Absolutely. It is one of the major reasons of rock musicians suffering from hearing loss.
Loud sounds can damage the delicate structures in our ears, leading to hearing loss or other hearing problems. Continued exposure to loud noises can cause permanent damage to the hair cells in the inner ear, affecting our ability to hear properly. It is important to protect our ears from loud sounds to maintain good hearing health.
Yes, loud sounds for extended periods can damage your hearing.
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Yes, some continuous loud sounds are related to hypertension (high blood pressure). In addition, sounds outside the audible range can make some people nauseous, etc., even if they are not all that loud. Loud sounds if sudden, sharp and loud enough, may damage your ear drums. An loud sounds experienced over a long enough period of time can damage your hearing.
it depends on how loud the pitch is some pitches are not harmful but they are so high we can hear them i think these type of sounds at a pitch very high are called infrared sound?
Loud sounds can damage hearing by overstimulating the sensitive hair cells in the inner ear, leading to their damage or death. This can result in hearing loss or tinnitus (ringing in the ears). Continuous exposure to loud noises or sudden exposure to very loud sounds can cause permanent damage to the auditory system.
Any sound over 85 Decibels is considered too loud and will hurt your hearing. Hearing anything this loud will start to damage your ear. prolonged exposure to sounds this loud will cause irreversible damage to your ears.
Sound is a form of energy, energy can be used to cause damage.
They can hear low sounds about as well as humans (40 Hz, compared to our 20 Hz), and can hear sounds that are a quite a bit higher (60,000 Hz, compared to our 20,000 Hz). They are more sensitive to loud sounds - loud noises that humans can tolerate may be painful to dogs. The flipside of this is that they can hear sounds that are 4 times farther away.
True
Sound is as loud as a piece of string is long - swapping the SI units from m to dB of course.add. Approximately one-half of the population can hear sounds below 0dB. (Assuming no damage.) Ordinary speech at 1.5m is perhaps 75dB, and loud speech at the same distance perhaps 85 - 90 db. To preserve your hearing, you should use hearing protection above these levels.The loudest sounds we should hear are about 120dB. Sounds above 130dB may cause instant damage. Above 140dB will be felt as pain.
Yes it does, any sound over 85 Decibels is considered too loud and will hurt your hearing. Hearing anything this loud will start to damage your ear. Prolonged exposure to sounds this loud will cause irreversible damage to your ears.