dense media
Air.
titi mu
Depends on what it is meant to travel through.
Yes, sound waves can travel through different media, including solids, liquids, and gases. The speed of sound varies depending on the medium it is traveling through, with sound traveling fastest in solids and slowest in gases.
In the same longitudinal form
sound can travel in all three media(solids liquid and gas)and travels fastest through solids.
Sound travels faster and further in water compared to air due to water being denser and providing a better medium for sound waves to travel through. In water, sound can travel over longer distances and at higher speeds than in air.
Both but i would think that it would go through solids more
Sound doesn't travel through any gases very well, Sound travels 10 times faster and much further (about 20Km) in liquids, and sound travels even better in solids as particles are closer together. Just so you know, sound DOES NOT travel through a vacuum (e.g space).
Air: Sound waves travel through air and can be heard as sound. Water: Water waves travel through bodies of water like oceans, lakes, and rivers. Electromagnetic spectrum: Light waves, radio waves, microwaves, and other forms of electromagnetic waves travel through a vacuum or various materials.
Sounds travel through gas by creating pressure waves that propagate through the molecules of the gas. As the pressure waves travel through the gas, they compress and rarefy the molecules, transmitting the sound energy from one point to another. Examples of gases that sound can travel through include air, carbon dioxide, and helium.
Because waves, such as sound, need to travel through a medium, whether it be water, air, etc. Since in empty space, there is no air, therefore there is no medium to travel in, so sound cannot travel.Sound waves require a medium (solid, liquid or gas) to travel through. They do this by alternately compressing and rarifying the distanced between the atoms or molecules of the medium.