Electromagnet radiation must be converted to mechanical movement within the range of audio (20-20khz) to be heard.
That would be the tympanic membrane!!
Yes, this happens all the time with communications. As radio and microwaves from mobile phones and radios are a form of the EM spectrum, which are converted into sound waves in the form of a person speaking or a song playing.
Sound waves are what make up sound (sound waves=sound) so I would suppose so.
Sound waves are longitudinal waves; they travel from side to side, not up and down like transverse waves.
it amplifies the sound actually, by strengthening the waves. the sound waves are converted into equivalent electrical waves and then it amplifies and later those electrical waves are converted the sound waves . the principle of electromagnetic induction is applied here.
it amplifies the sound actually, by strengthening the waves. the sound waves are converted into equivalent electrical waves and then it amplifies and later those electrical waves are converted the sound waves . the principle of electromagnetic induction is applied here.
Sound waves are detected by the fact that the waves can cause objects to vibrate. The vibrations from the sound waves must be converted into a signal and then amplified and processed. Your ear and a microphone are common detectors of sound.
Sound waves enter the microphone and are then converted to an analog electric current.
AM transmitters convert sound into amplitude modulated radio waves which am radios convert into electrical pulses which speakers convert into air waves that are converted into sound by our eardrum.
Sound waves are converted to mechanical vibrations within the middle ear with the impact of the cilia on the fluid chambers acting as conductive membranes. The brain then interprets this as specific sounds.
Electrical energy gets converted to sound energy. When we speak into the speaker, our sound waves get converted into electrical signals. These signals get amplified and emitted as louder sound. Thus, electrical energy (electrical signals) gets converted into sound energy (amplified/louder sound).
Electromagnet radiation must be converted to mechanical movement within the range of audio (20-20khz) to be heard.
0.5 mm/s
That would be the tympanic membrane!!
A sound system works by converting sound waves into electrical energy. The electrical energy is then converted back into solid energy that results in sound.
First forget the energyy. Our ears and the microphone diaphragms are sensors which are moved by the sound pressure (not by energy). The acoustical sound waves are converted to electrical voltage waves.