It wont
No.
sound waves are merely a figmunt of our imagination. they cannot be found. but if they could be found vin would be the one
PLATO USERS! They would not travel, because here is no medium present.
There is no limiting distance. But just like in any other medium, the sound generally spreads out and its amplitude decreases as it proceeds farther, so there's some distance past which you can't detect it any more, and to all appearances, you would say that the sound has not traveled any further than that. The distance depends on the substance, and on the amplitude of the sound at its source. (Sound waves that originate in thunder travel many miles through the ground. Sound waves that originate in earthquakes travel many hundreds, or thousands, of miles through rock.)
By modulating the light you can send signals, they would need to be electronically translated to be heard as sound.
sonar is used, to steer a vessel because sound waves are emitted around the vessel. Then the sound waves are traveled back to the vessel. If the sound waves are block by an object, it will tell the vessel.
Sound waves are what make up sound (sound waves=sound) so I would suppose so.
They would likely have much less of an impact than real ocean waves do. As it is, the only compressional waves that can move through water are sound waves, as water is, of the most part, incompressible, as are most liquids and solids.
Because sound waves are displacements of molecules of the medium they travel through, reducing the amplitude would mean decreasing the displacement the molecules experience as the wave passes through. Even though sound waves are longitudinal (meaning the displacement is in the direction the wave travels in) and waves in water are transversal (the displacement is perpendicular to the wave's direction), an example can be found in water waves; reducing the amplitude in water waves would reduce the size/height of the waves. In the case of audible sound waves reducing the amplitude will decrease the volume of the sound.
we would die
Sound waves are the sound. The waves cause vibrations in the objects that they collide with, and then the vibrated objects create more waves with their vibrations. An example of this would be listening to someone on the other side of a door.
Sound waves can't travel through space.
No.
Sound waves travel the fastest through nonporous solids.
they would swell upn and die
Then a human would arrive at an asteroid.
ahhh well if there was no such thing as sound waves everyone would ahh be deaf!