
Mars has lightning storms, avalanches and even dust devils, just like Earth - but its thin atmosphere of carbon dioxide would mean they sounded very different. A team from the University of Southampton used physics and mathematics to work out what the violent weather of our solar system might sound like - capturing the crashing sounds of lightning on Venus, whirlwinds on Mars and ice volcanoes on Saturn's largest moon, Titan. Professor Tim Leighton, of the university's Institute for Sound and Vibration Research, said: ‘We are confident of our calculations.'
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