You can't scream in space if you're a black hole.
The sound of a black hole can be heard in listenable format, according to NASA.
NASA has an explanation for how the hell sounds in space.
The misconception that there is no sound in space comes from the fact that most space is a vacuum. We've picked up sound from a bunch of gas. Here it's amplified and combined with other data to hear a black hole.
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The data from the Chandra X-ray Observatory was released by NASA in May for Black Hole Week. The ripples in the cluster's hot gas that could be translated into a note are one that humans cannot hear.
It sounds like a very bad start to a track.
Black holes can be more pleasing in other ways. The black hole located around 54 million light years away at the center of M87 is being sonified by NASA. This is the image of a black hole captured by the event horizon telescope. Data from the Chandra X-ray Observatory, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, and the ALMA in Chile are used to map the wavelength to a different range of audible tones. The result is something you might enjoy at your next yoga class.
Each time an exoplanet was discovered, NASA produced the same sound and sonifications. The agency has recorded sounds of other planets.