If there was a vacuum gap.
Sound DOES travel faster in solids than in gases. The higher the density of the medium, the faster the sound travels.
The sound not travel through vacuum because sound need a medium to travel.
Sound needs a medium through which to travel. It will not travel in a vacuum.
Yes. Because sound is nothing but a mechanical wave. So it could pass through solid.
sound waves bounce off of walls. they need air to travel.
sound cant travel on an asteroid because it has no atmosphere. it could travel through it.
Sound is a pressure wave. Objects that "allow" sound to travel through them could be called wave guides.
Sound DOES travel faster in solids than in gases. The higher the density of the medium, the faster the sound travels.
No matter what you do to either of them, light is always going to travel at least several hundred times as fast as sound, and most generally about 800 thousand times as fast as sound. Sound will never travel faster than light, in any situation.
Yes, sound could travel in any medium as long at it contains particles. That means it could travel in the three states, liquid, solid and air.
For propagation of sound only a material medium is enough and not light. So it could travel thorugh darkness
Sound (and vibration) are a wave system of sequential compressions and rarefactions of a material. These waves are mechanical and do need a substance through which to travel. They cannot travel through a vacuum.
Yes, sound is a longitudinal wave, transverse waves could not travel on the surface without gravity.
Could it be that the frequency of sound waves are to low?
The sound not travel through vacuum because sound need a medium to travel.
You have the ability to shout, but sound can't travel in space.
Sound requires a medium to travel