Space, the final frontier. A vast expanse of emptiness, or so we think. The classic tagline from the movie Alien, “In space no one can hear you scream,” may not be entirely accurate. While space is mostly empty, there is indeed some stuff out there between the stars that can carry sound waves.
What we perceive as sound is actually just vibrations traveling through a medium. Whether it’s the music playing in your headphones or the sound of your own voice, it all comes down to particles bumping into each other to create waves. In the case of music, these waves travel through the air and eventually reach your ears, where they are interpreted by your brain.
But how empty is space really? In a laboratory vacuum chamber, there may be a trillion particles per cubic centimeter, which is still millions of times less dense than the air we breathe. Interplanetary space is even more rarefied, with just a few dozen particles per cubic centimeter. And the space between stars, known as the interstellar medium, is even thinner, with as little as 0.0001 particles per cubic centimeter on average.
Despite these low densities, there are regions in space where matter is more concentrated. Nebulas and gas clouds can have densities ranging from 10,000 to a million particles per cubic centimeter. Even in these denser regions, sound waves wouldn’t travel far due to the lack of particles to carry them.
However, there are instances where sound can travel through space. When a star explodes, it releases huge amounts of material into space at supersonic speeds. This material interacts with the surrounding interstellar medium, creating shock waves that can carry sound. The speed of sound in a nebula can be as high as 10 kilometers per second, much faster than on Earth due to the lower density of the medium.
Interestingly, the speed of sound in a nebula plays a crucial role in the formation of planets. When a dense clump of gas and dust collapses to form a disk around a newly forming star, the speed of sound within the disk determines its viscosity and turbulence. Without sound waves to facilitate the growth of clumps of material into planets, the formation of planetary systems as we know them would not be possible.
So while the notion that “in space no one can hear you scream” holds true in most cases, there are exceptions where sound can indeed travel through the vast emptiness of space. And perhaps, if we listen closely enough, we might just hear the echoes of creation reverberating through the cosmos.