Length of the string, thickness of the string, tautness of the string.
It is a deeper sound, a lower note.
That just depends on the sound you want. If u just want each string to be the proper sound apart just play the fifth string of the deeper string than the one ur tuning and tune it to sound the same. That just depends on the sound you want. If u just want each string to be the proper sound apart just play the fifth string of the deeper string than the one ur tuning and tune it to sound the same.
Yes, it is. The viola is slightly larger than a violin and has a slightly deeper sound.
When you pluck a thick string the sound the guitar makes comes out deeper then it does when you pluck a thin string.
The double bass is called so because it is the largest and lowest-pitched instrument in the string family, providing a "double" or deeper bass sound compared to other string instruments.
sound is able to travel along a string by something thats called sound waves! The vibration from a voice/sound , it travels along the string until it comes in contact with an ending point with is anoth cup or aboject whwich allows you to hear the sound
Well, the vibrations from the strings would have more room to vibrate in the body, thus producing a deeper sound.
In bow hunting - for silencing the sound of the bowstring getting released
Pluck the string with your finger or with anything (like a pick or the hammer of a piano) and it will cause the string to vibrate at a frequency which is determined by the thickness of the string and the length of the string (which is a fixed length on a piano, but is determined by where you fret (push down on with your fingertip) the string on instruments like guitars and violins. The frequency of the vibration determines the note... since sound IS vibration.
Yes, sound can pass through a string. When a string is plucked or strummed, it creates vibrations that travel through the string and create sound waves in the surrounding air. The sound waves produced by the vibrating string can then be heard by our ears.
the simplified answer is that when the string is plucked or the bow is pulled across the string(s), it cause the string(s) to vibrate. The length and thickness of the string as well as the resonance of the instrument determines the wavelength and therefore determines the pitch of the sound produced. other factors that can affect the sound are the material the string is made of as well as the material of the instrument itself.
When the hammer inside a piano hits the string, it creates a sound. The pitch of the sound depends on how thick or long the string is. The thicker the string, the lower the sound.