either the vitreous humor or aqueous humor
cilia
The eardrum is the first thing that vibrates in response to vibrating air or "sound". The cochlea is the last step in the process, and instead of vibrating it is filled with fluid that moves in response to vibration on a small window on the side. This moves the cochlear fluid and then is transferred to the brain through small hairs inside the organ. Three tiny bones (Malleus, Incus, and Stapes) transfer the vibration from the eardrum to the cochlea.
When a fly touches one of the tiny hairs, the trap automatically gets triggered to shut.
cillilate
the cells which receive the signal receive "mechanical stimulation". As fluid waves, propagated when sound waves interact with the ear, travel through the cochlea tiny hairs are moved, smaller/stiffer hairs moved = higher pitch, longer/looser hairs moved = lower pitch.
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The inner ear or the cochlea
the tiny hairs are called CILIA
Since butterflies are a type of insect, they do not have fur. They may however have hairs.
The cochlea is not a bone. It is a fluid filled tube in the ear that has tiny hairs. When a vibration, or sound, travels through the cochlea, the hairs move, which triggers nerves connected to the base of each hair to send a signal to the brain, allowing us to perceive sounds. However, there are two tiny bones in the ear which transmit vibrations from the eardrum to the cochlea. These bones are referred to as the hammer, the anvil and the stirrup.
Cochlea i think
cilia
Tiny hairs in your ear conduct vibration and convey that to your brain
The walls of the hollow cochlea are made of bone, with a thin, delicate lining of epithelial tissue.
Your vestibular apparatus in your inner ear helps you maintain balance by tiny hairs that get stimulated in a aqueous fluid due to gravity and acceleration.
Your vestibular apparatus in your inner ear helps you maintain balance by tiny hairs that get stimulated in a aqueous fluid due to gravity and acceleration.
cilia