Yes.
Your ears pick up the sound.
Sound travels in waves. Our ears register these waves and convert them into noise; however, our ears can only detect a very small range of sound waves. Many sound waves have a frenquency that is much too high or too low for our ears to "hear". If you've ever blown a dog whistle and made your pup yelp in pain while you couldn't hear a thing then you understand. The vibrations that you feel are low frequency sound waves which your body can feel but your ears can't hear. It is only when the higher frequency waves get to you that you hear the source.
The tympanic membrane, or eardrum, receives sound in the first step. It sends a ripple, a reverberation of the sound, across the malleus, incus, and stapes (the three smallest bones in the body), and into the cochlea. The cochlea reverberates into the auditory nerve, which carries to the brain and delivers the sound.
The average human can hear frequencies of up to 20,000 Hertz.
Because the sound wave energy from the distant cause has reached your ears.
they can hear sound in ears
you can hear by sound wave and ears
In our ears the sound vibrates and makes the sound
With ears
Sound is something that travels in waves and we hear with our ears.
It is to hear sound
The loudness of a sound depends on the intensity of the sound stimulus. A dynamite explosion is loader than that of a cap pistol because of the greater amount of air molecules the dynamite is capable of displacing. After the sound stimulus reaches our ears, it vibrates the eardrum and converts this into sound.
you actuallydont hear with your ears sound waves go into your ear which vibrate your eardrum and somehow sends the message to your brain that there is sound in the air.
you can hear A very complicated process of turning waves into sound occurs in your ears
big ears
With its ears, the same way we do.
Sound.