Slashdot Mirror


The Scream Aliens Hear From the Earth

onehitwonder writes "Astronomers have discovered that the Earth emits awful, ear-piercing chirps and whistles that could be heard by any aliens who might be listening, according to an article up at Space.com. The sounds are created by charged particles from the solar wind colliding with Earth's magnetic field. This article explains more about the sounds and links to an audio recording of it."

6 of 223 comments (clear)

  1. Awful, ear-piercing reporting by geomobile · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The usefulness of this discovery in finding planets or identifying if they have an atmosphere is interesting.

    It as interesting as the lengths they went to create a sensationalist headline ...any emission in any spectrum can be mapped to audible sound, I guess. Unless it carries information encoded in analog form meant to be replayed as sound, it will always sound like awful, ear-piercing chirps and whistles.

    News pattern:

    1. Find interesting scientific discovery that features emissions in any spectrum.
    2. Map emission to audible sound.
    3. Write "The screams X emits to anybody listening"
    4. Profit.

    Wait, no ??? line. I must have told it wrong.

  2. What about the scream we hear from other planet ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Can't another planet emit those noises ?
    I suppose the answer is "Yes", if it has a magnetic field and if it orbits a usual star.
    So, can't we use those noises to detect extrasolar planets ?

  3. Re:To us... by peragrin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    funny i was thinking the opposite. Mother earth is warning the aliens to stay away.

    Call it an interstellar quarantine marker from the planet itself.

    --
    i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
  4. Ear piercing in space?? by gsslay · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you take any kind of electro-magnetic wave and arbitrarily convert it to sound waves using a formula you've just made up, then amazingly it's going to sound awful. But the idea that the Earth is emitting "sound" that aliens may find "ear piercing" is misleading garbage.

  5. Re:I thought by MrNaz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sound is the propagation of a wave within a medium, and in space, there is no medium with the density required to propagate a wave of any kind. Sound can travel within a medium such as a gas, however when the gas density decreases such as an atmosphere does as you get further from the surface, the sound wave attenuates, eventually petering out to nothing.

    When the article says that the Earth "screams" and "whistles", it's not talking about acoustic sound waves, rather, the acoustic translation of the radio waves that are given off as a result of the helio-terrestrial effects. Whatever sensory capacity aliens have may not actually consider it to be noise, to them, it may sound pleasant, the way the waves on a beach sound to us. They may be translating it into their native sensory package, which may be "eyes" that are only sensitive to microwaves, or "ears" that only "hear" sound in a band outside of our 5hz-15khz range. Once translated, we have no idea how they'd perceive the resulting sensory experience to be. It could be a piercing shriek to them, or a gentle soothing experience.

    --
    I hate printers.
  6. Re:Right but that's by SirLurksAlot · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Of course "hearing" is based on the detection of vibrations in the surrounding medium - a sense that is very antiquated indeed - and available to even some of the most primitive organisms. On Earth.

    How exactly is hearing antiquated? Lets see:

    • Predator/prey/Danger detection
    • Territorial alarm mechanism (coupled with the ability to vocalize of course).
    • Used in mating rituals.

    The list goes on. As far as how difficult it would be use hearing on a different world, I find that hard to believe as well. Given that sound is just vibrations traveling through a medium any planet with an atmosphere could conceivably have life that utilizes hearing for just such reasons as those listed above. In fact I would say that the ability to hear could very well be universal (or nearly so) in "advanced" lifeforms (advanced in the sense that they are more evolved than an amoeba for example).

    And then we can argue that the "screeches", etc, are merely the way we choose to make our computers interpret this data.

    Yes, because our brains are wired to listen for certain patterns, so what you're saying is correct. Of course, this could be true of a variety of lifeforms, so it could very well sound like that to them too. It would be interesting to encounter a lifeform that listens to those "screeches" and interprets them as, say, War and Peace (or the ET version of it), but I think it would be highly unlikely.

    --
    God, schmod. I want my monkey man!