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Posted

Er, loud *kablamo* type noises I'd expect.

 

 

Very loud. Louder than, say, a great many nuclear warheads exploding at once.

 

 

Louder than the human ear would register, anyhow.

Posted
Well, the sun basically is a gigantic nuclear fusion bomb, so I suppose you'd go deaf instantaneously if you heard it.

So then technically you couldnt hear it anyway... :P

Guest ejwill83
Posted

Maybe it is in-audible; well, at least to us. According to space.com, the noise that bounced around the universe 380,000 years after the Big Bang (granted the universe was much a 'small' dense gas cloud) has been identified and somewhere in the range of 57 octives below middle C. It is a debate whether we, as humans, can hear noise in space. We could, if our eardrums were sensitive enough to pick up the tiny vibrations created by the miniscule about of atoms in a space vacuum (compared, to say, under water).

Guest ejwill83
Posted

Unless I am horribly, horribly wrong.

Posted
Unless I am horribly, horribly wrong.

 

Uh, Im pretty sure you are.

 

Sounds travells by vibrations in molecules. The closer together these molecules are, the easier it is for the vibrations to move from one molecule to another. This is why sound travels further in water than in air. In space, there are so few atoms that even if they started to vibrate, they wouldn't touch another atom to transfer the vibrations to.

Posted

Unless you suddenly created a cloud of gas, from, say, an explosion, and that carried the sound. It would carry it only a short distance, though, because it would quickly dissapate to the point where you can't hear it.

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

3000 G bell this is the sound intensity approximately on the sun we will die if we hear such a loud sound coz it would not only destroy our thympanic membrane but also will increase the tempreature of earth and we all will cogulate. :)

 

AM I RIGHT AM I WRONG I AM DEAD.

Posted

Now lets say we were able to go inside the convection zone and survive. There we would hear the sun in perfect harmony. But im guessing the sound blasts would be so loud it might as well kill us.

Posted

You need a medium for soundwaves to travel through, and space is a vacuum, yada yada yada... I'm sure the sun is emitting a ton of radio waves, so I guess you could listen to the static.

 

You should check out the July 2004 issue of National Geographic. It's got some kickin photos of the sun. Also check out their website for a bunch of crap they put together on this.

 

And here's what they say the big bang sounded like.

  • 3 weeks later...
Guest shaqarava
Posted

Wouldn't our heads explode or implode or something unpleasant if we heard the sun close up?

 

Oh, and the 50 second clip of the big bang sounds like my washing machine in the middle of the night :P

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