subzero0137 said:
Well that is what Vanadium 50 said, unless I misunderstood him?
You misunderstood him.
People long ago realized that scientific visualization is a very powerful tool for presenting scientific data that, strictly speaking, has absolutely nothing to do with what we see. Our eyes are very, very good at seeing patterns in two dimensional data, so it makes sense to come up with a visualization that let's us see the variations in the data at an intuitive level.
What about one dimensional data? Our eyes aren't so good at "seeing" patterns in one dimensional data. "Seeing" patterns in one dimensional data that varies over time is exactly what our auditory system excels at doing. Just as data visualization (presenting data in as an image) is a very powerful tool for portraying multi-dimensional data, data sonification (presenting data as a sound) is a very powerful tool for portraying one dimensional data that varies over time.
Joe Martin said:
There is absolutely no sound in space. None.
You wrote "absolutely" and "no". That's a bit strong. Strictly speaking, that absolutely is not true. There is sound in space. However, it is extremely low frequency sound, frequencies so very, very low that a person couldn't hear it. ("Hearing" these sounds would require having a lifespan in the tens to hundreds of million years.)
Space is not a perfect vacuum. At long enough time scales and large enough distance scales, the interplanetary / interstellar / intergalactic media looks like a gas. It has a density (extremely low), a pressure (extremely low), and a temperature (varies all over the map). Like any other gas, the gas that comprises outer space can support sound.
An upper limit on the sound frequency a gas can support is the mean free path divided by the speed of sound. Given the extreme paucity of material in space, the upper frequency on sound in space is extremely low, many tens of octaves below what we humans would call "sound".