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Friday, October 31, 2003

Not with a bang, but a hum 

The New Scientist is carrying a report on an analysis done on the leftover radiation from the Big Bang. Turns out it wasn't a bang as much as it was a hum.

To produce the sound, Cramer took data from NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe. Launched in 2001, the probe has been measuring tiny differences in the temperature between different parts of the sky. From these variations, he could calculate the frequencies of the sound waves propagating through the Universe during its first 760,000 years, when it was just 18 million light years across. At that time the sound waves were too low in frequency to be audible. To hear them, Cramer had to scale the frequencies 100,000 billion billion times.

The sound file can be found here. Thrilling stuff.