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The sound of a sonic boom is the engine noise and vibration of the aircraft, only greatly amplified. Sound is a reverberating pressure wave that travels through air at a constant rate. Sound waves move away from the plane in all directions as it travels, but at the speed of sound these pressure waves at the nose can't get clear of the plane and so begin to 'stack' together, resulting in a much stronger wave and an extremely loud noise. O> = the plane ( ( ) ) = sound waves at rest: ( ( ( ( O> ) ) ) ) Subsonic flight: Sound in front is a higher frequency ( ( ( O> ) ) ) ) ) ) Sonic boom: Sounds can no longer escape directly in front ( ( ( O>) Supersonic flight: Plane is outrunning its own sound () ) ) )() ) ) )() ) ) )( O>
Sound energy is sound. W/o any sound energy there's nothing to hear. With too much sound energy, it's loud enough to be painful, maybe even damaging.
mabey 0.o ----
"t-h-e s-o-u-n-d o-f s-t-a-t-i-c"
The word piano has a long E, a short A, and a long O (pee-ah-noh). It can also be pronounced with a Y, short A, and long O (pyah-noh).
you go closer to the bridge or farther in order to sound different octaves. ( o Y o )
The vowel sound in "hog" is a short "o" sound.
The O has a long O (oh) sound, as in bold and gold.
The first O has a long O sound and the second O has a short O sound.
No, "note" does not have a short "a" sound. It has a long "o" sound.
The first O has a long O sound and the second O has a short O sound.
no it is a long o sound
A short 'o' sound
Yes,it does have a short (o) sound
It has a long O (oh) sound, as in no and so.
No. It has a short O (ah) sound, and rhymes with locket and pocket.
No, the O in out (of outside) is part of the diphthong OU which is an OW sound and not the same as the short O. Words like "dot" and "got" have a short O sound. The OU/OW sound in "outside" is the same as the vowel sound in "sound", "doubt", "down", "foul", and "how".