Not unless there's some material matter in the space.
Sound is a vibration when something makes a noise every thing around vibrates in order to make the sound for it to travel it needs particles to vibrate there is almost no matter in outer space hence no particles
The question is irrelevant, since sounds cannot be transmitted through space.
No. They can travel through any object that is not in a vacuum. They can travel through air, through metal, through string, through water, etc.. However sound cannot travel through space. That is why it is the writer's discretion to include space ship sounds in movies such as Star Wars and Star Trek. They would in fact be silent in space.
A sound wave cannot travel through space because there is no air in space. Without a medium such as air, you can't hear sounds
Sound can travel faster through space because space is a vacuum where there are no particles to slow down the transmission of sound waves. In a room at room temperature, sound travels through the molecules of the medium, such as air, which can slow down its speed.
That sounds like a description of electromagnetic waves.
no, an empty space is like a vacum it absorbs all of the vibrations so u cant hear a thing
Sounds vibrate the air molecules, when the vibrating molecules reach your ear, you ear the sound, there are no molecules in space, thus no sound in space
Sound and Light can travel through space.
Sound waves cannot travel through space.
Sound cannot travel in a vacuum. Sound is mechanical energy, and it travels by the transfer of mechanical energy through the medium through which it is traveling. If there is nothing to transfer the mechanical energy, like there is nothing in a vacuum, sound cannot travel there.
Yes, a black hole could travel through space.