Sound does not travel through a vacuum.
If the question is does sound travel in a vacuum. I believe the answer is no.
No, sound cannot travel through a vacuum because it requires a medium (such as air, water, or a solid material) to propagate. In the absence of a medium, there are no particles for the sound wave to travel through, so no one would be able to hear anything in a vacuum.
sound doesn't work a vacuum
No "space" is mostly a vacuum. No sound is transmitted in a vacuum. You would not hear a starship exploding either!
Space is vacuum, and sound can't travel in vacuum.
Nothing! Sound is wave and needs a medium to pass through in order to be heard !!!Nothing, because sound cannot travel in a vacuum.
No, sound cannot travel through the vacuum of space because it requires a medium, such as air or water, to propagate. Astronauts can hear inside their spacecrafts where there is air, but they cannot hear anything outside in the vacuum of space.
A vacuum is a space completely devoid of matter, including air particles. Sound needs a medium, such as air, to travel through. Without particles to transmit the sound waves, sound cannot be heard in a vacuum.
Because we can hear it. The medium air can tranport the sound. In a vacuum like on the moon that is not possible.
No. In a vacuum there is nothing for the sound waves to travel through.
Space is a Vacuum, consequently there are no atoms/particles to pass on the vibration a sound makes, so the sound cannot travel, and this is because space is a Vacuum.
One place where a person might actually expect to hear no sounds is in a vacuum. This is because sound waves only travel when there is matter (air in our case) present, and in a vacuum there is no matter. Outer space is another place one can expect to hear no sounds, though that is because it too, is mostly a vacuum.