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The observation was a surprise to mission managers. Or they could be something else...Among the other sounds were the Martian wind, mechanical movements by the seismometer's arm and other noises described by the NASA team as "dinks and donks".The "dinks and donks" are thought to be parts of the seismometer expanding and contracting and the ticking sound could be due to heat loss - similar to the sound a car engine makes after it is turned off and begins cooling.Constantinos Charalambous, from Imperial College London, who worked on the audio recordings, said: "It has been exciting, especially in the beginning, hearing the first vibrations from the lander. If you listen carefully to the Sol 235 quake, you can hear more bass frequencies toward the end of the recording. The lack of water filling in cracks in the crust on Mars makes the quakes “ring” for longer than they would on Earth.And there’s one more surprising set of sounds collected by InSight. Sounds of Mars: NASA's InSight Senses Martian Wind December 07, 2018 Listen to Martian wind blow across NASA’s InSight lander. Mars also has an atmosphere composed of mostly carbon dioxide.
News reporter NASA records mysterious sounds on Mars Similarly, sound produced by a lawnmower travels several miles in open air on Earth, but would go only a couple hundred feet on Mars. These are the sounds which the scientists have to filter out to hear the quakes more accurately.“It has been exciting, especially in the beginning, hearing the first vibrations from the lander,” Constantinos Charalambous, an InSight science team member at Imperial College London, said in a Copyright ©2020 Designtechnica Corporation. NASA's InSight lander is providing a veritable soundtrack for Mars. To create the soundscapes, NASA engineers took the sounds detected by InSight and sped them up and processed them to make them audible. These include sounds created by winds gusts and by the seismometer itself, which ticks as parts of it expand and contract due to temperature. The atmosphere on Mars is approximately 0.6% the density of Earth's atmosphere at Sea Level so sound waves can travel but because of the thinness of the air sound waves would not move very far making "sound" a mute point so to speak. Largely, due to the cold temperature there. All rights reserved.Clouds drift over the dome-covered seismometer, known as SEIS, belonging to NASA’s InSight lander, on Mars. And the atmosphere's lower density isn't suited to human speech and hearing systems which have evolved for life on Earth. "It is hoped that, by studying the marsquakes, scientists can learn more about how rocky planets - such as the Earth -were formed.So far, the team has learned that the Martian crust is like a combination of the Earth's and the Moon's.On Earth, cracks in the crust seal as water fills them with minerals, meaning sound waves continue uninterrupted as they pass through old fractures.On the Moon, the crusts do not seal, meaning sound waves are scattered for many minutes.Mars, with its cratered surface, is slightly more Moon-like, with seismic waves ringing for a minute or so, whereas earthquakes can come and go much more quickly.They also found that evenings were best for clear recordings because there was more wind interference during the day.Meanwhile, NASA's other task on Mars is not going quite as well.A German-made driller was meant to dig 16ft (almost five metres) below the surface but has managed barely 1ft (30cm) - not enough to fulfil its purpose: measuring the planet's internal temperature.It is not yet clear how the digger got stuck but scientists think the sand does not have enough friction for digging, meaning the "mole" has dug a pit around itself rather than digging deeper. There is a similar mathematical model of the Martian atmosphere.
The spacecraft’s seismometer and air pressure sensor picked up vibrations from 10-15 mph (16-24 kph) winds as they blew across Mars… https://news.sky.com/story/nasa-records-mysterious-sounds-on-mars-11824909 Sound on Mars …
More sounds from Mars have been revealed and, while some are likely to be marsquakes, the others are a mystery.The audio samples released on Tuesday cover more than 100 events detected by InSight's seismometer.The others could be.
