Silence is a lack of noise there would be no sound.
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∙ 8y agoLoudness level LN is measured in phons and the Loudness N is measured in sones. Scroll down to related links and use the fine converter "Loudness level and loudness".
Decibels can compare loudness
yes it is a unit of loudness
Loudness depends on the amplitude. square of amplitude is proportional to the loudness. Pitch is decided by the frequency. One can sing at higher pitch but at lower voice.
Units used to measure loudness are Sone (loudness N) and Phon (loudness level L). Scroll down to related links and look at "Loudness - Wikipedia" and "Sound level change and the change of the respective factor of volume and loudness"
In a silent room
a silent room if it isn't silent i get my ipod and play funky music
Volume in communication is the loudness of how you are speaking to a person whether it be really silent so the person cannot hear you, or whether it is to loud almost so that you are shouting.
Loudness level LN is measured in phons and the Loudness N is measured in sones. Scroll down to related links and use the fine converter "Loudness level and loudness".
Yes. But they have to be silent the whole time.
In an instant the lights went out and the room was silent.
It isn't louder (loudness has to do with intensity, and a small whistle can't generate that much intensity), it's a higher frequency. In the range that is inaudible to humans.
Volume in communication is the loudness of how you are speaking to a person whether it be really silent so the person cannot hear you, or whether it is to loud almost so that you are shouting.
Units used to measure loudness are Sone (loudness N) and Phon (loudness level L). Scroll down to related links and look at "Loudness - Wikipedia" and "Sound level change and the change of the respective factor of volume and loudness"
Units used to measure loudness are Sone (loudness N) and Phon (loudness level L). Scroll down to related links and look at "Loudness - Wikipedia" and "Sound level change and the change of the respective factor of volume and loudness".
yes it is a unit of loudness
Decibels can compare loudness