yes because the power lins
Yes. Vibrations can travel through anything except space where there is a vacuum.
They travel through the air.
Yes. When you're underwater in the pool, you can hear the lifeguard's whistle. The vibrations in air do set up vibrations in the water when they hit the surface.
sound is vibrations from an object that travel through diffusion,which is how something travels through tiny water in the air or water itself
Air particles are much less dense than water particles, so the vibrations of sound can travel through air more quickly.
As vibrations, pressure waves.
They are denser. Molecules are closer together. Vibrations move faster.
Vibrations travel through the material, just as they would in air. How well they travel through depends on the material.
Sound is transmitted through water the same way it's transmitted through air -- by vibrations. Whatever is making the noise makes vibrations in the water, which then strike against your eardrum and vibrate it, and then the vibrations travel through some bones in your head to a bundle of nerves, which transmit the signal to your brain, which produces the sensation we call sound.
Vibrations are carried through the atoms in a structure. When these vibrations travel through air, they are amplified by the ear drum and sensed by nerves as sound.
sound is actually vibrations. your eardrum is designed to pick up these vibrations that we call sound. kind of like when you have a glass of water on the table, and then drop something on the table, the glass of water picks up these vibrations and creates ripples.
Disturbances/shockwaves/ripples/ through the air/water/ground.