Sound is transmitted through the air to the eardrum as variations in pressure above and below ambient atmospheric pressure.
Sound is transmitted through water the same way it's transmitted through air -- by vibrations. Whatever is making the noise makes vibrations in the water, which then strike against your eardrum and vibrate it, and then the vibrations travel through some bones in your head to a bundle of nerves, which transmit the signal to your brain, which produces the sensation we call sound.
Sound waves are transmitted in this manner.
Sound is transmitted from a source to the surrounding air particles, which vibrate or collide and pass the sound energy along to our ears. Without any particles to vibrate we wouldn't hear the sound.
Sound can be transmitted through all mediums (liquid, solid, gaseous) except vacuum.
Sound is transmitted through the air to the eardrum as variations in pressure above and below ambient atmospheric pressure.
Sound waves transmit sound through a solid, as well as air and water. Sound waves cannot be transmitted through a vacuum.
Sound is transmitted from a source to the surrounding air particles, which vibrate or collide and pass the sound energy along to our ears. Without any particles to vibrate we wouldn't hear the sound.
sound is transmitted through echos.when sound inhibits diffraction i a medium eg air its wavelength increaes increasing the distance through which the wave is propergated
Sound is transmitted through water the same way it's transmitted through air -- by vibrations. Whatever is making the noise makes vibrations in the water, which then strike against your eardrum and vibrate it, and then the vibrations travel through some bones in your head to a bundle of nerves, which transmit the signal to your brain, which produces the sensation we call sound.
Sound travels faster when traveling through a headset than in plain air. The speed of sound in air is a little more than 1000 feet per second. Sound transmitted electronically through a headphone circuit travels much faster.
Sound waves are transmitted in this manner.
Sound is transmitted from a source to the surrounding air particles, which vibrate or collide and pass the sound energy along to our ears. Without any particles to vibrate we wouldn't hear the sound.
Sound creates waves in a material- compression waves. These waves are transmitted through the atoms/molecules in the material to the receiver. The denser a material is, the more effectively sound may travel; this is because the sound waves are transmitted more easily through the tightly packed molecules.
the answer is sound energy because you have a vibrations in your ear to hear
Your question needs to be defined more clearly, do you mean through which medium does sound travel the fastest? If so, in general the more dense the medium is the faster the sound wave travels; sound travels through Air (a gas) slower than through water (a liquid) because the sound is transmitted by the molecules colliding therefore the more dense the medium the easier the force is transmitted in a direction. It is also for this reason why sound can not travel through a vacuum (there are no particles in a vacuum to transmit the sound wave)
Sound is a mechanical wave that is an oscillation of pressure transmitted through a solid, liquid, or gas, composed of frequencies within the range of hearing.Sound also travels through plasma.Sound is a sequence of waves of pressure that propagates through compressible media such as air or water. Sound can propagate through solids as well, but there are additional modes of propagation.