The Sputniks Orbit covers Defense, Science and Technology . Contact Admin_News@mail2world.com. here is a link to our coverage and rules page: https://thesputniksorbit.blogspot.com/2019/08/the-sputniks-orbit-blog-for-short-tso.html
Saturday, August 5, 2023
Space News: What sounds do twinkling stars make? - study
What sounds do twinkling stars make? - study
To get the "pure sound" of the
twinkles the researchers applied a number of filters to the noise hoping
to isolate the sounds from environmental interference.
This artist's impression shows two Earth-sized worlds
passing in front of their parent red dwarf star, which is much smaller
and cooler than our Sun. The star and its orbiting planets TRAPPIST-1b
and TRAPPIST-1c reside 40 light-years away. (photo credit: NASA, ESA, and G. Bacon (STScI)/Wikimedia Commons)
Researchers recently used the twinkling of stars to help further our understanding of the internal physics inside stars.
The paper was published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Astronomy last month.
When
we see stars twinkle often it is because our atmosphere bends the light
as it arrives on Earth, however, stars also have an innate twinkle or
shimmer.
The surface of stars have waves of gas on their surface which cannot be seen from Earth, these waves are believed to occur due to energy ripples originating in the star's core.
The sound of twinkling stars
The
researchers using 3D simulations were the first to model these ripples,
furthermore in another first they transformed these ripples into audio
form, allowing them to listen to the stars twinkling.
Red dwarf. Main sequence star of spectal type M. (credit: Wikimedia Commons)
In order to get the "pure sound" of the ripples the researchers applied a
number of filters to the noise hoping to isolate the sounds from
environmental interference. These isolated sounds from the simulation
matched the sounds produced by ripples on real-life stars, confirming
that the simulation was properly simulating them.
Listen to a star ‘twinkle’
They hoped that this would allow them to confirm the so-called "red
noise signal" often found on massive main sequence stars was indeed
caused by internal gravity convection in the core of the star as the
ripples are. This red noise is a type of extremely low noise often
completely imperceptible by the human ears and certainly so across the
void of space.
However contrary to their expectation they did not find internal gravity convection
in the core to be the cause of the red noise signal. The noise produced
by the twinkling of the star was not a match for the red noise signal.
This
means that the search for the source of the red noise signal continues
and that researchers will need to reformulate their theories regarding
it.
Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, Wally and the Beet
PLEASE RECOMMEND THIS PAGE & FOLLOW THE SPUTNIKS ORBIT AT HTTPS://DISQUS.COM/HOME/FORUM/THESPUTNIKSORBIT-BLOGSPOT-COM
No comments:
Post a Comment