the loudness of sound depends on the amplitude of the waves that compose it, i.e. the difference in pressure between the crest and the trough of the wave.
The loudness of a sound depends on the amplitude of the sound wave. A higher amplitude corresponds to a louder sound. The human perception of loudness also depends on the frequency of the sound wave and the sensitivity of the human ear.
Loudness is the property of sound that describes our awareness of the energy of a sound. It is subjective and depends on the amplitude of the sound wave.
The amplitude of sound waves is what humans perceive as loudness.
LOUDNESS
The 'Loudness' of a sound wave is dependent on its Amplitude, hence why we have 'amplifiers' to increase the volume of something.
The loudness of a sound depends on the amplitude of the sound waves, which is related to the intensity or power of the sound source. It also depends on the distance between the sound source and the listener, as sound waves lose intensity as they travel through space.
Depends on what "these" are. It is amplitude
No, the amplitude of a sound wave determines its intensity, not its perceived loudness. Loudness is subjective and depends on the sensitivity of the human ear to different frequencies at different sound pressure levels.
No. A sound's pitch depends on the frequency of the wave.
It depends on how big your shlt is. ~signed~ YOMOMMA!
By its amplitude. Really loudness is sound intensity & intensity depends on square of amplitude ie. higher the amplitude higher the intensity which means higher the loudness.
The amplitude of the sound waves. (the distance it makes the particles move)