Submitted by DemonOfTheAstroWaste t3_11c3z36 in space
Alexthelightnerd t1_ja3ezoc wrote
Reply to comment by sam_I_am_knot in Explosions in space movies? by DemonOfTheAstroWaste
Sound will propagate, just not through undisturbed vacuum. Explosions generally create a cloud of rapidly expanding gas, and that would be audible. It would not be as loud or travel as far as an explosion in an atmosphere, but within a certain distance you would hear it. Further, sound propagates very well through metal, and spaceships generally have atmosphere inside them. If something hits the spaceship you're in, you'd hear it. If something explodes close to your ship you'd hear it. You'd also absolutely be able to hear weapons firing, engines operating, and anything else that vibrates on the ship you're currently in. Any engine that creates a pressurized exhaust would be audible from outside as well, though in most cases I'd imagine if one were close enough to hear it they'd be killed by it because of temperature or radiation.
sam_I_am_knot t1_ja3gll5 wrote
Thanks for the thorough explanation. It'll be good for anyone who read my comment :)
I was thinking was of the vacuum of space without much matter to speak of.
I was pretty amazed when I learned Earth's atmosphere extends past the moon in trace amounts.
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