplitude is linear with a gamma of 1.5. Each modulated sine is what constitutes a bright horizontal bar, and as you can see each bar is regularly spaced by about 11.3 Hz. It's also clear enough that each "bar" is a sine modulated by what looks like noise, which supports my claim that the original spectrogram
I didn't know space... (Score:2)
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Re:Beat? (Score:5, Interesting)
Parent
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You've just defined "beat" into a meaningless term.
When people say that music has a "beat", they are referring to a subjective feeling, not "every time you introduce a new tone". At some point, while there's still technically some sort of rhythm, even if a non-repeating random "rhythm", it's absurd to call it a beat or a rhythm, except to show how the term isn't really an objective one, but really subjective, which is what music is in the first place.
Once you start treating subjective musical terms as objec
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You really ought to listen to some of the others. Richard D. James will go down in history as one of the greatest electronic composers of the 20th century. He's right up there with Brahms, Bach, Stravinski, etc., IMHO. There isn't a single electronic composer out there who hasn't been influenced by him.
Get your hands on a copy of the Richard D. James album or Windowlicker, and enjoy.
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It was Aphex Twin's wacky predecessor Stockhausen who claimed he was born on the planet Sirius and sent on a musical mission to Earth. Fortunately Richard D. James is a lot more level-headed.