No. Space is a vacuum; sound can't travel through it. Sorry for being a killjoy. ;)
2007-10-20 14:46:06
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Well, the thing is that sound needs a medium to travel. For example gas, water etc etc. Sound travels at different sppeds depending on the medium. For example sound travels faster in water than in air. This is why if you where diving and you hear a boat you should not go to the surface because you would not be able to tell in which direction the boat is comming from. This is because your ears can only distinguish sound direction at certain speeds. SO the question is was there enough matter or was the matter close enough for the sound to travel through? Pace is just a big vacuum. No sound travels in space.
2007-10-20 21:48:16
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answer #2
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answered by mr_gees100_peas 6
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Well, I would suppose that whoever or whatever triggered the Big Bang "heard" it in a manner of speaking, ears or no ears, since it itself was making the noise. I will definitely have to think some more about this!
2007-10-20 21:50:07
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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nope its like saying if a tree fell in the forest and nobody was around did it make sound NO! how can it make a sound if nobody was around to hear it
2007-10-20 21:46:29
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answer #4
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answered by jemba 3
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I believe that sound is a matter of perspective..if nobody heard something. did that thing happened...Lots of philosophers have tried to support the argument both ways...hence I believe this question is a rhetorical question.
2007-10-20 22:07:43
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answer #5
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answered by ayok 2
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I don't know, but here's another question. Do you know what came right after "The Big Bang?"
Answer: The Big Cigarette
2007-10-20 21:45:14
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answer #6
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answered by rhino 6
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Ok put a microphone there and go 1000000 miles away and listen for a sound.
2007-10-20 22:32:13
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answer #7
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answered by !@#$%^&*() 4
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techinally, no. things existed AFTER the big bang, so how could nothing make a sound?
2007-10-20 21:45:34
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answer #8
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answered by hotgurl101:) 1
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I just got 2 points woohoo be do
2007-10-20 22:08:59
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answer #9
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answered by ღKrissyღ 5
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no b/c sound waves are dependent on being received somewhere(like the ear) and if there is no ear then to hear it then there is no sound; technically.
2007-10-20 21:46:37
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answer #10
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answered by princessaris80 4
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