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Edited the question thanks to some helpful commenters.

Are the sound waves emitted by fundamental strings so small as to be impossible to interact with the world? In other words, do they disappear, like sub-planck length fluctuations that are obscured by the size of fundamental strings? OR, is it theoretically (not physically) possible to "listen" to the strings, discern pitches, etc.

Original Question:

I mean, vibrating strings make sounds no matter what they are or what scale they're on, right? If there are loops of strings in bosons and fermions, then aren't they kind of like really small violin strings, which are also attached at each end. So, if you have strings vibrating with different whole numbers of peaks and troughs, they should each have their own pitch, even if not in the most immediately obvious sense... Either way, at least you don't have fire photons at it to observe it if you can listen to it.

Is listening to string theory a possibility?

Has it been attempted, and if so, how?

Or does air pressure interaction or some other problem make this impossible?

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The notion of fundamental strings making sounds is inapt.

Fundamental strings are so-called because of their similarity, in certain senses, to an oscillating rope, cord, or string. An oscillating string is a nice physical example of harmonic behavior, eigenmodes, and so on. The oscillating string makes a sound, but the sound is a result of the air around the string being excited. In a vacuum, the oscillating string would make no sound.

Fundamental strings have similar behavior; they can be described in terms of their boundary conditions (both ends free, both ends fixed, or one free and one fixed) and their oscillatory modes. However, they do not create sound in the sense that our vibrating, physical string does. As I stated above, the sound is not a property even of the physical string, merely a consequence of its interaction with the air. While strings must interact with other "stuff" in order to have any consequence in our universe, that interaction does not manifest itself as anything that we might think of as "sound waves".

KDN
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