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Transforming deep-space signals into cathedral sound

An immersive sound installation at Oulu Cathedral, Finland, co-created by MIT Associate Professor Kiyoshi Masui, transforms more than 4,000 cosmic signals into spatial audio.

By converting fast-radio-burst data from deep space into a shared listening experience, a new sound installation at Oulu Cathedral in Finland suggests a different way of understanding the universe: not only through analysis, but through attention.
By converting fast-radio-burst data from deep space into a shared listening experience, a new sound installation at Oulu Cathedral in Finland suggests a different way of understanding the universe: not only through analysis, but through attention.
This view of nearly 10,000 galaxies is called the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. The snapshot includes galaxies of various ages, sizes, shapes, and colours. The smallest, reddest galaxies, about 100, may be among the most distant known, existing when the universe was just 800 million years old. The nearest galaxies - the larger, brighter, well-defined spirals and ellipticals - thrived about 1 billion years ago, when the cosmos was 13 billion years old. The image required 800 exposures taken over the course of 400 Hubble orbits around Earth. The total amount of exposure time was 11.3 days, taken between Sept. 24, 2003 and Jan. 16, 2004.
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
By Juliana DiVirgilio | MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research