Solids.
Sound waves travel through a medium, such as air, water, or solids. In air, sound waves create vibrations that travel through molecules in the form of pressure waves. These waves carry the sound energy and allow the sound to be heard by our ears.
Yes.
Sound waves can travel through solids, liquids, and gases.
Sound waves can travel through mediums such as air, water, and solids.
Sound waves travel through a medium, such as air, water, or solids.
Sound travels slowest through gas, as molecules are farther apart compared to liquids and solids, leading to decreased speed of sound waves passing through.
Sound waves cannot travel through vaccum.
Sound waves require a medium to travel through, and, since space is a vacuum, sound waves can't travel in it.
Sound waves will travel through gases, liquids, and solids. Sound waves cannot pass through a vacuum.
Sound waves travel through air as fluctuations in pressure caused by vibrating objects. When sound waves reach our ears, they cause our eardrums to vibrate, which our brain interprets as sound. Sound waves lose energy as they travel through air, which is why sounds become quieter the farther away we are from the source.
Sound waves do not travel through a vacuum. They require a medium, such as air, water, or solids, to propagate. In a vacuum, there are no particles for the sound waves to interact with and thus cannot travel.
Sound waves travel through a medium such as air, water, or solid materials.