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Beyond Visible Noise: the 'sounds of space' on film

Written by  Sunday, 18 July 2021 09:43
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London, UK (SPX) Jul 19, 2021
Space scientists, spoken word artists and filmmakers teamed up to create a new short film, 'Beyond Visible Noise', that will launch at the National Astronomy Meeting on Tuesday 20 July. Dr Martin Archer of Imperial College London will describe how scientists and poets worked together to take the incredibly weak sound waves found in space and convert them to the audible content that features in t

Space scientists, spoken word artists and filmmakers teamed up to create a new short film, 'Beyond Visible Noise', that will launch at the National Astronomy Meeting on Tuesday 20 July. Dr Martin Archer of Imperial College London will describe how scientists and poets worked together to take the incredibly weak sound waves found in space and convert them to the audible content that features in the film.

The space between the planets is more rarefied than any terrestrial near-vacuum. But it is filled with plasmas - gases of electrically charged particles that generate and interact with electromagnetic fields. Sound waves travel through this medium, but they are far weaker than anything found on Earth, and have frequencies far below the audible range.

Archer and his team converted the routine satellite recordings of these 'space sounds' into audible content, simply by dramatically amplifying the data and speeding up its playback. These sounds now feature as the basis of 'Beyond Visible Noise'.

The film is the product of the Experimental Words project, which paired some of the UK's most exciting spoken word artists with leading scientists - challenging them to co-create performance poetry that explores their worlds. Dr Archer, a Stephen Hawking Fellow at Imperial College London, teamed up with UK Entertainment Best Poet 2017 awardee Shareefa Energy to create a piece that explores sound, space, and the wonder of science.

'Beyond Visible Noise' came about from numerous conversations between Martin and Shareefa on many disparate areas that they were able to bring together into a cohesive narrative. One key jumping off point was Martin's scientific research into these sounds present around our planet and how they affect our everyday lives.

Discussions about this work prompted Shareefa to explore the limits of humans' senses and the power of sound as both a physical and psychological force - one which can be used nefariously, but can also bring about awe.

The final talking point that ended up in the track was around attempts at universal languages and communication, like those on the plaques found on the Pioneer spacecraft that left the solar system in the 1980s and 1990s.

By being re-exposed to physics and maths, subjects she was put off from at school, Shareefa wondered how many fail to appreciate the richness they can bring in explaining both the familiar and wildly abstract wonders of our universe, leaving the poem on a hopeful end point. Through the brainstorming, writing, and recording processes, 'Beyond Visible Noise' became a true sonic journey!

Their track was subsequently picked by Forbes 30-Under-30 and BAFTA Rocliffe Award winning filmmaker Peter Fellows, co-writer of 'The Death of Stalin', to be turned into a music-video style short-film for an epic exploration of the creative power of the performing arts and science.

The film depicts an astronaut, returned from space travel, struggling with the trauma of having lost a fellow crewmember and adjusting to life back on Earth. Visually it highlights the busy world we all live in, the vastness of the space, and the calming beauty of nature.

Archer says about the project: "Beyond Visible Noise exemplifies the power of sound. So often astronomers rely on visually arresting imagery from their telescopes to communicate and enthuse the public.

But space scientists like me that study the invisible plasmas in our solar system can't do that. By using real sounds of space, the new film shows how a lack of visual material does not need to be a challenge and can in fact be a creative way of engaging with the universe around us."


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