because th suns beams don't inter-fear with the waves
As defined by research on the topic of the Electromagnetic Spectrum, no human can hear radio waves. No human can hear any part of the Electromagnetic Spectrum except gamma rays, which have enough energy to light up. If humans were to hear radio waves, they wouldn't need radios (except from the original form).
Radio sound is heard through the use of radio waves, which are electromagnetic waves that can carry information from one point to another. These waves are transmitted from a radio station and received by a radio receiver, such as a radio or smartphone, which then converts the waves into sound waves that we can hear.
Radio waves are electromagnetic waves that carry energy. When these waves are absorbed by the radio's antenna, they induce electrical currents in the circuitry of the radio. This process allows the radio to convert the energy from the radio waves into sound, enabling us to hear broadcasts. However, radio waves themselves do not heat; it is the conversion of that energy into electrical signals that allows the radio to function.
how are radio waves be used- well they are used by sound waves like as in u can hear sond waves but radio waves is where you are in the car and u are listening for instance capital fm that is radio waves Hope It Helped Hennddyyyy:) :D
The human ear cannot hear radio waves because they are electromagnetic waves with frequencies typically ranging from about 30 kHz to 300 GHz, which are far below the audible range for humans (20 Hz to 20 kHz). While radio waves can be detected by radio receivers, the ear is designed to respond only to sound waves, which are mechanical vibrations transmitted through air or other media. Therefore, the fact that we require a radio receiver to convert radio waves into audible sound supports the conclusion that the ear cannot directly hear radio waves.
i think we could because we hear the radio
more interference in the day e.g. phones, wakie talkies,
When you listen to the radio, you are hearing sound, which has no resemblance to light, radio waves, or x-rays. However, the sounds you hear are created in the radio receiver, using information that was carried to your location by means of radio waves.
There's a whole lot to it, actually, and real scientific. But basically, you can get AM radio from a distance at night, and only local during the day, because the straight waves of radio bounce from the ionosphere back to earth. The ionosphere is composed differently, depending on if it's day or night. When it's nighttime, the ionosphere reflects much better, thus you can hear stations from farther away.
In a radio, energy transfers through electromagnetic waves. The electrical signal from the radio station is converted into electromagnetic waves, which travel through space and are picked up by the radio's antenna, converting them back into sound waves that we can hear.
One would hear news headlines on a Sirius satellite radio by adjusting the channel to one of the many news listening waves. Such radio waves may include CNN, HLN, and many other news channels.
Sound travels at the speed of sound, whereas radio waves travel at the speed of light. The speed of radio waves is much faster than the speed of sound. If you're seated high in the stands at a baseball game, watching it on the field and listening to the game on the radio at the same time, it's quite common to hear the crack of the bat on the radio before you hear it straight from Home Plate.