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Because the sounds bounce off of walls.
sound waves bounce off of walls. they need air to travel.
Sounds seems to echo in an empty room because the sound has only six surfaces to bounce off of. When the sound waves bounce, they bounce right back to the source. However, when there is furniture, pictures, and other objects placed in a room, those surfaces contain just about every different angle, and when sound hits them, they bounce every but back to the source, hence, little to no echo.
Curtains help absorb sound waves, whereas sound waves bounce off solid walls, so a curtained room will be more quiet.
No because sound travels by vibrating the air. When the vibrations hit the inside of the bottle, they bounce off of the walls for a while, and will eventually lose momentum and their effect.
Yes Sound waves bounce off walls
The Walls We Bounce Off Of was created in 1994.
An echo happens when sound waves bounce off an object. That's why if you scream into a hollow cave, there is an echo. Because the sound waves bounce off the walls and back at you
Sound waves travel in airThey bounce off of pretty much everythingIn an empty room they bounce off walls and create a echo
Because the sounds bounce off of walls.
It absorbs sound so there is not an echo. Without them, the sound would bounce off the walls and would sound bad
sound waves bounce off of walls. they need air to travel.
Sounds seems to echo in an empty room because the sound has only six surfaces to bounce off of. When the sound waves bounce, they bounce right back to the source. However, when there is furniture, pictures, and other objects placed in a room, those surfaces contain just about every different angle, and when sound hits them, they bounce every but back to the source, hence, little to no echo.
Curtains help absorb sound waves, whereas sound waves bounce off solid walls, so a curtained room will be more quiet.
Curtains help absorb sound waves, whereas sound waves bounce off solid walls, so a curtained room will be more quiet.
No because sound travels by vibrating the air. When the vibrations hit the inside of the bottle, they bounce off of the walls for a while, and will eventually lose momentum and their effect.
Yes. Echolocation works by bouncing waves off of objects. A sound proof room would not allow sound to escape but there are still walls in the room to allow a bat's echolocation to bounce off of and back to the bat.