This kinda looks like a waveform
this is the galactic magnetic field of the Milky Way. Pretty cool
Can someone convert it to sound? like.. reasonably.. just try your best to shape it
seems like there's three (or maybe more) layers of it so maybe make three different versions
I just think it's cool, like this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3fqE01YYWs
Hopefully people see the geeky fun in this.
>>303443
>>303739
Sorry? You can't look at this as a waveform?
>>303752
Also I know there's going to be a LOT of detail missing
>>303739
https://musiclab.chromeexperiments.com/Spectrogram
try a spectogram ?
that is how i am imagine it
also you should look at aphex twin song windowlicker in a spectogram. creepy fun.
You'll physically blow your ears.
Where do you begin ? Music has a direction in time. Image does not
>>303443
There's probably a mercator projection of the same image available somewhere, that would be a better starting point
>>303764
>also you should look at aphex twin song windowlicker in a spectogram. creepy fun.
Yeah he shows that you really can fuck with music visually.
>>303872
You could make it acceptable for human ears. It doesn't need to be 100% accurate. Jupiter wouldn't sound like what it does in that YouTube link, no, it'd explode your ears. Also falling into it, if you survive, is falling through nothing but extreme gases never ending, never going to end, just constant for millions of years and you know it'll never end.
I honestly think it's possible.
>>303443
What you are hearing in that video is the radio waves Jupiter gives off - not an auditory representation of the image spectrum.
For that, you might wanna try this:
http://photosounder.com/
(Though it will sound like ass.)
>>304274
>Jupiter wouldn't sound like what it does in that YouTube link, no, it'd explode your ears.
At that distance, Jupiter makes no sound. No air = no sound.
I suppose you could drop a microphone into the atmosphere and hear a bunch of 10,000mph winds as it falls.
Again, that's just the audio translation of the radio waves being put off - not actual "sound".
What he's looking for is an image spectrum to audio tool, like yon: >>304602
On the other hand, if you just want to hear the radio waves put off by the Cosmic Microwave Background - find yourself an old television and go to a static channel (which these days, would be any channel).
>>304604
>Jupiter makes no sound. No air = no sound.
I don't think I'll be communicating effectively if I give the impression that I'm some retard who thinks Jupiter is making sounds in space without air. I just like translating two different things that probably aren't compatible because it is interesting.