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Q:I would like to obtain an audio tape of the "Wow!" signal. Can you provide that to me?
A:At the time Big Ear recorded the radio signal that later became known as the "Wow!" signal (based on the notation that Dr. Jerry Ehman wrote in the margin of the computer printout), there was no audio recording equipment attached to the output of that radio telescope. Hence, it is impossible to provide an audio tape of that signal.
Admiral Hillenkoetter was not on the board of NICAP after 1962. The Wow Signal was received at the Ohio State University radio telescope in 1977. It has never been heard by any other facility, including Arecibo.
originally posted by: Cauliflower
a reply to: Ross 54
October 1961 Admiral Hillenkoetter would have been steering NICAP.
en.wikipedia.org...
He was obviously heavy in charge of psyops during and after WW2.
First director of the CIA
Was knowledgeable about the KH "Keyhole" downlinked satellite series from1962.
Wasn't the "WOW" signal recovered at the Arecibo dish while spying on the Russians?
No that's not what it means. Sound doesn't travel through the vacuum of space, so the telescope never received any sound from space. Ever.
originally posted by: darkbake
So that means that although there was an audio signal, there is no record of it.
There are plenty of mentally challenged people making youtube videos claiming these are the "sounds of space", and that jupiter is actually making these noises, but they are mistaken, it's data sonification.
One approach scientists use to make sense of the data from instruments is to make pictures and graphs to represent the data. This is called "data visualization". Some types of data, especially radio signals, are very similar in many ways to sound. The power of a radio signal is analogous to the volume of a sound. The radio signal also varies in terms of the frequency and wavelength of the radio waves, which is like the variation in pitch of sound waves. So scientists sometimes translate radio signals into sound to better understand the signals. This approach is called "data sonification".
You're welcome, and it's understandable that it was unclear to you as it's apparently unclear to many.
originally posted by: darkbake
a reply to: Arbitrageur
Thanks for clearing that up, I see, that makes sense - data sonification and data visualization. I hadn't been clear on that before, very informative.
That's quite possible and in fact AM and FM radio are two completely different methods for encoding audio into electromagnetic radiation signals. But to decode those two types of encodings you need two different methods.
What I was thinking was that sound could have been encoded in the radio signal, and they got data of that signal, but it looks like the signal data wasn't recorded in detail.