If you mean 'after the splash is seen' then g has nothing to do with this problem; only the speed of sound and the distance.
500/340 =1.47 seconds.
If you want to include the time it takes for the stone to fall then
500 = 1/2x10 t2 t= 10 seconds 10+1.47 = 11.47 seconds
Velocity= (distance*2)/time 340=(45*2)/t; 340/90=t; t=3.78 seconds
A plop as a sound would be like if you dropped a small pebble into a pool of water! :)
Sound . . . 0.34 km/second Light . . . . 300,000 km/second
No, the speed of sound (at sea level) is only about 0.213 mile per second.
"ms" in this case is short for "meters per second". It means that sound advances that many meters every second.
the speed of sound is 1100 feet per second
Yes, the word "splash" has a short vowel sound for the a in the first syllable. It is pronounced as /splæʃ/.
Since the weight of pumice is less it will float on water for some time and then..
water
Splash has a short vowel sound.
a waterfall
Difficult to say, a word of no particular origin other than the sound that is made when something is dropped into water. There is a English word from the mid 1700's 'plash' which referred to an 'ostentatious display'
splash
it says splish splash
it is kind or a splash or crasssh crussshchchch
splash
I'm no expert but it will probabley have a splish splash sound!
A fish or marine life animals.