It does; sound will be transmitted through any medium, be it solid, liquid or gas. The sound might be attenuated through long distances, but we don't generally have large volumes of milk in which to test.
Sound can pass through any state of matter.
There is no "why". Sound passes through glass quite easily.
No, sound cannot pass through a vacuum because sound requires a medium, such as air, water, or a solid material, to travel through. In a vacuum, there are no particles for sound waves to propagate through, so they cannot travel.
Bovine tuberculosis is the most notorious disease spread through unpasteurized milk.
no
Yes, small amounts of gluten can pass through breast milk to infants when consumed by breastfeeding mothers.
Breast milk is a secretion and you do not get the infection through the breast milk. Though this can happen rarely. As anything is possible in biology.
Yes, sound can pass through a balloon filled with air. The sound waves will travel through the air inside the balloon and vibrate the balloon's surface, creating sound on the other side.
Sound energy cannot pass through opaque objects as they block the transmission of sound waves. Opaque objects do not allow sound waves to propagate through them, unlike transparent or translucent objects.
Sound waves will travel through gases, liquids, and solids. Sound waves cannot pass through a vacuum.
yes, there are enough dissolved salts in milk to conduct some current.
No.