Materials that are able to transmit sound well includes solid. This is because the molecules within solids are closer together.
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∙ 9y agoYes, Sound can go through water. And it is also pretty amzing too!!! Sound can travel through water quite well, even more efficiently than through air. This is because sound is a wave that requires a medium for its transmission, and the higher the density of the medium, the greater the efficiency of transmission. "Efficiency" for this discussion means that the overall amplitude (strength) of the sound is not diminished. However, it should also be understood that sound, as we know it, is comprised of many different frequencies, some higher and some lower. Not all of these will retain their same relative amplitude as they transmit through different materials. So the sound you hear underwater will be different than the sound we are accustomed to hearing through the air. Water is denser than air, so it will transmit sound more efficiently than air. Also understand that sound traveling through air loses much of its original energy (loudness) because air is a relatively poor medium through which to transmit sound. Likewise, since water is so much better, the same sound will seem louder under water. But it is not louder. It just retains more of its original energy. This is why tapping your fingers on an aquarium is not such a good idea. It creates a sound in the water that is much louder than the tapping sound you hear through the air, and which causes great stress to the aquarium fish. Sound will not transmit through a vacuum.
It travels fastest through solids, slowest through gases, and liquids are in the middle.
Any matter can conduct sound reasonably well. Only empty space (not gas) is a poor conducter. As for speed, the more dense an object is, the faster sound travels through it. So sound travels much faster in a solid than a gas.
Electromagnetic waves, such as light, radio waves, and X-rays, do not require a medium to travel. These waves are able to propagate through a vacuum. In contrast, mechanical waves, like sound waves, do require a medium, as they rely on the vibration and movement of particles in a substance to transmit energy.
brick
Well in your eardrum there is a speaker
Sound waves transmit sound through a solid, as well as air and water. Sound waves cannot be transmitted through a vacuum.
There is no air in space and because of that, the noise it makes can not transmit elsewhere. The sound it makes is well noticeable inside the craft though. Sound moves through the materials the shuttle is built from and then it starts transmitting these sounds into the air on board, and this noise is very well audible. I am sorry to say, but I can not explain the sound it actually makes. maybe there is something on Nasa homepage regarding this.
Translucent materials transmit some light and scatter some as well.
It depends. Pure water do not conduct electric current; on the other hand, we consider tap and river water as a conductor because of the ions of the decomposed materials in the water. Water transmits electricity, heat, and sound very well, so it is a conductor. An insulator would not transmit electricity, heat, or sound well.
Sound travels faster through some solid because, in general, the particles are packed more closely together. This transfers the sound wave faster. Other solids do not transmit sound well at all.
Yes, Sound can go through water. And it is also pretty amzing too!!! Sound can travel through water quite well, even more efficiently than through air. This is because sound is a wave that requires a medium for its transmission, and the higher the density of the medium, the greater the efficiency of transmission. "Efficiency" for this discussion means that the overall amplitude (strength) of the sound is not diminished. However, it should also be understood that sound, as we know it, is comprised of many different frequencies, some higher and some lower. Not all of these will retain their same relative amplitude as they transmit through different materials. So the sound you hear underwater will be different than the sound we are accustomed to hearing through the air. Water is denser than air, so it will transmit sound more efficiently than air. Also understand that sound traveling through air loses much of its original energy (loudness) because air is a relatively poor medium through which to transmit sound. Likewise, since water is so much better, the same sound will seem louder under water. But it is not louder. It just retains more of its original energy. This is why tapping your fingers on an aquarium is not such a good idea. It creates a sound in the water that is much louder than the tapping sound you hear through the air, and which causes great stress to the aquarium fish. Sound will not transmit through a vacuum.
Materials that do not transfer mechanical energy well. These tend to be soft, flexible, low density, and with high surface area to linear area ratios. Open cell foams and fabrics are among the best at absorbing sound.
It travels fastest through solids, slowest through gases, and liquids are in the middle.
Any matter can conduct sound reasonably well. Only empty space (not gas) is a poor conducter. As for speed, the more dense an object is, the faster sound travels through it. So sound travels much faster in a solid than a gas.
carpets, curtains and wood are best at muffling sound carpets, curtains and wood are best at muffling sound
Well, it causes people to not be able to focus on what they're trying to do, obvvv.