A big explosion that never stops.
If you would like to hear spoken Irish you could check out tg4.tv online television.
The sound of gentle rain falling on leaves.
I hope so. However, if they see something that would be noisy on the Earth, but in space, like a rocket firing, they would not hear it in space, because sound needs a medium to travel through, like air. There is no air in space, it is mostly a vacuum. So the only sounds an astronaut should hear are his radio, his breathing and anything tapping on his helmet (the air in the helmet will transmit sound waves to his ears).
It would be a struggle for most of this people who couldn't see or hear... but for most of them it could be easy....
I highly doubt it. The main reason I like Apocalyptica is their unique sound. If you play their music on guitars, it will revert back to the common rock music we hear everyday... but if you like that type of sound, I guess yeah, it could be better.
The 'd' would sound like the 'th' in 'then'; the 'u' would be like the sound in 'could'.
Astronauts on the Moon would not be able to hear a landslide because sound requires a medium, like air or water, to travel through. The Moon has no significant atmosphere, meaning there are not enough molecules to transmit sound waves. Any movement of debris would occur silently in the vacuum of space. Thus, while they could see the landslide, they wouldn't hear it.
like you :)
If it was you wearing a space suit and hitting the bars together, you could hear it, but not very loudly. If it was someone else hitting the bars together, then you couldn't hear it (if your and/or their radio was off). Sound is mechanical energy. The bars would generate mechanical energy if struck together, and that energy would be radiated through anything touching them. But space, because it is a vacuum, would not carry the sound. There would be no medium to transport it. The mechanical energy of sound, like that of a wave on water, is transferred into the medium in which it is to be carried. Sound is "put into" air so it can travel and we can hear it. Sound cannot be heard in space in the "normal" way we hear things here on earth.
No, you cannot hear sound in space because sound requires a medium, like air or water, to travel through. In the vacuum of space, there are not enough particles to transmit sound waves. Therefore, while you may see events like explosions or collisions, the sound associated with them would not be audible.
You can find examples of these songs online. If you would like to hear how they sound you can put in the title at YouTube.
On Jupiter, you would not be able to hear any sounds because Jupiter's atmosphere does not contain the necessary molecules to transmit sound waves like on Earth. Additionally, Jupiter's intense storms and turbulent atmosphere would make it a very noisy environment if sound could travel there.