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The Battalion Sci|Tech Page 10 • Tuesday, September 23,200 Tone deaf no longer Volume 11 { Scientists discover deepest sound ever in Perseus gak Computer ar are haumg a Uiruses fjreiual Optical Sept, r flroute access UJebCT. .The nee Uncreas Chandra X-Ray [3-color] Chandra X-Ray [Sound Waves] Photos courtisv of chano*a.hakva*c» Af left is the Perseus galaxy cluster as seen through a The sound waves found in Perseus' black hole (righl)o! Chandra X-ray before the identification of sound waves. far lower than what an average human being can feu By Amelia Williamson THE BATTALION Astronomers danced to a new tune Sept. 9 when NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory caught hold of the deepest sound ever detected from an object in the universe. This sound is far below the range that humans can hear — 57 octaves below the middle C note on a piano, according to NASA. As Dr. Roland Allen of the Texas A&M Department of Physics said, “It’s like nature is singing to us in a very low voice.” Chandra found these high-energy sound waves rippling out from the center of the Perseus galaxy cluster, located 250 million light years from Earth. NASA scientists believe the sound waves originate from a supermassive black hole in the center of the cluster. Andrew Fabian of the Institute of Astronomy in Cambridge, England, who is the leader of the study, told NASA “We have observed the prodi gious amounts of light and heat cre ated by black holes, now we have detected the sound.” Chandra is a space telescope that NASA launched into orbit in 1999 to observe X-rays and produce images of areas in the universe that emit high levels of energy. According to Dr. Christopher Pope, also part of A&M’s Department of Physics, X- ray observation is vital to studying high-energy objects. Astronomers must study X-ray emissions from orbit because the Earth’s atmosphere absorbs the rays. “(Chandra) is worth the millions of dollars of funding because it shows us things that we cannot see from here on Earth,” Allen said. “It benefits everyone in the world.” Chandra is one of four observatories that orbit the Earth and is accompanied by the Hubble Space Telescope, which observes visible light, the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, which detects gamma rays and the Space Infrared Telescope Facility, which explores using infrared light. According to the Chandra X-ray Observatory Web site, scientists came across the sound waves while viewing Chandra’s processed images of the Perseus cluster that show differences in brightness. In previous Chandra images, astronomers found two cavities stemming from the black hole that give off large amounts of radio waves. Black holes emit large jets of material that push through the gassfii the galaxy cluster, creating these cavities thatcai tain high-energy particles and magnetic fields.Hi cavities move the surrounding gasses in the cte causing high-energy sound waves to ripple throus the universe. For many years, scientists have struggled the issue that the hot gasses near the center of ik Perseus cluster have not cooled dows Astronomers theorized that in galaxy clusters tk emit X-rays, the hot gasses should cool downow time, condense and give birth to an immense■ ber of stars. When scientists observed cluster however, they found that this w not the case. Astronomers weit puzzled that after billions of)®, the gasses are still hot. NASAindi- cated that the high-energy sod waves beaming from the centeroi the cluster could be the answer#! this long-lived question. As the sound waves tno through the gasses in the gala' cluster, the energy spreads out, absorbed and transferred into ires The heat produced by the spun waves could be the agent that i heating the gasses in the cluster an preventing its cooling. The discovery of these sound waves is extreme!) significant because by studying the high energy tk the waves let off, scientists could learn a great des about galaxy clusters. “This discovery gives us more information abof the evolutionary development of galaxy clusters Not much was previously known about how the; form and expand,” said Dr. George Kattawar oftis A&M Department of Physics. In the past, astronomy professors have had told disappointed students that the process of evoluti# for galaxy clusters was unknown. Soon, howevtt with Chandra’s newly discovered information,pn# fessors will finally be able to explain how gala,? clusters, the largest groups of objects in the li verse, develop. The A&M Department of Physics faculty keeps! close eye on new discoveries and is working on if grating more astronomy into the curriculum “Curiosity drives us,” Dr. Kattawar said. “It# remarkable to contemplate all the things going omi the universe - it’s mind-blowing.” The Department of Physics posts information o: astronomy classes and new astronomical discover at http://astronomy.tamu.edu. It is remarkable to contemplate all the things going on in the universe — it’s mind-blowing. — Dr. George Kattawar Department of Physics Gatei atSti By Sarah THE BAT Director of Services Rodney A&M President F are slated to spea second Student f of the semester it emance room of I Gates attends Senate meetings t and said his time a question-and-a open to the senatt Weis, who wa speak at the first! I Sept. 10 but did n | on the agenda. On Tuesday, S out an e-mail a! the rules for Southside Garage At the Sept. H ing, about 20 suit to express their t the e-mail and cl directly. 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