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Sound is produced when an object moves or vibrates. Without movement there could be no sound. When an object moves or vibrates, the air molecules around the object also vibrate. Vibrating objects (as long as they are not in a vacuum) produce sound.
Sound travels through a medium such as a solid or liquid, and it moves when the air vibrates and hits an object.
A high-pitched sound results when a string or a column of air vibrates rapidly.
Sound is produced due to vibration. Sound needs medium such as air to travel. When an object vibrates, it sets neighbouring particles of medium to vibrate. These particles oscillate back and forth and reach our ears.
The oscillation of the rubber as it vibrates - forces the air around it to vibrate also. This is the sound we hear.
Sound is produced when an object moves or vibrates. Without movement there could be no sound. When an object moves or vibrates, the air molecules around the object also vibrate. Vibrating objects (as long as they are not in a vacuum) produce sound.
Sound travels through a medium such as a solid or liquid, and it moves when the air vibrates and hits an object.
A sound is produced in a wind instrument when a column of air vibrates inside a tube.A sound is produced when a column of air vibrates inside a tube.
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We need sound to send information to our ears and brain. Sound is produced when an object vibrates. The air molecules around the object also vibrate. As long as vibrating objects are not in a vacuum they produce sound. So watch your ears.
A high-pitched sound results when a string or a column of air vibrates rapidly.
Sound is produced due to vibration. Sound needs medium such as air to travel. When an object vibrates, it sets neighbouring particles of medium to vibrate. These particles oscillate back and forth and reach our ears.
Sound is the periodic compression and rarefaction of a medium, this change being produced by a vibrating object or other medium mass. If something vibrates, it starts vibrating the air around at the same speed. These vibrations are transmitted through the medium and sound is produced. Basically, something shakes the air (or water or whatever) back and forth. The shaking gets passed on to all of the air (or whatever) around it, which causes times of higher and lower pressure with a regular rhythm.
It's a common misperception that the body of the guitar vibrates to create the sound. Actually it the column of sound around the guitar and in the guitar which vibrates to create the sound. When you vibrate the strings, the air around it vibrates causing the air in the guitar to vibrate.
The guitar string vibrates; this vibration is transmitted to the air as sound.
When you hit it, the triangle vibrates, and the air around it vibrates. The air particles closest to it vibrates, then the air particles next to the first ones start vibrating as well and so on, so it reaches your ear. From liam514 if u have any other questions tell me and i will answer them as best as i can.
The oscillation of the rubber as it vibrates - forces the air around it to vibrate also. This is the sound we hear.