Speed of sound in air is c ≈ 331 + 0.6 × T.
T = Temperature in °C.
Speed of sound in air at 20°C is c ≈ 331 + 0.6 × 20 = 343 m/s.
The speed of light through air at sea level is roughly881 thousand times the speed of sound.
No. The denser the material, the faster sound moves through it.
You can calculate the speed of sound through air based on air temperature with the following equation: speed in meters per second = 331.5 + (temp in celcius*0.60)
Well speed of sound in air at room temperature is 350 m/s . It depends on the density of the medium. Sound cannot propagate through vacuum. Speed of sound is directly proportional to the temperature of the medium.
The speed of sound in a solid is faster than the speed of sound in air.
The speed of light through air at sea level is roughly881 thousand times the speed of sound.
The speed of sound through dry air is 767 miles per hour.
No why would the speed of sound will stay the same
It never would. Sound is vibration through some physical medium; the speed of sound is related to the speed of the vibrations. No physical medium can move at the speed of light, so the speed of sound could never get there.
A blackbird doesn't go "through the speed of sound", it moves through the air.
In dry air, at 20°C, the speed of sound is 343 meters/second.
The speed of sound through a medium depends on the density of the medium and the density of air is affected by temperature.
No. The denser the material, the faster sound moves through it.
Mach 1 is the relative speed of sound through air. Relative because the speed of sound varies with air density. At sea level the speed of sound is about 740 miles per hour. Mach 2 is then twice the speed of sound.
You can calculate the speed of sound through air based on air temperature with the following equation: speed in meters per second = 331.5 + (temp in celcius*0.60)
Essentially it is the density and temperature of the air which determines the speed of sound therein.
Well speed of sound in air at room temperature is 350 m/s . It depends on the density of the medium. Sound cannot propagate through vacuum. Speed of sound is directly proportional to the temperature of the medium.