Actually, there is.
There are interstellar gases that allow waves to travel. They're just less dense.
Microphones can pick up sounds in space, and black holes generate sounds too. X-rays will happily carry sound away.
No-one can hear it. It's 57 octaves lower than a middle C, and it makes a noise that is in the pitch of B flat.
Because in the space there is no air, so there is not an elastic medium to carry the sound from the sound maker to the listener.
It sounds like a term used in some science fiction story. "Quadrant" is often used in such stories to refer to a region of space.
The Sounds of the Sounds of Science was created in 2002.
Ultrasonic sounds are sounds that are above our hearing range.
During an examination a physician hears overactive bowel sounds known as high-pitched tinkling bowel sounds.
The Soothing Sounds Of... was created in 2002.
No
Sounds like Advertisement.
Not unless there's some material matter in the space.
Only to those sounds inside the pressurized space suit or spacecraft you are in.
one sounds more technical...lol
In space, nobody can hear you scream, but it doesn't mean there's no sounds up there. Black holes generate sound. There's always one nearby.
rocket
It has a long A sound and a silent E.
No, because sound is a vibration of the air and there is no air in space.
u cant send sounds into space give up with this question -.-
If "space" were a perfect vacuum, the answer would be "no."However, it's not, so there are sounds "in space", they're just very faint.
Sound requires a medium to carry vibrations. There are not enough molecules of matter in space to effectively carry the vibrations. There are no sounds in space.