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Mars NASA Space

NASA's InSight Lander Captures First 'Sounds' of Wind On Mars (nbcnews.com) 40

NASA's InSight lander, which touched down on Mars less than two weeks ago, has recorded vibrations -- low-pitched, guttural rumblings -- caused by wind blowing across the science instruments on the spacecraft's deck. NBC News reports: Unaltered, these vibrations are barely audible, because they were recorded at a frequency of 50 hertz, at the low end of what the human ear can detect, according to Thomas Pike, the lead scientist for InSight's Short Period Seismometer, one of two instruments that picked up the subtle movements. NASA also released a sample of the same audio file that was shifted up about six octaves, to within a range audible to humans. That recording -- which at times sounds like a regular blustery day on Earth and other times has the muted, hollow quality reminiscent of being underwater -- would essentially be what a person would hear if they were sitting on the InSight lander on Mars, said Don Banfield, the science lead for InSight's air pressure sensor and a planetary scientist at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. NASA believes the wind in the recordings was blowing at 10-15 miles per hour from northwest to southeast.
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NASA's InSight Lander Captures First 'Sounds' of Wind On Mars

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe the Mars Polar Lander was the only Mars lander to have an actual microphone included in the instrumentation - and it was lost when it smashed into the surface.

    We have audio from Titan, but not Mars. Seems a bit odd.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      We have audio from Titan, but not Mars. Seems a bit odd.

      The Soviets got audio from Venus but I've never found it available for listening :( The closest I've come is that I found a graph of the recording online and in it they've even highlighted such sounds as the camera lens cover being removed with a tiny explosive and then the sound of it landing on the ground. The recording was made to measure wind speed and I'd be really curious to hear it.

    • Quora

      The microphone was flown again on the Phoenix lander in 2007 as part of the Mars Descent Imager. However a potential data corruption problem had a small probability of causing an error with one of the gyros during the landing so the camera and microphone were never turned on.

      The Mars 2020 Rover will have microphones aboard.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's waves in a gas, that's real sound, not figurative.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      What you are hearing is the vibration of the solar panel, measured by a seismometer.

  • So amazing
  • Low C, which is two octaves below middle C and the low note on a cello is about 65 Hz with modern tuning of A=440Hz. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] Young ears can hear in the range of 20Hz - 20 KHz and there are instruments with a lower range than the cello so I don't think it's correct to say that adjusting this up six octaves moves it into the range audible by human ears. The video comments says 100x speedup so that would be 5000Hz. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] Perhaps it would be better to say

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