yes. go underwater in a pool and ask someone to talk and you will be able to hear them talking. I am not sure if you can hear under water in the ocean though.
Because you've never listened? I have, and I find it quite easy to hear sound travelling through water.
You can, but not clearly. Sound waves travel through water but lose much of their definition due to the density of the water. You would hear even less if you were in syrup.
My bet would be the hot water heater cycling water through
They will simply hear what is around them. Sound, which is vibrations, can travel in water, air and through anything apart from a vacuum.Whilst underwater, frogs hear sound waves that have been emitted by other frogs and ambient noises also. Frogs use internal ears to process sound signals as well as their lungs, although the sensitivity of the lungs is not as high as that of the ear structure.They can hear fish, insects, animals and other frogs that are in the water. They hear using their big round ears called tympanum. Frogs can hear under water through the vibration that travels through the water, but they cannot hear sounds that are short and of high frequency.
sound can be produced in any medium - air, water and solids too, but most of the sounds we hear are through air. Animals like dolphins produce sound in water and hear it there.
Indeed! You can't hear what's going on around you, but you can hear other astronauts through their radio.
Their are vibrations that let you hear through various things.
they can hear better out of the water
Water. it is more viscous (thick) then air which means the molecules are closer together therefore making it easier to travel through (but not better to hear).
cause its easier for sound waves to travel through air than through liquid
Owls can hear through the snow. Saw it on a nature show.
Sound waves have to have something physical to travel through, such as air or water. There is nothing in the vacuum for the waves to move in.