The sound of an F22 fighter jet buzz by at just over 2000 miles per hour..... faster than an ak47 being shot. As the jet flys by you the sound from the speed barrier being broken can cause your ear hair to break
the ear drum Answer: Harmful sounds cause damage to the hair cells as well as the auditory nerve
No only loud noises will damage your ear drum.
You will go deaf by that ear.
The "hairs" inside an ear of corn are corn silk.
Yes. Sound is measured by decibels. It is safe to only hear 65 decibels or less. If sound is higher than 65 decibels, it can 95.6% damage your eardrums. Listening to music through your headphones at highest volume from an mp3 or an iPhone is considered 82 decibels. Listening to a concert is considered 167 decibels. A blue whale is 300+. :)
It is due to the sensitive hairs found in your ear. This causes noises to vibrate, where we are able to hear them. As we age, are hairs lose their once youthful strength, and some high pitched noises are difficult to hear.
the ear drum Answer: Harmful sounds cause damage to the hair cells as well as the auditory nerve
Trim the ear hair frequently.
Your ear contains a thin membrane that vibrates when sound waves hit it. The louder the sound the more the membrane vibrates. Just like a drum skin the ear drum can burst if vibrated too much. The bones in the inner ear are filled with fluid and lined with tiny hairs. The vibration of sound waves moves this liquid and applies pressure to the hairs which your brain interprets as sound. If these tiny hairs are damaged due to excessive noise it can reduce hearing significantly. Anything above 80 decibels can cause hearing loss.
The stirrup hits the cochlea and it sends waves through the liquid inside of it. These waves move the tiny hairs at the start of the auditory nerve. The hairs use the auditory nerve to make a cricket noise in your ear to send the vibrations to the brain.
a
No only loud noises will damage your ear drum.
if loud noises hurt your ear you may have an inner ear infection, have you been to the doctor lately?
That depends on the directionality of our pinna (ear cup) which is front localisation.
By listening to loud noises frequently.
The ear canal is normally skin-colored and is covered with tiny hairs
Tiny hairs in your ear conduct vibration and convey that to your brain