In celebration of the 250th birthday of the United States, NASA has unveiled four cosmic images from its Chandra X-ray Observatory rendered in red, white, and blue that represent the wonders of the universe the agency explores. The images are accompanied by a trio of new sonifications – a technique that translates astronomical data into sounds.
In celebration
of the 250th birthday of the United States, NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory
has unveiled four cosmic images rendered in red, white, and blue that represent
the wonders of the universe that NASA explores.
NASA/CXC/SAO
The image set
begins with Cassiopeia A in the top panel, where X-rays from Chandra
(represented in blue and purple) have been combined with an infrared image from
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (red and white). Chandra’s X-ray vision
reveals the blast wave that tore through the star, as well as elements in the
debris field like iron, calcium, and oxygen. Webb’s infrared data also shows
the expanding shell of material from the explosion and cosmic dust throughout
the remnant.
In the bottom row, the first image on the left
is the nebula NGC 3603, which contains a massive cluster of stars and is
located in the Milky Way Galaxy. This new composite image contains Chandra’s
X-ray data (red and white) and shows diffuse emissions near the galaxy’s center
along with point-like X-ray sources throughout the middle of the image.
Optical, infrared, and ultraviolet light from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope
(red-orange, green, blue, and yellow) reveal stars in the center of the image
and dust and gas toward the bottom. The combined layering of the colors makes
this nebula and the stars forming within it appear primarily red, white, and
blue, with X-rays showing the sparkling lights of young stars.
The middle panel
of the bottom row is a new look at the galaxy NGC 4736, also known as Messier
94. In this image, X-rays of different wavelengths from Chandra (red, orange,
and blue) are layered with a visible light image from astrophotographers using
their telescopes on the ground (red, green, and blue). Messier 94 is a spiral
galaxy with a bright inner ring around it, called a starburst ring, where new
stars are forming, perhaps fueled by gas driven in the unique oval-shaped
structure seen here.
The final image
in this red, white, and blue quartet features ZwCl 0024+1652. This is a distant
galaxy cluster in which astronomers have found evidence for dark matter by
using specially processed data from Hubble (blue). Another image from Hubble
reveals the individual galaxies in the cluster (appearing as yellow and white).
X-ray data from Chandra shows the enormous reservoir of superheated gas that
pervades this galaxy cluster (red) with much more mass than all the galaxies
taken together.
New
sonifications of the three images along the bottom row of this mosaic are also
available, allowing listeners to experience data through sound.
The translation
of NGC 3603 into sound begins with a left to right scan, where the brightnesses
of the sources once again dictate volume. Chandra’s observations of compact
sources sprinkled throughout the galaxy are heard as piano notes, while the
diffuse X-ray emission is mapped to a range of audio frequencies. The Hubble
optical data is played as sustained tones and acoustic guitar harmonics.
In the
sonification of NGC 4736, the radar-like scan moves clockwise, and the
brightness of the sources dictates the volume of the sounds. X-rays from
Chandra have been turned into wind-like sounds that follow the shape of the
X-ray emission. Neutron stars and stellar-mass black holes (known as “compact
sources”) detected by Chandra are mapped to pitched tones on a glass marimba.
Optical data from ground-based observations is mapped to musically pitched
tones, creating a low drone, while stars and background galaxies are heard as a
soft piano.
For ZwCl
0024+1652, the sonification begins as a circle on the outside of the image and
moves inward. The volume is linked to the brightness of the data, reaching one
peak as the circle passes over the dark matter detected by inference from
Hubble optical observations and another as it reaches the core. The background
stars are heard as a swelling glockenspiel-like sound, and the galaxies are
played on a piano. Chandra’s X-rays, which dominate the center of the galaxy
cluster and reveal superheated gas, are represented by airy synthesizer notes.
The sonification
program is led by the Chandra X-ray Center (CXC) and included as part of NASA's
Universe of Learning program. The collaboration was driven by visualization
scientist Kimberly Arcand, (CXC), Matt Russo, astrophysicist; and Andrew
Santaguida, musician, SYSTEM Sounds project; along with Christine Malec,
consultant. Previously released sonifications of data from Cassiopeia A can be
found at chandra.si.edu/sound.
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Chandra X-ray Center controls science operations from Cambridge, Massachusetts, and flight operations from Burlington, Massachusetts.
To learn more
about NASA’s Chandra mission, visit: https://nasa.gov/chandra
Source: NASA’s Chandra Reveals ‘Red, White, Blue’ Universe for US 250th - NASA Science

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