[QUOTE=Thom12255;44081449]I thought the light particle hitting another atom produced a reaction that fired another light particle out and it is that particle that hits your eye that lets you see the dog, otherwise the dog would be a mirror.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Toyhobo;44081203]To be fair, your dog never emits light. He just reflects the light from the sun/light bulb near him and your eye catches the [B]light he didn't absorb.[/B][/QUOTE]
Like horrible modern hip hop music
It's space.
There is no sound in space.
wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
[QUOTE=Thom12255;44081449]I thought the light particle hitting another atom produced a reaction that fired another light particle out and it is that particle that hits your eye that lets you see the dog, otherwise the dog would be a mirror.[/QUOTE]
I'm not sure of what's right but I was taught that an object only reflect certain light depending on what colour they are. a yellow box would only reflect the yellow light of the spectrum making the box look yellow to you etc.
Shit rushing past you would sound something like a terrible storm or thunder before sound would dissapear completely as nothing is there to convey the sound waves.
Like an inside-out asshole regurgitating putrid anal fecal matter
[QUOTE=Hat-Wearing Man;44079614]It would sound somewhat like Black Hole Sun by Soundgarden.[/QUOTE]
Fuck, that music video still creeps me out to this day :v:
vffffsssshh
If black hole suddenly appeared on Earth, it would evaporate/explode instantly.
It would sound like tornado outside sounds speed's event horizon.
[video=youtube;HhwWAciO6F4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhwWAciO6F4[/video]
something like this
John Madden awaits
Probably like nothing since there's no air in space.
[QUOTE=oskutin;44082770]If black hole suddenly appeared on Earth, it would evaporate/explode instantly.[/QUOTE]
Do you think you could explain why? This statement piqued my curiosity.
[video=youtube;bqd56RWQ9lU]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqd56RWQ9lU[/video]
Probably something like this but way way bigger and darker.
[QUOTE=supersocko;44083131]Do you think you could explain why? This statement piqued my curiosity.[/QUOTE]
If the black hole is small and doesn't have enough mass. The pressure of the degenerated matter will cause it to evaporate or explode as the degenerated matter generates back to matter.
[editline]1st March 2014[/editline]
Gravitational force doesn't exceed the other forces.
[QUOTE=JohnnyMo1;44079576]You'd probably hear the natural sound of a bunch of shit being sucked past you, but the black hole itself wouldn't make any noise.[/QUOTE]
IIRC black holes emit either radio waves or gamma rays, which could be modulated into sound, but i am not so certain.
It would probably sound like bwaaaaang roop a doop
Source: I am a Scientist
Like me on the toilet this morning :zoid:
[video=youtube;hqIsc8ooXug]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hqIsc8ooXug[/video]
Source: a scientist
Considering how Black Holes exist in the vacuum of space, they wouldn't sound like anything. Sound is caused by vibrations in the atmosphere, the only time you would hear anything would be if it was eating an atmospheric planet and even then, you'd be dead.
I'm not even sure if we would get similar readings to how we recorded the sounds of Jupiter.
[QUOTE=IceWarrior98;44086310]Considering how Black Holes exist in the vacuum of space, they wouldn't sound like anything. Sound is caused by vibrations in the atmosphere, the only time you would hear anything would be if it was eating an atmospheric planet and even then, you'd be dead.
[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=FurrehFaux;44083085]Probably like nothing since there's no air in space.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Otterman;44081697]It's space.
There is no sound in space.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Stonecycle;44079642]This also implies the black hole at the surface of our planet than in deep space. If it were in deep space, you'd hear nothing since you need matter for sound to travel through to begin with.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE]what would a black hole sound like if one were to suddenly and inexplicably materialize somewhere on earth?[/QUOTE]
derp
[QUOTE=zombini;44083850]IIRC black holes emit either radio waves or gamma rays, which could be modulated into sound, but i am not so certain.[/QUOTE]
Sure, but that's not really sound. I can turn basically any information I want into sound.
I imagine it sounding like a tornado, just an immense, ear-shattering noise as everything is being sucked past you into the abyss faster than the speed of light.
macaroni and cheese noises
i read in this space book that if you could hear a black hole it would sound like a b-flat 50 octaves under human hearing.
Fading
[QUOTE=zombini;44083850]IIRC black holes emit either radio waves or gamma rays, which could be modulated into sound, but i am not so certain.[/QUOTE]
Not too sure if they're actually directly released, or just influenced by the black hole but originate from other sources.
Hawking radiation is, however, theorised to be released from black holes.
I don't know never been in one
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