Scientists turn 3 years’ worth of solar flares into audible sound (video)

If you’re more of an auditory learner than a visual one, this timelapse video is for you. (And, well, visual learners will probably love it, too!)

The European Space Agency (ESA) has released an audio-visual representation of solar activity over the last three years, pulling data from its Solar Orbiter probe, which it runs with NASA.

In the video, we see blue circles popping up across the surface of the sun — and audible tones paired with each of these circles. As time progresses toward the present day, the frequency of the blue circles and their sonifications increases.

spacecraft photo of the sun, showing it as a mottled yellow sphere with two small blue spheres superimposed on it to represent solar flares

A screenshot of ESA’s new animation and sonification of solar activity, which is based on data from the Solar Orbiter mission. (Image credit: ESA & NASA/Solar Orbiter/EUI & STIX, Klaus Nielsen (DTU Space/Maple Pools))

To create the video, ESA combined images from two of Solar Orbiter’s instruments — the Spectrometer/Telescope for Imaging X-rays (STIX) and the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI). STIX captured the location and size of X-rays emitted by solar flares, which are now represented with those blue circles, while the EUI images showcase the sun’s outer atmosphere in yellow.

The increase in the frequency and size of the solar flares correlates to the sun’s progression toward solar maximum, the peak of activity in its 11-year cycle. According to NASA and the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, we’re in solar maximum right now. (And that makes the next year or so prime time for viewing the northern lights.)

Related: Space weather: What is it and how is it predicted?

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As for the zooming in and out in the video, that’s due to Solar Orbiter’s elliptical orbit. Every six months, the spacecraft makes a close approach to the sun. You not only see this represented in the video visually but also hear it through the background humming — that noise mirrors the proximity of the spacecraft and the sun, getting louder when they’re closer together and quieter as they move apart.

The sonification was created by Klaus Nielsen (DTU Space / Maple Pools); you can listen to more of his work at https://linktr.ee/maplepools.

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