casue of the wind hitting the car
Yes it does because you are not able to concentrate if there is to much noise.
Speed Intensity Loudness Frequency Pitch :)
No. The amplitude of the sound (and therefore its loudness) will decrease at greater distances; the speed will remain constant (assuming other factors, such as the density of air and the temperature, are constant).
Pitch of sound in air does not affect the speed of sound.The speed of sound in air is also not affected by atmospheric pressure.Temperature does affect the speed of sound in air.Similar statements are not true for liquids or solids. It stops being true for gasses when pressure and temperature are near the point that the gas will liquify.
frequency,wavelength,amplitude,sound pressure,sound intensity,speed of sound,and direction
The speed of sound is slower at higher altitudes because the air temperature is lower. The greater the amplitude, the louder the sound. It is your perception of the energy of a sound. What two factors affect the loudness of a sound
The loudness of the sound has no effect on its speed.
Sound is caused by a vibration of the leaves. Depending on the shape and stiffness of the leaves, the sound will sound different. Also the speed of the wind will affect the loudness and pitch of the sound.
Sound is caused by a vibration of the leaves. Depending on the shape and stiffness of the leaves, the sound will sound different. Also the speed of the wind will affect the loudness and pitch of the sound.
For the sound to fade away is Diminuendo (Dim.) (that goes for loudness and speed). For just the loudness (dynamics) is a decrescendo (decresc.). For just speed, it is a ritardando (rit.)
Yes it does because you are not able to concentrate if there is to much noise.
Speed Intensity Loudness Frequency Pitch :)
Loudness is the quality of a sound that is the primary psychological correlate of physical strength or amplitude. I think you want to know the difference in sound pressure. In a solid body the speed of sound is faster than in air.
Exceeding the sound barrier refers to speed of travel, not loudness of sound. A speaker cannot "exceed the sound barrier".
The four elements of voice are pitch (frequency of sound), volume (loudness or softness of sound), tone (quality of sound), and pace (speed of speaking).
No. The amplitude of the sound (and therefore its loudness) will decrease at greater distances; the speed will remain constant (assuming other factors, such as the density of air and the temperature, are constant).
Temperature, coefficient of restitution, density are some of the factors that affect the speed of sound in a medium.