Yes.
The amplitude of sound waves is associated with the loudness of the sound. A larger amplitude produces a louder sound, while a smaller amplitude produces a quieter sound.
Loudness and amplitude are directly related in the context of sound waves. Amplitude refers to the height of a sound wave, which determines its loudness. A greater amplitude results in a louder sound, while a smaller amplitude produces a quieter sound.
The amplitude of a sound wave is related to its intensity, which determines the loudness of the sound. Sound waves with greater amplitude produce louder sounds, while sound waves with smaller amplitude produce softer sounds.
The amplitude determines the loudness of a sound wave.
The property of waves responsible for loudness is amplitude. The higher the amplitude of a wave, the louder the sound produced. Amplitude determines the intensity or strength of a sound wave, which our ears perceive as loudness.
Yes, the loudness of a sound is determined by the amplitude of the sound waves. A higher amplitude corresponds to a louder sound, while a lower amplitude corresponds to a quieter sound.
The amplitude of sound waves is what humans perceive as loudness.
The amplitude of a sound wave determines its loudness. Higher amplitude waves produce louder sounds, while lower amplitude waves produce quieter sounds. The intensity of the sound wave, which is related to the amplitude, also affects how loud a sound is perceived.
LOUDNESS
Depends on what "these" are. It is amplitude
The loudness of a sound (or intensity) corresponds to the sound wave's amplitude. The amplitude of a wave is the distance from the midpoint of the wave to a high-point (crest) or low-point (trough).
The amplitude of sound waves determines the loudness or volume of sound perceived by the human ear. Higher amplitude sound waves are perceived as louder, while lower amplitude sound waves are perceived as softer.