Want this question answered?
Yes as a matter of fact it can. for example take two stones and go to a like throw one in the water and shortly after throw the other one within three feet of the first stone. Now view the ripples. Like sound the ripples crated from one emission can effect and enlargen the ripples from another.
molecules in hot water possess a high kinetic energy that is why vibrate vigorously when hot water is dropped from height on the floor the molecules of water transfer their energy to that of floor as a result floors molecules start vibrating,may be that is why we hear this thumping sound.
A plop as a sound would be like if you dropped a small pebble into a pool of water! :)
Compared to a tuba, it's higher. Compared to a piccolo, it's lower.
Ripples on a pond are waves moving through (across) water. Sound waves from an audio system move through air (though they can move through other things that they come into contact with). Seismic waves move through the ground, and that means anything on or under it, including rock, magma, water, or just about anything else. (It should be noted that we often consider seismic waves as moving through the ground without differentiating it much, unless we're in a more "involved" or "advanced" study.)
Imagine a pool of water. If you dropped a rock in the water you would cause ripples that would travel out evenly in all directions. When one of those ripples hits a wall, you can see that the ripple bounces off the wall. Sound works the same way. Sound is basically just ripples in the air (vibrations). When a sound vibration hits a wall it bounces back much like the ripples in water.
Imagine a pool of water. If you dropped a rock in the water you would cause ripples that would travel out evenly in all directions. When one of those ripples hits a wall, you can see that the ripple bounces off the wall. Sound works the same way. Sound is basically just ripples in the air (vibrations). When a sound vibration hits a wall it bounces back much like the ripples in water. * When you hit something and waves travel through the air to your ears. Sometimes sound reflects again.
Imagine a pool of water. If you dropped a rock in the water you would cause ripples that would travel out evenly in all directions. When one of those ripples hits a wall, you can see that the ripple bounces off the wall. Sound works the same way. Sound is basically just ripples in the air (vibrations). When a sound vibration hits a wall it bounces back much like the ripples in water. * When you hit something and waves travel through the air to your ears. Sometimes sound reflects again.
Sound and Water-Ripples.
Wind does, as neither liht nor sound is a what but a whim. Wind is the only process that is a transport of mass and matter. The others do not travel, but fare.
makes little ripples in the water
My Guess, Ripples on water and Sound
sound is the compression of particles which is why their is no sound in space. think of it as ripples of water when you drop a stone in if it hit a wall it would bounce back.
sound is actually vibrations. your eardrum is highly sensitive, like ripples on water, it picks up these vibrations
Yes, "plunk" is considered an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound it represents. It is often used to describe a dull, heavy sound when something falls or is dropped.
Yes as a matter of fact it can. for example take two stones and go to a like throw one in the water and shortly after throw the other one within three feet of the first stone. Now view the ripples. Like sound the ripples crated from one emission can effect and enlargen the ripples from another.
molecules in hot water possess a high kinetic energy that is why vibrate vigorously when hot water is dropped from height on the floor the molecules of water transfer their energy to that of floor as a result floors molecules start vibrating,may be that is why we hear this thumping sound.