The Black Hole: The INCREDIBLE revelation, what Mankind did NOT know

Black hole sounds

The black hole, the most mysterious and dangerous object in the entire universe, is again in the center of attention after an incredible revelation shows us something we didn't know until now, or better said, we haven't heard. A Belgian mathematician has managed to reproduce in the form of audio sounds what would be heard in the universe as the sound emitted by a black hole, and this is the first time such an achievement has been revealed to mankind.

The black hole whose sounds would be reproduced by this Belgian mathematician is the supermassive one in the center of the Milky Way galaxy, the data for the project coming from the space probes Voyager 1 and 2. The sounds represent the transposition of the extreme gravitational waves near that black hole in a format audio to present us to a certain extent the way such an object would be heard if we could listen to it in the universe.

The Black Hole: The INCREDIBLE revelation, what Mankind did NOT know

The black hole does not normally emit sounds, or at least scientists have not seen anything like that somewhere in the universe, but the electromagnetic waves, and not only that, emitted by it can be transformed into sounds. You can hear below "what a black hole sounds like", but the reality is that if they really do emit sounds, they could probably be quite different from what we imagine, or what the Belgian mathematician is trying to show us down.

The black hole is an object about which scientists want to know as much as possible, but for which they do not have that much information available because no one has come close to such an object yet. The black hole in the Milky Way galaxy is the largest that is close to us, but it is not the closest to Earth, but even those are at colossal distances from our planet, so they are impossible to visit.

The black hole in the Milky Way has been the source of many revelations over time, but this one regarding the way it "would sound" is one of the most interesting discoveries so far.