Sound would travel faster through one brick than the same amount of concrete based on molecular structure but if a wall were built with brick, mortar would be required, this mortar would slow the sound vibrations and scatter them, while the same size wall made of concrete is solid and would then conduct sound faster than the brick wall.
You mean which one does it travel faster in? It would be a brick because of how tightly packed the molecules in the brick are together. Wood, which is a lot more fragile that brick, does not allow sound to travel through it as fast.
Sound travels faster through brick than through wood because brick is denser and has a higher elasticity, allowing sound waves to travel more efficiently.
The brick because it is heavy but if its a trick question then balloon
the baby oil is slippery and that makes it go faster.
No it is a popular travel website
A brick would fall faster than a penny off a roof due to the difference in their mass. Objects of different weights fall at the same rate due to gravity, but the brick would have a greater force pulling it downwards compared to the penny.
metal,wood and then brick. yes all the basics
100m/s
A brick falls faster than a feather due to differences in mass and air resistance. The brick has more mass, so gravity exerts a greater force on it, causing it to accelerate faster. Additionally, the feather experiences more air resistance due to its larger surface area, slowing its descent.
by sled feet brick and unicorns
Water, air, brick, and steel
It really depends on what the sound is traveling through. Sound travels faster through hard things, in fact, I hear it travels 22 times faster through brick than through air. If you are talking room temperature at a few thousand feet above sea level it should travel at about 775 miles per hour, (1,240 kilometers per hour.)