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sound is a form of energy that can travel from one place to another .sounds are made when something vibrates.
An object vibrates to produce sound. So a soundmaking object is different from the one that is silent because it produces vibrations that the silent object does not.
The eardrums are like an omnidirectional microphone. The sound pressure vibrates the membrane (diaphragm) of the eardrum and the microphone only from one side.
Sound travels slow in gas because the molecules have space to move in so when one molecule vibrates the others can't because they are not close to eachother.
the frequency (think of it as the speed) that an object vibrates within a medium (generally air or water, but it could just as well be some other gas or liquid) determines the pitch of it's "sound".
one of the two structures that vibrates,producing sound
A reed is a thin slice of wood that is shaved and gradually gets thinner to one end. When you blow, it vibrates, producing the clarinet's sound.
There is no such thing as vibrates or non-vibrates. Vibration is a concept when dealing with sound waves. However, one may mean vertibrates and invertibrates. Vertibrates are those that have backbones and invertibrates do not.
It vibrates creating sound.
sound is a form of energy that can travel from one place to another .sounds are made when something vibrates.
one that vibrates and makes a noise! Ze art of trolling
Same way it travels through air; each molecule vibrates the one next to it which then vibrates the one next to (the new it) and so-on.
An object vibrates to produce sound. So a soundmaking object is different from the one that is silent because it produces vibrations that the silent object does not.
An object vibrates to produce sound. So a soundmaking object is different from the one that is silent because it produces vibrations that the silent object does not.
Well, when the pick plucks one of the strings, it vibrates. depending on how far down on the neck you are, the faster it vibrates. the magnetic pickups detect that very vibration and it goes into the amplifier and ta-da.
The eardrums are like an omnidirectional microphone. The sound pressure vibrates the membrane (diaphragm) of the eardrum and the microphone only from one side.
well when your finger is on one of the strings, you move it back and forth extremely quickly and you will get a nice vibrato sound, if you move it slow it wont sound as nice