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Can you hear a spaceship explode in space?
Because sound is just vibrating air, space has no air to vibrate and therefore no sound. If you are sitting in a space ship and another space ship explodes, you would hear nothing. Exploding bombs, crashing asteroids, supernovas, and burning planets would similarly be silent in space.
Would you hear an explosion in space?
To travel to us from outer space, the wave must be able to travel through regions of space which are essentially vacuum (nothing there). Sound cannot do this, as it requires a medium to propagate in, so we would not be able to hear the explosion.
Are explosions silent in space?
The gases from a supernova explosion expand rapidly, and the density will drop off fast. But the basic idea is that you would have to be extremely close to get densities high enough to hear anything. So we won’t ever hear a supernova explosion on Earth, for example. It’s a little sad, but space really is silent.
Why can’t astronauts hear explosions in space?
Despite the violent nature of the Sun’s constant explosions, Hadfield noted that even astronauts in space couldn’t hear them simply due to the vast emptiness and vacuum of space. In other words, the sound of the explosions produced by the Sun can’t travel across space.
Do your ears ring in space?
While sound doesn’t travel through empty space, there are other places off our planet where scientists have detected sound waves. “In general, the sounds are probably so low a frequency, a mega bass, that our ears can’t hear it,” Coffin said.
Is it possible to hear an explosion in space?
No, because the spaceship is in space. There is vacuum between the explosion site and the spaceship. You need a medium for sound waves to travel. Otherwise they can’t be heard. That’s why you always hear lightning (from atmosphere) but never the bursting of stars (from outer space).
Is it true that there is no sound in space?
They say that there is no sound in space and that it is because there is no air in space. For instance if someone were talking to you, you couldn’t hear what they were saying. Answer by Lynn: You’re right that there are gases in space, and it’s true that these gasses can propagate sound waves just like Earth’s air allows sound to travel.
Are there sound waves or light waves in space?
Now, like you’ve said, there are indeed light waves and radio waves in space, but these waves are not sound, but light. Light does not need air to travel, but then you don’t hear it; you see it, or it is interpreted by your radio set and then translated into sound. Astronauts in space do talk to each other.
How do astronauts talk to each other in space?
Astronauts in space do talk to each other. In the spacecraft, there is plenty of air, so they just talk normally. When they are spacewalking, they talk by means of radios in their helmets. The radio waves, again, have no problem in space, but they’re not sound. They’re radio, which has to be converted into sound by the astronauts’ headsets.