C. iron, because it is the most dense of the listed materials
Sound travels fastest through solids, so it would travel quickest through iron.
No, radio waves do not need a medium to travel through. They are a type of electromagnetic wave that can travel through a vacuum, such as space. They can also travel through other mediums, such as air or water.
Sound can travel through solids, liquids, and gases. It requires a medium to propagate, meaning it cannot travel through a vacuum.
No, light cannot travel through sponge material as it is opaque and absorbs or scatters light instead of allowing it to pass through.
Air, food, and liquid travel through the pharynx.
Waves typically travel through a medium, which can be a solid, liquid, or gas. For example, sound waves travel through air or water, while seismic waves travel through the Earth's crust. Electromagnetic waves, such as light, can travel through a vacuum as well as through certain materials like glass or air.
it travels through rock quickest even if they are both solids eking
Air travel is usually the quickest.
plane...
To fly, I believe.
If you want to find out the quickest way to travel to New York, you can go to hot jobs. They have a sight to where you can find out the right the time and how fast does it take you to travel from your destination to the other.
Most of the electric current will pass through the path through the body which offers the least resistance, NOT the 'quickest' path, as speed doesn't come into it.
The simplest and quickest way is to fly. You could also travel to France by sea or through the Channel Tunnel and then travel overland to Portugal. You could also go by boat.
going by experience it would be 'the metro' .
going by experience it would be 'the metro' .
going by experience it would be 'the metro' .
going by experience it would be 'the metro' .
solid. think of it this way you get a large line of people close together to represent solid and you send a shove through them it will reach the end fastest.