When you hit a drum the skin vibrates creating a sound wave which travels through the air.
It goes through cloth faster.
Because the thin skin isn't entirely air tight. A little bit of air is constantly leaking straight through.
No. Sound waves require air.
An item dropping through the air experiences Skin Resistance. That is the turbulence created by friction on the surface of the item passing down in the air. Also there are Updrafts which will slow the item down. NOTE: These problems are not present when the item is in a Vacuum (Space.)
through it's skin
i dun think so that air gets inside through our pores... but yes gases do get in through by being in the liquid state....
No because it is not a fish it is a mammal.
The air around the earthworm goes through the skin.
Its rare for a bone to go through the skin. There is no disorder that I know of
Roundworms get their oxygen buy absorbing the air through their skin
Air.
Some species of amphibians do not have lungs or gills, but obtain all their necessary oxygen and water through their skin. Other amphibians have lungs for breathing air, but use their skin to take in additional oxygen, as well as water, through capillaries in their skin.
No, birds and other reptiles like crocodiles also breathe air. Insects absorb air through their skin.
Actually air escapes through your skin as well as your lungs and heart (which keep the air circulating.) And, at the risk of sounding cheesy, that's the reason that the girl dies when she is painted gold in Goldfinger - the pores in her skin can't breath, so air can't escape and so she suffocates.
Amphibians breathes through their skin, they accumulate enough air from the moist on their skin. If there is no moist, they will die.
The earthworm's body allows oxygen to be diffused from the air through the skin. Since, they do not have lungs.