1.water
2.any viscous fluid
3.dry air
4.cold season or low temperature
5.any medium having particles away from each other or if there is no interaction b/w particles of that medium
in stiff and not stiff mediums stiff mediums are too strong to let the sound wave molecules pass through, whereas less stiff mediums eventually leave the sound waves to loose energy as they pass through. the atmosphere would have to be just right from mediums, no more, no less.
Sound travels the same way through different mediums. Sound travels faster in denser mediums.
The speed of sound in a medium depends on the properties of the medium. Generally, sound travels faster in denser mediums, so sound at 30 c would travel faster than sound at 15 c. But without knowing the specific properties of the mediums, it is not possible to determine the exact speed difference.
Sure, sound travels in all mediums, it just can't travel through vacuum.
If the sound of Herbert's footsteps were quicker than usual, then he would possibly be bringing bad news.
in stiff and not stiff mediums stiff mediums are too strong to let the sound wave molecules pass through, whereas less stiff mediums eventually leave the sound waves to loose energy as they pass through. the atmosphere would have to be just right from mediums, no more, no less.
well, the first thing i think about, is you've got to have some sort of instrument. That would be your first medium. After that, you would need air, so that the vibrations from the instruments can move and mix.
Sound travels the same way through different mediums. Sound travels faster in denser mediums.
The speed of sound in a medium depends on the properties of the medium. Generally, sound travels faster in denser mediums, so sound at 30 c would travel faster than sound at 15 c. But without knowing the specific properties of the mediums, it is not possible to determine the exact speed difference.
vocal and instrumental are the basic two sound in music
Actually, sound travels slower under water than underground. Sound is a vibration in molecules that we perceive as noise. Water's molecules are rather loose compared to a solid's molecules, so it would travel slower underwater compared to traveling underground.
Sure, sound travels in all mediums, it just can't travel through vacuum.
See it- speed of light, then hear it- speed of sound is MUCH slower.
yes it can yes it can
because you suck at driving it
Well sound would travel the slowest - i.e not at all - in a vacuum. However, for simplistic terms, rubber is actually the slowest that sound will travel through of common objects. I don't know but something like sodium at 3K might be a lot slower.
If the sound of Herbert's footsteps were quicker than usual, then he would possibly be bringing bad news.