UNKNOWN ARTEFACT: Sound Engineers, apply here!

I'm glad you guys are having fun and keeping busy and all, but I really think you have gone too far analysing this, I don't think there is anything hidden in the sound at all. Who remembers the sour taste left from the titan x comp after all the theories and speculation and it was just random, just like this is just a sound created by an FD sound engineer. I wish I was wrong and FD were that crafty, but I think not from previous experience.

Maybe they're learning. Or if not this time, if we keep overanalysying everything, they'll throw us a bone sooner or later.

You can keep your trading and bounty hunting. The unknown is what sci-fi should be about.
 

Very nicely done! This kind of alignment is what we should do with all the samples. OR - I saw some nice spectrographs that made the patterns very visible, that could be another approach.

In looking at this, I see no repeat. I don't think that we have the whole message NOR do we know if it is in contiguous order. We need more recordings until we can identify a repeated section and hopefully have enough coverage to stitch together the whole series. A little like shotgun sequencing.
 
Reposted by popular demand, sorry about the formatting issues:

So, instead of speeding up the audio to listen for Highs and Lows, (which I believe is clouded by the erratic 'heart beat' sounds it makes, causing there to be no discernible pattern) I listened to it at plain old 1X, and I hear a pattern of 7 notes. First four (ending with the iconic foghorn note), then three. These repeat, without fail, every time. AND they coincide with when the UA 'lights up'.
Now, I'm not fully convinced that the Thargoids 'want' us to find them, because if they knew our culture they would just emit a message in english (for example), but for now let's assume that for simplicity, we can use all our human tools to decode it.
I took the seven notes and corresponded them to notes on a keyboard.
The first is D (27) - A (34) - D (27) - D (3)
The second is F (30) - C# (2) - D# (28)
I'm trained in music, but by no means a tone expert so I would love for someone to check me. This results in seven alpha notes, or 12 numeric digits. These twelve digits could be used to make a 3-axis coordinate system, with 4 digits each. You would result in (27.34, 27.33, 02.28)
Just one of the many ways to interpret the sound, but I believe looking at the notes themselves is more reliable than the binary system of highs and lows, because there is a definitive pattern, and it's not just high and low, there are multiple notes being used.

Just FYI, the closest system to those coordinates is V1285 Aquilae... I may head that way tonight, but it may end up being in the morning - only 175LY out. (1AM, need some rest)

Its actual coordinates are 28.4, 24.9, 1.61... so it is rather close.

I don't actually have a UA, so... it'd mostly just be to see if anything stands out, but I'm exploring anyway, so... might as well!
 
So far no-one seems to have successfully decoded the sounds, and any attempts to do so seem to have produced random numbers
or possible coordinates which lead nowhere.
This is leading me to think the following explanation might make more sense...


Everyone seems to have been interpreting the 'honk' sound as some kind of sync bit or word separator, but if so, why does it obscure the last two bits,
and why can you occasionally hear, or see in the spectrogram, fragments of bits in the silence after the 'honk'.
If it were a sync bit, or even a reply tone, then wouldn't it be in a different frequency range so it could be separated out rather than trampling over the signal?
Now it could be Frontier have done this just to make it harder to hear, but things seem pretty complicated already.


I'm beginning to think the 'honk' might be some kind of 'error' signal, based on the way that it steps on the signal frequencies.
Perhaps if we take the UA to the right place, or do the right thing, the 'error' will disappear and the remaining binary signal will be the correct one.
However that just takes us back to the problem of finding the right place/thing, which would imply that the first clue lies elsewhere.


Does that sound plausible to anyone else?
 
Reposted by popular demand, sorry about the formatting issues:

So, instead of speeding up the audio to listen for Highs and Lows, (which I believe is clouded by the erratic 'heart beat' sounds it makes, causing there to be no discernible pattern) I listened to it at plain old 1X, and I hear a pattern of 7 notes. First four (ending with the iconic foghorn note), then three. These repeat, without fail, every time. AND they coincide with when the UA 'lights up'.
Now, I'm not fully convinced that the Thargoids 'want' us to find them, because if they knew our culture they would just emit a message in english (for example), but for now let's assume that for simplicity, we can use all our human tools to decode it.
I took the seven notes and corresponded them to notes on a keyboard.
The first is D (27) - A (34) - D (27) - D (3)
The second is F (30) - C# (2) - D# (28)
I'm trained in music, but by no means a tone expert so I would love for someone to check me. This results in seven alpha notes, or 12 numeric digits. These twelve digits could be used to make a 3-axis coordinate system, with 4 digits each. You would result in (27.34, 27.33, 02.28)
Just one of the many ways to interpret the sound, but I believe looking at the notes themselves is more reliable than the binary system of highs and lows, because there is a definitive pattern, and it's not just high and low, there are multiple notes being used.

