US Lab Models Galaxy Cluster Merger
astroengine writes "The scales are mind-boggling and the physics is cutting edge, so how do you go about simulating the collision of two galactic clusters? Using some of the most powerful computers in the world, researchers at Argonne National Laboratory, the Flash Center at the University of Chicago and the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics have done just that."
No. Sound is the vibration of air molecules, so when you speak or drop something, it creates compression waves that travel through the air and vibrate your eardrum, which in turn creates waves in the fluid of your cochlea that stimulate hair cells connected to the acoustic nerve. Since outer space has (almost) no air, these waves have no medium on which to travel, and sound as we know it does not happen.
Well, yes and no. There's no sound in space that a human could hear -- especially over the deafening roar of their blood boiling in the near-vacuum of space -- but there is a tremendous amount of diffuse gas and dust in galaxies and galaxy clusters, through which compression waves travel, albeit very weakly and slowly. If you were to observe those waves, then you could convert that data into an audio waveform in the range of human hearing. I may be misremembering, but I seem to recall that a group of researchers did precisely that with the (vastly smaller, nearer, and more easily observable) waves of gas being propelled outward by the pulsar at the heart of the Crab Nebula.
And yes, I know that really stretches the human notion of sound, but objects the size of galaxy clusters stretch most of our petty human notions, so it only seems fair.
Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.