No, radiation itself does not produce sound. Sound is a mechanical wave that requires a medium, such as air, water, or a solid, to propagate. It involves the vibration of particles in the medium, which causes a sequence of compressions and rarefactions that our ears perceive as sound.
Radiation, on the other hand, refers to the emission and propagation of energy in the form of electromagnetic waves or particles. Electromagnetic waves, including light and other forms of electromagnetic radiation, do not require a medium to propagate. They can travel through vacuum, such as in the case of light from the Sun reaching us on Earth.
While radiation can interact with matter and induce various effects, including the conversion of energy into other forms, it does not directly produce sound. Sound and electromagnetic radiation are fundamentally different phenomena, and they are perceived by our senses in distinct ways.