Video.. Hans Zimmer’s melodies are emitted from a black hole in the depths of space

by time news

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NASA scientists were able to record a sound emanating from a black hole in the center of the group of the galaxy “Priceus” more than 200 million light-years from Earth, and the sound recorded by the Chandra X-ray Observatory sounded like music, according to “Russia Today”.

The sound waves were recorded in a NASA space telescope, in the form of astronomical data, and then translated into sound that humans can hear. Despite a “common misconception” that “there is no sound in space”; Because there is no way for sound waves to travel, the newly detected sound is very similar to composed by Hans Zimmer, who composed and composed the soundtracks for several films about outer space.

And space agency astronomers have realized that the hot gas that blankets Perseus, a bundle of galaxies 11 million light-years across, can be translated into sound. This gas, which surrounds hundreds and even thousands of galaxies, provides a medium through which sound waves travel.

Sonication was created by recombining the sound waves of the human hearing range, by raising the volume “57 or 58 octavas” above the true pitch.

Composer Hans Zimmer, who composed the soundtrack for the Academy Award-winning science fiction film Interstellar, has created music very similar to that spotted by NASA.

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