I got it as D G# D A
and F C# D

I got this by playing the notes on virtualpiano (http://virtualpiano.net) along with the recordings - this seemed the closest fit (to my ears).

Going on musical intervals the pattern seemed as follows
root +b5th root +5th or -4th (D G# D A)
root +b5th +5th (F C# D)

If we make the assumption that the key is D for both sequences
root +b5th root (+5th or -4th) +minor3rd +maj7th root(one octave above)

If we go "chromatic" and say 1 is the root and 13 is one octave above and number each semi-tone between...

1 7 1 (-6 or 8) 4 12 13(or 1)

Other possible things to look for could be the actual frequencies of the notes and the differences or ratio of differences in frequencies between notes - but I think I have already gone too far in over analyzing.
 
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This may be really stupid but I recently watched the movie 'Mission to Mars' - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0183523 - And
At the end, they have to decode an audio signal sending out tones groups of 3s - it turns out the audio signal represented a DNA strand that had missing values - They had to insert the ending of the audo signal to actually complete the audio representation of the DNA Strand
- Now, whether or not what they did is possible or just movie magic doesnt matter.

The point I am trying to make is: Could this be similarly setup? Some are saying that the end of the sequence is sort of cut off or tromped on by another sound. Could the audio be a representation of a 3d object? I know people have done the spectrograph analysis, but to me that is more 2D than anything.

I think I agree that this could either be just the sound of an alien inside the artifact and we are listening to a heartbeat etc. Or it could be that something needs to be "added" or modified to produce a valid signal that can be decoded.

Here is my question for anyone that has this cargo: Has anyone tried any of this with 2 of these? Does anyone have 2 samples to drop in the same system, same instance, same everything and see if they both produce the exact same sounds? Like jettison both samples and select each to see if anything changes...I think a wing with another CMDR who has a sample should work to test this out as well

Again, this is by no means my area of "expertise" - so If Im completely off then dont mind me :cool:
 
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I have kept a keen eye on this thread and the others spawned by it so i have my own piece to say

Through my travels i have noticed that most systems have their own seemingly unique sound signature depending on the type and class of star, a lot of the audio is pre-generated stuff like your thrusters re-aligning your ship or your sensors on their regular sweeps. Both of which can be eliminated by turning the modules off.

has anyone tried isolating and cleaning up the signals from the UA's and such?
As in removing the local systems background audio and the unique sounds for each ship?

All that interfearence would most likely be why the audiophile's have not gotten their binary translations/calculations right.
 
I got it as D G# D A
and F C# D

I got this by playing the notes on virtualpiano (http://http://virtualpiano.net) along with the recordings - this seemed the closest fit (to my ears).

Going on musical intervals the pattern seemed as follows
root +b5th root +5th or -4th (D G# D A)
root +b5th +5th (F C# D)

If we make the assumption that the key is D for both sequences
root +b5th root (+5th or -4th) +minor3rd +maj7th root(one octave above)

If we go "chromatic" and say 1 is the root and 13 is one octave above and number each semi-tone between...

1 7 1 (-6 or 8) 4 12 13(or 1)

Other possible things to look for could be the actual frequencies of the notes and the differences or ratio of differences in frequencies between notes - but I think I have already gone too far in over analyzing.

The notes D and G sharp are an augmented fourth or flattened fifth apart. This interval (difference between the two notes) is also known as a tritone. The other name for this is the devils interval.

Another point is a tritone splits an octave exactly in half.

This sound is heard at the start of 'Purple Haze' by Jimi Hendrix. Not the exact notes but the same interval.

I have no idea what this all means but I hope that helps.
 
