Same as it always moves. A significant part of the sound will be absorbed by the pillow, however.
When you scream into a pillow, the sound waves are muffled and absorbed by the fabric of the pillow, reducing the overall volume. The interaction is a combination of sound absorption and reflection, as some sound may still escape the pillow and be heard in the surrounding environment, albeit at a lower intensity.
Sound can.
Sound can move through any material, although it must be said that some materials are much better sound conductors than others. In particular, sound can move through liquids and gases as well as solids but not vacuums.Sound can move through anything that has atoms that can transfer the impulse they get - in other words, basically any type of matter.
Yes, sound can move objects through a phenomenon called acoustic levitation, where sound waves create pressure that can lift and move objects.
No, sound waves cannot move objects. Sound waves are vibrations that travel through a medium, such as air, but they do not have the ability to physically move objects.
No, sound waves require a medium (solid, liquid, or gas) to travel through, so they cannot move through the vacuum of space where there is no air or other material. In space, sound waves cannot propagate because there is no medium to carry the vibrations.
Acoustics is the branch of science that studies how sound waves move through the air and other mediums. It examines the generation, propagation, and reception of sound.
If I'm not mistaken all sounds move in waves.
vibration and a medium for it to move through
the only wave type that can travel through matter is sound. sound waves cause vibrations in the material, which means that the waves move faster the closer the atoms in the component are to each other. for example, water is denser then air, so sound will travel through the water faster than the air.
Sound does move through space. It doesn't move though empty space, i.e. a vaccuum. In outer space there is a vaccuum (though not necessarily a perfect vaccuum).Sound is caused by vibrations in a medium such as air (or water or wood). These vibrations compress and rarefy the medium. The vibrations move through the medium as waves.In a vaccuum, there is no medium thus there is no sound.
Yes. Sound cannot travel in a vacuum.