Senin, 22 Agustus 2022

Real-Life Black Hole Sounds Like A Mass Effect Reaper - Kotaku

People immediately started calling it things like “terrifying,” “unsettling,” “an Eldritch horror,” and “here’s a video of my dog barking after hearing it.” But others made the comparison to video games. (Three cheers for the gaming angle!) The obvious corollary is Mobius Digital’s tour de force, Outer Wilds, a high-minded space exploration game and a permanent fixture of Kotaku’s “best games” pantheon. Here’s the tune “Uncertainty Principle,” from Outer Wilds composer Andrew Prahlow:

Andrew Prahlow / Annapurna

Good thing our own universe survives longer than 22 minutes!

Others pointed out how it sounds exactly like the start of the Halo theme, and then actually superimposed the theme on top of NASA’s clip, an uncanny match. (Personally, I think it sounds a bit like the soundscapes from Observation, No Code’s psychological mind-fuck puzzle game from 2019.) And, of course, some folks likened the sound to the Reapers from Mass Effect.

If you’ll recall, BioWare’s totemic trilogy of extraterrestrial-banging RPGs was set against the backdrop of an imminent invasion from apocalypse death machines. These machines, called Reapers, lived in the fringes of space between galaxies. Every 50,000 years, they sweep through the Milky Way and purge sentient life. Reapers look like enormous purple un-fried calamari, but are marked more by the ominous, foreboding sound they make upon arrival—which sounds a whole lot like NASA’s data sonification of the Perseus Cluster’s black hole.

This brings us to the Fermi Paradox, a quandary notably put forth in the 20th century by Italian physicist Enrico Fermi: If space is so vast and so full of near-infinite possibilities, there’s no way Earth is the only instance of sentient life in the Milky Way, right? But also, where the hell is everybody?

There are tons of theories as to why either side of the argument could be right. (Wait But Why ran down all the leading ones nearly a decade ago, a thorough summary that still holds up today.) One popular theory reads exactly like a Mass Effect pitchline: The rest of the galaxy is quiet because there’s a predator species out there. All of the other advanced species are aware of these predators, and are silent as a result; but humans, characteristically oblivious, keep making as much noise as possible, through efforts spearheaded by research organizations like the SETI Institute, which sends out radio signals into deep space in the event someone, anyone, else might hear them and make contact. Basically, one theory posits, by doing so, we’re alerting a species of apocalypse death machines to our presence. And now, NASA assembled a data sonification that bears an uncanny resemblance to the sound emanated from a (fictional) species of apocalypse death machines.

It’s fun to make the connection, although it is, admittedly, a far-fetched one. The real inspiration for the Reaper’s distinctive horn? Garbage, actually.

 

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiVWh0dHBzOi8va290YWt1LmNvbS9uYXNhLWJsYWNrLWhvbGUtcGVyc2V1cy1jbHVzdGVyLW91dGVyLXdpbGRzLW1hc3MtZWZmZWN0LTE4NDk0NDE3ODLSAQA?oc=5

2022-08-22 18:00:00Z
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