Every second, it vibrates once for every Hertz of its frequency.
it is pitch
they travel along vibrations that happen every nano-second in the air.
No, the speed of sound at sea level is around 0.2114 miles per second.
in air sound travels 330m/s
Every second, it vibrates once for every Hertz of its frequency.
It depends how high the sound is, the a above middle C is 440Hz (vibrations/second) and there are 110Hz in an octave. From there you can work out the Hz of any note.
Yes. Light travels approximately 186,000 miles every second, while sound waves travel only about 1,120 feet in a second. Light wins the race every time!
"ms" in this case is short for "meters per second". It means that sound advances that many meters every second.
it is pitch
The speed of sound increases by approx 0.6 metres/second for every Celsius degree increase in temperature.
0.61 meters a second
The first "e" in "every" has a short "e" sound. The second, unstressed "e" is sometimes pronounced as a schwa in various English dialects (ev'ree vs. evuhree) and the "y" has a long "e" sound.
the second tv made was made in 1934 and is called the sound box and philip jay fry made it
they travel along vibrations that happen every nano-second in the air.
a day there are 100,000
The frequency of a sound wave affects the pitch of the sound. If the frequency of a wave increases causing more waves for every second, the pitch will go up, and vice-versa.