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Q: What happens to molecules when a sound collides with them?
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What happens to molecules of an object when the temperature rises?

when the temperature rises the molecules of an object collides even more faster and also its moves around faster.


What happens to molecules when a sound is sent through them?

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Describe how sound waves travel through matter?

Sort of like the set up chain reaction of dominoes. One falls, collides with the one next to it, which falls and collides with another and so on. Energy is transported along with many of them, before it eventually disappates into something else. The dominoes would be analogous with matter in this case; atoms, molecules etc.


What can a sound move through more quicker?

Sound is transmitted by the molecules in a substance jiggling back and forth and passing on this energy to the molecules next to them. This happens the quickest when the molecules are closest together, which is a property of solids. The molecules in solids are packed in closer than they are in liquids and much more so than in gases, so sound travels much faster in solids.


What happens durring a chemical reaction?

During any chemical reaction there will be a spontaneous motion of each atoms/ molecules, and all atoms/ molecules collides with each other, on each collision there will be a microscopic interaction, and, there will be a rearrangement in electronic configuration when a low energy or "symmetry" can be obtained. Due to this reconfiguration the spatial arrangement and motion of atoms/molecules changes which is what we observe.


When a bowling ball collides with a bowling pin what happens to the force?

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