Depends entirely on which country, state, province etc.
Over 100 feet away it's the law
In Utah I think the law says 50 feet.
The Conservation of Energy or power Law. This gives the inverse distance law of Intensity: Intensity on Earth = intensity on sun (radius/sun distance to earth)2 .
no you cannot park on a dropped curb, you can have your car towed away,
Hubble's Law states that (more or less) the distance to a galaxy is a constant multiple of the distance to that galaxy. For example, if one galaxy is moving away from us at three times the speed of another galaxy, then that means it is also three times as far away. The Law indicates that the Universe is expanding and had a beginning. Before Hubble's Law, many astronomers thought that the Universe did not have a beginning (it always existed).
Build a wall around the noise source. Go far away from the sound source. Measure the sound pressure level at the distance where your ear is and learn about the inverse distance law 1/r. Scroll down to related links and look at "The inverse distance law 1/r".
The first place Montag stops as he is running away from the law is the home of Professor Faber, an old English professor he once met in a park.
Well, it has to follow the inverse square law, so that as distance increases, the sound intensity drops by the square of the proportionate change in distance. The intensity will be 1/16 at 4 times the distance.
Build a wall around the noise source. Go far away from the sound source. Install accoustic insulation. Learn to use the inverse distance law 1/r. Scroll down to related links and look at "The inverse distance law 1/r".
The sound pressure decreases with distance r in a free field (direct field). The next question is. How does the sound decrease with increasing distance? After which law? Answer: The sound pressure p diminishes with distance after the 1/r law. Sound pressure decreases inversely as the distance increases with 1/r from the sound source. The Sound pressure level (SPL) decreases by (−)6 dB per doubling of distance from the source to 1/2 (50 %) of the sound pressure initial value. Sometimes it is said, that the sound decreases with with 1/r², the inverse square law. That is really wrong. Scroll down to related links and look at "Damping of sound level with distance".
Although municipalities, each have their own restrictions, the normal law is fifteen feet.
There is no such thing. You must start in a traditional accredited law program. The American Bar Association does not look favorably upon distance education, and there are no accredited distance law programs.