When you think of a speeding space rock crashing into a planet, you might think of a clangorous and shaking sound. But according to new audio from NASA, it turns out that when it comes to a meteoroid ...
In the summer of 1997, NOAA's underwater microphone network - a Cold War-era array of hydrophones originally built to track Soviet submarines and later repurposed to monitor earthquakes and whale ...
How did the ocean produce the loudest sound ever recorded? In 1997, NOAA hydrophones picked up the infamous “Bloop,” a noise so powerful it was heard across the Pacific. This video explores the ...
When you think of a speeding space rock crashing into a planet, you might think of a clangorous and shaking sound. But according to new audio from NASA, it turns out that when it comes to a meteoroid ...
Make this your preferred source to get more updates from this publisher on Google. After 15 long years, scientists have finally found an explanation for the creepy undersea "bloop" noise recorded in ...