Saturn Hailstorm 133
crmartin writes "NASA has released a web story about the sounds recorded aboard the Cassini spacecraft as it pased through the Rings. The story includes a Quicktime file of the hailstorm-like sounds of Ring particles impacting."
Powerful Hull? (Score:5, Interesting)
You have to give them credit. These bits of dust were going 45,000 mph! You'd think they would have decimated that antenna, but I guess not? I would have to disagree, however. To the average non-PHD, this dust sounds like nothing more than some static mixed with klinking noises. To me it sounds like SPACE DUST!
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:4, Interesting)
Obviously that's one tough schoolbus sized planet orbiting pretty picture taking probe.
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:2, Interesting)
Pretty cool either way, I like schoolbuses.
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:2)
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:4, Informative)
Well, there's a reason these things cost millions and millions of dollars. ;)
Another example: I remember reading once about the modems they use on these things. Now a modem itself costs very, very little, but it costs them well over $10,000 to test hundreds and hundreds of modems, then make sure that they can function properly amidst the radiation, cold, etc. of space. And of course this is pennies next to the costs related to the rest of the spacecraft.
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:1)
I can understand that it's a cheap thing to just throw in there, but really what's the point? Is it for data monitoring of 'hull integrity' for example (detecting collisions and vibrations?).
No microphone (Score:5, Informative)
They don't. TFA to the rescue again:
In other words, the sound is a representation of other data, slightly akin to false color images as an earlier poster pointed out.
I can understand that it's a cheap thing to just throw in there
I don't think anything with mass is cheap to add to a space probe. I don't recall what the per-kilo launch costs are for one of those things, but it's not small.
Re:No microphone (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:2, Informative)
They converted its signal to audio.
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:3, Funny)
Billions and billions of meters!
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, ok, that explains the static and the clinking noises, but what was that *THUMP*THWACK* sound at the end?
Somebody told me it was Cassini running into a big black monolith full of stars thing.
What's that all about?
uhhhmmm (Score:2, Interesting)
or if the space craft were going against the particles. however, it's prollygoing either just a little slower or faster than the particles, so the speed of them hitting it is somewhere in the hundreds range to the thousand range.
Off by one (order of magnitude) (Score:2, Informative)
You don't give units, but assuming you're talking MPH you're off by an order of magnitude. TFA sez:
Re:uhhhmmm (Score:1)
Re:Powerful Hull? (Score:5, Interesting)
On the other hand, a 1-ounce pebble would have the kinetic force of about 5 pounds of TNT compressed into an impact point less than 1cm across..... Think hole straight tru the orbiter with lots of dead instruments.
I'm guessing that the probe designers calculated the probability of a large-particle impact, and then just made the antenna as sturdy as they could afford to.
Re:Powerful 56 (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Powerful 56 (Score:1)
Re:Powerful 56 (Score:1)
2) not all of rob's friends have low user ids.
3) put down the crack pipe.
But (Score:2, Funny)
Re:But (Score:1)
Re:But (Score:3, Informative)
As it said in the article, the sound was generated by using data from an instrument onboard that measured the impacts of the particles. It's an artificial sound, created by NASA engineers to simulate what you might hear if you were inside the probe (an
Re:Any other format? (Score:1)
http://www.afterdawn.com/software/video_software/
There is also a Real Player one too
Re:Take that pedants! (Score:1)
hmm (Score:1, Funny)
sounds like fun
Re:hmm (Score:1)
Re:hmm (Score:1)
Amazing! (Score:4, Interesting)
I am so engaged by space exploration these days, it makes me really happy to be alive in the century I'm in.
Re:Amazing! (Score:2)
Too bad I'm not about 30yrs older, to have experienced the "First man on the moon" too...
Can't wait to read and see more from this mission!
Re:Amazing! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Amazing! (Score:2)
Re:Amazing! (Score:1)
Re:Amazing! (Score:1)
That is precisely the reason why there is so much media attention to this, as well as to the Mars rovers, and the much-hyped plans for sending men to Mars again.
For a cross-section of the populace it covers up a lot of the administration's fuck-ups and tries to focus attention away from them. (Obviously, there's a lot of people who couldn't give a rats ass about this one way or another.) But to people like you and me, it's a big deal. And intere
Now, if they can only... (Score:1)
Re:Now, if they can only... (Score:1)
However, as long as you sit and complain things will only stay the same.
Why would anyone want to listen to this anyway? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Why would anyone want to listen to this anyway? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Let's together you and me jam!
Money, money, money,
Seems so funny,
It's a rich mans world!
Re:Why would anyone want to listen to this anyway? (Score:4, Interesting)
For some samples of people working with this kind of source material, check out these two artists:
Joyce Hinterding [antiopic.com] -- Australian cross media artist working in part with ecordings of magnetic fields and weather satellites.
Steven Mcgreevy [uiowa.edu] -- VLF (Very Low Frequency) recordins of atmospheric phenomena -- very beautiful, with audio samples available from the site.
