Receiving sound waves is the process by which sound travels in form of waves and is received by our eardrums to be heard.
I'm told: clear still weather, a popping feeling in your eardrums and a strange colour in the daylight from the surrounding tall clouds. Get back under shelter.
Yes an organism can be classifed as a person but it can be many other things to besides a person.
Because thunder is just sound, unless it is loud enough to burst your eardrums nothing harmful can really happen to you. After Lightning there's thunder, the speed of light is faster then the speed of sound.
It will vary from person to person, but essentially the technology does not exist at this time to determine an exact number.
A grasshopper has two very tinsy eardrums. this helps them to hear their enemies coming from behind. The same as us we have two eardrums to hear.
They have 3 eardrums.
That depends on the test person. Some eardrums pop when the sound pressure is more than 130 dBSPL. That hurts very much.
nô they do not have small eardrums.
The vibrations caused by sound waves onto your eardrums are pressure compressions and rarefactions.
amplifys sound
Tympanic membranes-- essentially 'eardrums' much like the eardrums deep inside our human ears. Frogs don't have external pinnae (ears) like we do, but you do see their eardrums right there on the side of the head.
It breaks your eardrums.
sound vibrations
No. If anything, you would burst your eardrums, thereby releasing the pressure and giving you one terrible headache.
They rupture their eardrums. Period.
your eardrums take in vibrations from the air...