Hi Guys,

I've been looking into a sounds a lot - hadn't spotted this thread so have been posting in another:

https://forums.frontier.co.uk/showthread.php?t=142794&page=11&p=2194131#post2194131
https://forums.frontier.co.uk/showthread.php?t=142794&page=14&p=2195833#post2195833

Some of the things I think I've discovered are:

Listening at 3x speed makes it a lot easier to hear some of the details

There are 2 main tones in the sequences, but many have up to 4 tones in the first few notes. This could be a marker for the start of a message sequence, or be something like a header providing meta-information about the message to follow.

It seems there is a pattern that begins with 2 honks, is followed by 6 honks and then settles into a regular 7 honk cycle. The 2 and 6 honk segments have the bigger alphabet of up to 4 tones, but the 7 honk sequence is where it becomes limited to 2 tones. However it is difficult to be sure the start and end of the sequences have been captured entirely.

The pitch of the two main notes slowly increases throughout the 7 honk cycles - directly compare some tones from the start and end of the sequence and there is a big difference in pitch. I am guessing that the pitches of the notes could indicate the position in the sequence.

The 'whale noise' segments alternate between two seemingly identical samples, both of these are directly followed by a single sequence of click and whirs. Every instance of the clicks and whirs is identical.

The spacing of the 'whale noise' segments is regular, which could indicate they are a timing mechanism. There is an exception though - the distance between the very first and second whale noise segments does vary.

The timing between the honks is not always regular. This could be why there is a need for the whale noise 'clock' to give context to the timings.

Sometimes honks are very quiet and/or cut short and sometimes they are entirely absent, leaving an unusual gap when compared to other recordings.

All interesting stuff - not sure what to make of it all yet, but it is an intriguing puzzle!
 
Hi Guys,

I've been looking into a sounds a lot...

+rep

This is an excellent overview, and matches my own findings perfectly. In particular, I think the additional tones in the 'header' could do with more investigation - they are an oddity. Typically, tones outside of the regular 'binary' nature indicate punctuation, or SOM/EOM markers - but I still haven't got anywhere with that.

As each block only contains a maximum of 2 consecutively repeated tones, I suspect that we are dealing with something other than a simple binary message. It could indicate the presence of a cipher; with predominately 7-bit binary blocks, I'd expect at least one instance where value concurrency exceeds 2.

- - - Updated - - -

The binary route.....is it possible in ED to plot a course to a particular set of coordinates in the galaxy?

Indeed it is!
 
Aren't you looking too far into this, trying to find a pattern and all? Sounds pretty straightforward to me: there's something organic and alive in that thing, awaiting for the right moment to burst out.

I have a feeling that by bringing and selling those things in stations, we're actually assisting the Thargoids in their (surely violent) come back.


I personally think you are right with this assesment

Cheers Cmdr's
 
I've updated my earlier post (#36) with four more recordings. You can find the post here. Kaunan A 1 sounds interesting, as it broke the usual pattern twice - however, Kaunan A 3 didn't.
 
I've updated my earlier post (#36) with four more recordings. You can find the post here. Kaunan A 1 sounds interesting, as it broke the usual pattern twice - however, Kaunan A 3 didn't.

Good stuff - I'll have a listen. I'll repeat my encouragement to make 10 recordings in one spot. The five recordings that we have from the initial location never repeat the series. This means that we may not be in possession of all the patterns, we may be missing chunks in between each group and/or it may actually be random (can't rule that out until we see it repeat)
 
What happens if we bring two or UAs together (within say 100 metres)?

Maybe they only make sense if they act as a together.

Sadly I don't have any to try this with.
 
Aren't you looking too far into this, trying to find a pattern and all? Sounds pretty straightforward to me: there's something organic and alive in that thing, awaiting for the right moment to burst out.

This thread isn't for you then, Chief. Move along!

What happens if we bring two or UAs together (within say 100 metres)?

Maybe they only make sense if they act as a together.

Sadly I don't have any to try this with.

I'd like to see what the results of this are - not sure anyone has tested this yet.

Also, try flashing your lights at it while you are there :)
 
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The binary route.....is it possible in ED to plot a course to a particular set of coordinates in the galaxy?

Yes, easily. Use the galaxy map to get to those coordinates. If there is a system there, click on it to get a route there (assuming you are within 1000LY. If not, get nearer - use the coordinates to find interim system(s) ).
 
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