In space, you don't get that much noise. Noise doesn't propagate in a vacuum.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Of course you don't make any noise in space, because there's no air.
Noise is a parasite. Anything noisy is poorly designed.
The overwhelming bulk of the cosmos is deathly quiet. But here and there - on worlds where matter is thick and conditions are right - noises are commonplace. And in some cases, these noisy worlds may ring with the sounds of life - the bleats and bellows of creatures we have never seen, but may someday discover.
As far as the sounds on the space station, it's pumps, fans, motors, certain modules are louder than others, but it's generally a pretty nice working environment. It's not too loud or too smelly.
Noise is a buffer, more effective than cubicles or booth walls.
You don't have to be noisy to be effective.
If I could make noise with anything, I was going to.
I'm noise-sensitive. It's always better for me if things are quiet, so I can concentrate.
When I was a kid, my mom used to run the vacuum cleaner, and the noise would bother me so much that I would run into the woods to calm down. I feel like that vacuum cleaner has been on since I moved to New York City.
On Mars, where the air is spare - a hundred times less dense than on Earth - someone could hear you scream. But you'd have to really strain to get anyone's attention. On the Red Planet, where the wind is high-pitched and faint, even a symphony orchestra will sound as thin as cheap gruel.
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