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NASA captures the Earth’s ’song’

By | October 1, 2012, 6:35 PM PDT


You’d hear the Earth’s ’song’ if you had a radio receiver implanted in your brain. Thankfully, NASA has made it possible to sample our planet’s chorus without having to take such a drastic step, potentially safeguarding costly spacecraft from being damaged by “killer” radiation.

NASA on Friday announced that its twin Radiation Belt Storm Probes had beamed back sounds of the electromagnetic plasma waves that reside within the Van Allen belt – layers of charged atomic particles that surround the Earth. Those waves produce what NASA is calling the “Earthsong,” or “chorus.”

A team at the University of Iowa built the Electric and Magnetic Field Instrument Suite and Integrated Science (EMFISIS) receiver used to record the signals, NASA says.

The probes were launched late last month to study the belt, which is not fully understood in spite of decades of space travel. The belt generates oscillating radio waves that can be picked up by EMFISIS equipment. Ham radio operators can hear the chorus, but not as crisply as the CD quality sound that NASA is now providing.

This research is not just being done for our listening pleasure – more than a few spacecraft have failed due to a phenomenon called “killer electrons.” Killer electron particles are found in the belt, and are thought to become dangerous to people and equipment after encountering a chorus wave.

The probes will map out how broad the region is over the next two years, and further NASA’s understanding of why unpredictable “killers” can occur. Click on this video to learn more:

Astronaut Charles Walker described how he felt “strangely unfulfilled” after viewing the Earth from space. “Here was a tremendous visual spectacle, but viewed in silence. There was no grand musical accompaniment; no triumphant, inspired sonata or symphony,” he said. But in a way, the Earth is really making quite a racket.

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David Worthington

About David Worthington

David Worthington is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

David Worthington

David Worthington

Contributing Editor

David Worthington has written for BetaNews, eWeek, PC World, Technologizer and ZDNet. Formerly, he was a senior editor at SD Times. He holds a degree from Temple University. He is based in New York.

Follow him on Twitter.

David Worthington

David Worthington

David does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what he covers. Occasionally he consults for other companies; should David cover a topic in which a client is involved, he will disclose this fact in his writing. His views do not represent those of his employers.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Just how far
can we travel into outer space? Read that
there is a cloud or halo of million degree
matter surrounding the Milky Way galaxy.
That should stop us.
Posted by bill1514@...
Updated - 2nd Oct
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Sweep frequencies?
The little sample that I heard sounded like sweep-frequency runs. Is there an explanation for the "chorus" to sound like that? Or is it just that this particular sample sounded like sweep frequencies?
Posted by firstaborean
3rd Oct
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