Re:Why would anyone want to listen to this anyway? (Score:2)
How can you say all that and not mention Brian Eno?!? [enoweb.co.uk]
Sound in Space? (Score:1, Informative)
GroupShares Inc. [groupshares.com] - A Free and Interactive Stock Market Community
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:5, Informative)
They were recording plasma, not actual sound.
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:1, Redundant)
Certainly not, but you can hear the sound of the particles hitting the craft as it resonates through the metal (or whatever) that makes up the craft.
If you were trying to listen to it with an open-air microphone, though, well that obviously wouldn't make any sense.
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:1)
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:1)
--
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:2, Funny)
I imagine that listening for particles hitting the exterior of the probe would be the last thing on your mind as your lungs explode and your blood starts to boil and your eyes start popping out of your skull like in that Schwartzenager movie.
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:1, Informative)
Basicly the stuff hits the spaceship, the sound travels thru the solid mass of the thing to the audio receivers.
You couldn't hear 2 things smashing into each other, but you can hear when things smash into you.
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:1)
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:3, Interesting)
Then I read the article and found out that they were recording the em pulses resulting from the space dust being turned to plasma by the force of the impact.
As for the high gain antenna being that tough --- yeah. they seem to have designed it that way... Remember that they turned the bus (er, spacecraft) to use the antenna as a shield as they went thru the gap.It makes sense to put an extra
Bradley armor (Re:Sound in Space?) (Score:2)
Thus explaining the unfortunate success of Iraqi IEDs ("improvised explosive devices"), i.e. those damned roadside bombs that tend to explode as the vehicles are passing, not when they're appro
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:2)
I believe the Huygens lander has a microphone. When I first saw the title I thought that's what they had used.
I doubt it would have heard anything anyway.
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:1)
from what i read in the news , the spacecraft has only captured the vibration generated by the plasma clouds when a particle hit the hull.
the vibration captured was then sent to NASA and just then the researchers converted the eletrical vibe to "air-sounds". So we all can appreciate!
Re:Sound in Space? (Score:5, Funny)
That's just because people always wear spacesuits that block the sound. This is an unmanned probe, so the sound can come through without a problem. You'd hear the same thing if you took off your helmet while you were out there.
You see this all the time in movies: the cameras are usually outside the suits, so they can hear the whoosh of the spaceships and the zapping sounds of the lasers.
Old news (Score:3, Informative)
My TV (Score:3, Funny)
Last month, some rain water seeped into the cable outlet box outside and for 2 days, all I could hear on my TV was the exact same sound as Saturn Hailstorm (except that the video didn't show the spacecraft travelling around saturn).
I think aliens from Saturn were trying to use me to send a message.... *smack on the head* if only I had known then..
Re:My TV (Score:1)
Thay are sending a message.
Decoded it reads.
'ALL OF YOUR BASE ARE BELONG TO US'
On the bright side.. (Score:3, Funny)
...there is going to be one wicked-ass scratch & dent sale on astronomical probes, at Crazy Vaklav's on Saturn.
Re:On the bright side.. (Score:2)
As long as you're not a Jedi, that is.
D.
Star Trek: Voyager Intro (Score:4, Interesting)
You can (barely) hear it on this ST: Voyager Audio Clip [fsnet.co.uk]. It occurs at time index 1:08.
Re:Star Trek: Voyager Intro (Score:2)
Re:Star Trek: Voyager Intro (Score:2)
About as meaningful as false-color images (Score:4, Informative)
Bang a gong. (Score:4, Interesting)
That might give you a better impresion of what your space ship would sound like as you passed the rings if you used dogs or cows for your hull.
When I imagine the puffs of plasma translating into vibrations that might be heard by a traveler, I get something more like what was presented.
-1, Weapon of Mess Distraction (Score:3, Funny)
Argh! No! (Score:2)
Oh, man (Score:4, Funny)
I need another puff of that magic dust
Dust cloud width (Score:3, Interesting)
Could anyone explain why the observed dust cloud was so much wider?
Re:Dust cloud width (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dust cloud width (Score:1)
In space, no one can hear you scream... (Score:1)
No one ever expects the Cassini spacecraft!
Cassini on DirecTV... (Score:2, Informative)
It has been great for keeping up with the Cassini stuff though. I had it on during the entire SOI burn. It beats the crap out of a
3001 (Score:1)
They could also hear.. (Score:2)
"Goddamit Sulu, sheilds up!! sheilds up!!"
Recording wind sound on Mars (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Recording wind sound on Mars (Score:2)
I know that it would have taken a little bit more power, space, etc., so maybe that answers the question. Still, it would be nice.
I guess that on the next launch window to Mars it will be going, this time with the French.
So when is someone (Score:2)
It seems (Score:1)
Space sounds (Score:1)
Well, I'll be goddamned. (Score:2)
The sound of Stupidity (Score:2)
Which means they could have also converted them into audible sounds that resembled a dog barking. Or maybe a cat meowing. Fuck, plasma puffs hitting the antenna could have resembled a Van H
I still have troubles fathoming... (Score:1, Interesting)
Absolutely incredible.
Nyuk nyuk nyuk.... (Score:2)
Nicked from Voyager? (Score:2)
Re:Cassini (Score:3, Funny)