Sound travels by making pressure waves. The wave travels through the substance at various speeds, depending how hard the substance is.
In vacuum there is no pressure, so sound cannot travel.
Sound is something that travels in waves and we hear with our ears.
The scientific name for the medium through which sound travels is "material" or "medium". Sound waves need a material medium to propagate, such as air, water, or solid objects.
The substance through which something travels is called a medium. This could refer to air, water, or any other material that allows for the transmission of sound, light, or waves.
No, not quite. The sound travels at the speed of sound to your ear.
Sound travels in waves like light or heat does, but unlike them, sound travels by making molecules vibrate. So, in order for sound to travel, there has to be something with molecules for it to travel through. On Earth, sound travels to your ears by vibrating air molecules. In deep space, the large empty areas between stars and planets, there are no molecules to vibrate. There is no sound there.
Sound travels in waves.
Something must vibrate, to make the air (or whatever else the sound travels through) vibrate.
Sound travels through all matter.
Why sound travels easily in rainy day
Sound travels at around this speed in air.It's possible that you are thinking of something else that could travel at this speed, but sound was the first thing that I thought of.
Sound travels as a wave through a medium, such as air, water, or solids. The vibrations of particles in the medium create pressure changes that propagate as sound waves.
it travels through sound