Sound can travel through any material, air, liquid or solid It cannot travel through a vacuum. Sound is a vibration on an audible level, or frequency. It requires matter to continue, without matter the vibration has nothing to continue through and will reflect back and forth in what matter is present until it dissipates.
Sound travels through all matter.
Sound travels through a medium, which can be solid, liquid, or gas. In solids, sound waves travel the fastest, followed by liquids, and then gases. In space, where there is no medium, sound cannot travel.
it travels through sound
window, because sound travels fastest through solids, liquids second, and gases last.
Sound travels because of the sound waves.
Sound travels as a wave through a medium, such as air, water, or solids. The vibrations of particles in the medium create pressure changes that propagate as sound waves.
Gases
When you hit a drum the skin vibrates creating a sound wave which travels through the air.
Sound travels fastest through solid materials because the particles are tightly packed, allowing the vibrations to pass quickly through the medium. Examples of solid materials where sound travels fastest include metals like steel and iron.
Sound is a compression wave that travels via then vibrations of particles. If the particles are closer together then the wave (sound) moves faster. Particles are closer together in a liquid than a gas, therefore sound travels faster through liquids.
In solids, sound travels through the vibration of molecules in a compressional wave. In liquids, sound also travels through compressional waves but with less resistance to movement compared to solids. In gases, sound travels through the propagation of pressure waves created by vibrating molecules.
Sound is affected by the media. It travels high speed in solids generally.