Elite Dangerous uses real life space sounds recorded from Antarctica Rock Paper Shotgun

Elite Dangerous uses real life space sounds recorded from Antarctica Rock Paper Shotgun

Elite Dangerous uses real-life space sounds recorded from Antarctica Rock Paper Shotgun Support us Join our newsletter Visit our store Sign in / Create account If you click on a link and make a purchase we may receive a small commission. Read our editorial policy. Elite Dangerous uses real-life space sounds recorded from Antarctica Yes, there is sound in space News by CJ Wheeler News Reporter Published on Aug. 25, 2022 15 comments Sci-fi space flight sim Elite Dangerous' director has owned up that the game uses noise from recordings of actual space. David Braben said that Frontier Developments incorporate audio from projects such as the British Antactic Survey's Halley Research Station, which is where the data was collected that revealed that classic environmental disaster, the hole in the ozone layer. Braben's revelation was prompted by the recent public acknowledgement from NASA that, yes, people really can hear screams in space. Sort of. Watch on YouTube Humanity's Proteus Wave contraption didn't go to plan in Elite Dangerous' storyline. Over the weekend, NASA's exoplanets team released a remix of the sound from the Perseus galaxy cluster that they say includes the noise of its central black hole. I know, I'd not heard that one before either. Must be on their new album. The tune was a hit, and NASA even started promoting their Soundcloud off the back of it. I was looking into going to see them live but there isn't another launch window for weeks. The misconception that there is no sound in space originates because most space is a ~vacuum, providing no way for sound waves to travel. A galaxy cluster has so much gas that we've picked up actual sound. Here it's amplified, and mixed with other data, to hear a black hole! pic.twitter.com/RobcZs7F9e- NASA Exoplanets (@NASAExoplanets) August 21, 2022 To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Manage cookie settings The process used in NASA's recording is something called sonification. You can read a layman's explanation of it here. The gist is that they take data and convert it into sound. If you want to check out more banging choons from NASA's sonification project then there's a site for that. In a reply to a commenter, Braben confirmed that Frontier use sonification for Elite Dangerous. "We use various recordings of EM noise, turned into audio for specific locations - for example the noise of electrical storms on gas giants, or Van Allen belts around planets," he said. Yes. We use various recordings of EM noise, turned into audio for specific locations - for example the noise of electrical storms on gas giants, or Van Allen belts around planets. Halley base is one of the most radio-quiet locations on Earth for recording signals from space.- David Braben (@DavidBraben) August 25, 2022 To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Manage cookie settings Rick Lane had a chinwag with the Elite Dangerous team for us recently, discussing the controversial Odyssey update and the coming Aftermath of the game's Azimuth Saga storyline. "Launched in May last year, Elite's second expansion was, to put it lightly, not well received by Elite's community," he said. "Complaints ranged from extensive bugs and performance issues to more fundamental criticisms about the implementation of the expansion's on-foot exploration and FPS combat." It's well worth a read, sci-fi fans. Elite Dangerous is on Steam and the Epic Games Store for £20/$30/€25, and currently on sale at 75% off on the latter. If you listen very carefully, you can probably hear me typing away furiously while you play it. More News Jack King-Spooner's next handcrafted game has a teaser demo out Judero brings chat and action in the Scottish Borders Alice O'Connor 17 hours ago 1 If you were hoping for any Overwatch 2 balance changes then you'll have to wait until season two The next season begins in December CJ Wheeler 18 hours ago 3 The Dead Space remake will chuck random Necromorphs at you as you wander the Ishimura In space, no one can hear you proper bricking it CJ Wheeler 18 hours ago 8 Valve register mysterious new Neon Prime trademark in the US It doesn’t seem to be for a particularly colourful Steam Deck CJ Wheeler 20 hours ago 11 Latest Articles What are we all playing this weekend? Well? Alice O'Connor an hour ago 21 Past Wordle answers Here's an archive of previous Wordle words Ollie Toms 2 hours ago 1 Wordle answer today (Saturday 15 October) Hints and the answer to today's Wordle word Rebecca Jones 9 hours ago Overwatch 2 hero tier list Which are the best heroes in Overwatch 2? Ollie Toms 16 hours ago Supporters Only You're probably better than me at One Many Nobody You go on without… uh, you? Sin Vega 17 hours ago Supporter podcast - The Nate Files episode 13: dry bones Bad science is also FUN science! Alice Bell 18 hours ago Japanese dating show Love Wagon has surprising parallels with Yakuza and Persona My new obsession Ed Thorn 2 days ago If you're hankering after Bayonetta 3, Valkyrie Elysium might be a good substitute It's not out on PC until next month, but the console demo has been a surprise charmer Katharine Castle 1 week ago 4 We've been talking, and we think that you should wear clothes Total coincidence, but we sell some clothes Buy RPS stuff here
Share:
0 comments

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Minimum 10 characters required

* All fields are required. Comments are moderated before appearing.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

Elite Dangerous uses real life space sounds recorded from Antarctica Rock Paper Shotgun | Trend Now | Trend Now