The concept of whether sound exists and actually could flourish in space — or not — was very much on my mind as I recently sat down with the creative and scientific teams behind National Geographic’s groundbreaking series MARS, which returns for a second season on the National Geographic Channel (a.k.a. That is a difficult question. NASA'S InSight Mars lander caught a snippet of sound capturing wind vibrations from two of its sensors, not exactly microphones. "You're imagining what's really happening on Mars as InSight sits on the open landscape. The speed of sound is slower on Mars. The two events which generated the sounds were both marsquakes, with the quake occurring on Sol 173 being a magnitude 3.7 and the one occurring on Sol 235 being a magnitude 3.3. That gives information about the Martian crust, showing that its cratered surface is drier than the crust on Earth and has more in common with the Moon’s crust. But at 2.4 hertz, Mars’s drone is a higher pitch than most naturally occurring hums on Earth, which tend to fall below 1 hertz, says Stephen Hicks, an …
The observation was a surprise to mission managers. Or they could be something else...Among the other sounds were the Martian wind, mechanical movements by the seismometer's arm and other noises described by the NASA team as "dinks and donks".The "dinks and donks" are thought to be parts of the seismometer expanding and contracting and the ticking sound could be due to heat loss - similar to the sound a car engine makes after it is turned off and begins cooling.Constantinos Charalambous, from Imperial College London, who worked on the audio recordings, said: "It has been exciting, especially in the beginning, hearing the first vibrations from the lander. If you listen carefully to the Sol 235 quake, you can hear more bass frequencies toward the end of the recording. The lack of water filling in cracks in the crust on Mars makes the quakes “ring” for longer than they would on Earth.And there’s one more surprising set of sounds collected by InSight. Sounds of Mars: NASA's InSight Senses Martian Wind December 07, 2018 Listen to Martian wind blow across NASA’s InSight lander. Mars also has an atmosphere composed of mostly carbon dioxide.
News reporter NASA records mysterious sounds on Mars Similarly, sound produced by a lawnmower travels several miles in open air on Earth, but would go only a couple hundred feet on Mars. These are the sounds which the scientists have to filter out to hear the quakes more accurately.“It has been exciting, especially in the beginning, hearing the first vibrations from the lander,” Constantinos Charalambous, an InSight science team member at Imperial College London, said in a Copyright ©2020 Designtechnica Corporation. NASA's InSight lander is providing a veritable soundtrack for Mars. To create the soundscapes, NASA engineers took the sounds detected by InSight and sped them up and processed them to make them audible. These include sounds created by winds gusts and by the seismometer itself, which ticks as parts of it expand and contract due to temperature. The atmosphere on Mars is approximately 0.6% the density of Earth's atmosphere at Sea Level so sound waves can travel but because of the thinness of the air sound waves would not move very far making "sound" a mute point so to speak. Largely, due to the cold temperature there. All rights reserved.Clouds drift over the dome-covered seismometer, known as SEIS, belonging to NASA’s InSight lander, on Mars. And the atmosphere's lower density isn't suited to human speech and hearing systems which have evolved for life on Earth. "It is hoped that, by studying the marsquakes, scientists can learn more about how rocky planets - such as the Earth -were formed.So far, the team has learned that the Martian crust is like a combination of the Earth's and the Moon's.On Earth, cracks in the crust seal as water fills them with minerals, meaning sound waves continue uninterrupted as they pass through old fractures.On the Moon, the crusts do not seal, meaning sound waves are scattered for many minutes.Mars, with its cratered surface, is slightly more Moon-like, with seismic waves ringing for a minute or so, whereas earthquakes can come and go much more quickly.They also found that evenings were best for clear recordings because there was more wind interference during the day.Meanwhile, NASA's other task on Mars is not going quite as well.A German-made driller was meant to dig 16ft (almost five metres) below the surface but has managed barely 1ft (30cm) - not enough to fulfil its purpose: measuring the planet's internal temperature.It is not yet clear how the digger got stuck but scientists think the sand does not have enough friction for digging, meaning the "mole" has dug a pit around itself rather than digging deeper. There is a similar mathematical model of the Martian atmosphere.
The spacecraft’s seismometer and air pressure sensor picked up vibrations from 10-15 mph (16-24 kph) winds as they blew across Mars… https://news.sky.com/story/nasa-records-mysterious-sounds-on-mars-11824909 Sound on Mars …
More sounds from Mars have been revealed and, while some are likely to be marsquakes, the others are a mystery.The audio samples released on Tuesday cover more than 100 events detected by InSight's seismometer.The others could be.
The concept of whether sound exists and actually could flourish in space — or not — was very much on my mind as I recently sat down with the creative and scientific teams behind National Geographic’s groundbreaking series MARS, which returns for a second season on the National Geographic Channel (a.k.a. That is a difficult question. NASA'S InSight Mars lander caught a snippet of sound capturing wind vibrations from two of its sensors, not exactly microphones. "You're imagining what's really happening on Mars as InSight sits on the open landscape. The speed of sound is slower on Mars. The two events which generated the sounds were both marsquakes, with the quake occurring on Sol 173 being a magnitude 3.7 and the one occurring on Sol 235 being a magnitude 3.3. That gives information about the Martian crust, showing that its cratered surface is drier than the crust on Earth and has more in common with the Moon’s crust. But at 2.4 hertz, Mars’s drone is a higher pitch than most naturally occurring hums on Earth, which tend to fall below 1 hertz, says Stephen Hicks, an …