It is loud because police and fire stations want everyone to be safe if a tornado warning in issued. It is basically a warning for people.
The loud croaking noise (weee onngg weee onngg) has no direct spelling. But the familar high-pitched sound of a siren (police, fire, or ambulance) is referred to as a "wail" and the alternating pitch version as a "warble".
Hertz are a frquency, so if you have 1 hertz it is 1 hertz/second if you have 2 hertz =2 hertz second and so on, so a Intel processor at 2.4ghz would be 2.4 billion hertz a second.
depends on the siren... but about 4-10kW is average
The sound waves in front of the siren bunch up, and those behind the siren spread out.
No
Hertz measures the pitch, the tone of a sound, not how loud it is.
It means you are loud and red!!
a loud siren
A tornado alarm or tornado siren is a loud siren found in some tornado prone areas that sounds when a tornado warning is issued.
The correct spelling is siren (a loud, high-pitched blaring alarm).
The emergency sound made by ambulances is produced by a siren.
It is loud because police and fire stations want everyone to be safe if a tornado warning in issued. It is basically a warning for people.
yes and no it depends if your talking about humans or about an animal. perhaps a dolphin.
Typically, it's a ringing bell which tend to be quite loud, or a distinct siren/klaxon.
The danger of being subjected to aerial bombardment .
When it dived to launch it's bomb, a small air powered siren came on.