It vibrates.
The sound goes into your ear and through the eardrum.
No, the ear canal and the eardrum are different structures in the ear. The ear canal is a tube that carries sound to the eardrum, a thin layer of tissue that vibrates in response to sound waves. The eardrum separates the outer ear from the middle ear.
No, there is no hair on the eardrum. The eardrum is a thin membrane located in the middle ear that vibrates in response to sound waves, transmitting them to the inner ear. Hair cells in the inner ear, not the eardrum, convert these vibrations into electrical signals that the brain interprets as sound.
to transmit sound entering the outer ear to the bones of the middle ear
The outer ear collects and funnels sound waves to the eardrum, where vibrations are carried into the middle ear.
The ear canal collects sound waves and funnels them towards the eardrum, which vibrates in response to the sound waves. These vibrations are then transmitted to the tiny bones in the middle ear, which amplify the sound and send it to the inner ear for processing.
Sounds entering the ear canal through the air as sound pressure variations come to the eardrum and are send to the cochlea of the inner ear.
Because there is an eardrum in between the outer ear and inner ear, there is no way for it to get right into your brain. There is no tube that goes all the way in.
it creates gaps in the air and then goes to your ear
The eardrum is not permeable; it is a thin membrane that separates the outer ear from the middle ear. Its function is to transmit sound vibrations to the middle ear ossicles.
Yes, sound waves are collected by the outer ear and travel through the ear canal to the eardrum. When the eardrum vibrates in response to these sound waves, it sends these vibrations to the middle ear and then to the inner ear, where they are converted into electrical signals that are processed by the brain as sound.
Because it hurts and it breaks your eardrum when something such as a stick goes in your ear