yes.
The eardrum.
"High frequency" sounds are more directional.
It needs to bounce off of something first! :)
A noise and something for it to bounce off of
Bat echolocation is an example of ultrasonic sounds, as bats emit high-frequency sound waves that bounce off objects and allow them to navigate and hunt in the dark.
The Walls We Bounce Off Of was created in 1994.
It's called an echo.
All balls will bounce based on the surface you bounce it on. Even a bowling ball will bounce at least a centimeter or half a centimeter even though it is hard to determine whether it is getting off the ground or not. Of course it wont bounce if you bounce it on something soft and break through, but it will bounce on a hard cement floor. It will bounce because it will have potential energy weighing it down and if the floor is harder than the ball, the ball will move off like opposite sides of a magnet. but only for a while until our gravity pulls it down and stops it. Hope that helped.
Our ears are designed to hear sounds traveling through air. When these sounds are made underwater, they travel at slower speeds, causing them to bounce off surfaces differently and sound differently.
The scientific term for bounce off of is "reflect."
It is legal to bounce a washer off the ground and score, though it is another good taunting.Yes. It is legal to bounce a washer off the ground and score.
Echoes can be heard in environments with hard and flat surfaces that reflect sound waves, such as mountains, canyons, buildings, or empty rooms. When sound waves bounce off these surfaces and return to the listener, an echo is produced.
The term used to describe sounds that are reflected back to their source is "echo." An echo occurs when sound waves bounce off surfaces and return to the listener's ears after a delay.