That is because of density.Lead has a high density than steel.
because particles in iron are closer than particles in cork
I don’t know
Sound travels fastest through a nonporous solid medium, such as steel.
The steel ship would sink.
The steel would EXPAND
It's possible, but the percentage of silver would be very low, as silver is non-magnetic. <<>> If the coin is magnetic it is probably a steel one with plating on top of it. In the UK, 1p and 2p coins are copper-plated steel, while 5p and 10p are steel with nickel plating.
Sound travels relatively slowly (less than 700 mph). Superman has been estimated to fly at speeds far above this. So, the answer to this question would be yes (hypothetically speaking, since Superman is, after all, a comic book character).
Sound travels fastest through a nonporous solid medium, such as steel.
I am not sure about distance, I think it may be further but NOT SURE, But, I do know it travels WAY faster in steel, something like 10 times faster.
Sound will travel farther and fastest in water, followed by steel and the air would be slowest
Steel
Steel would be one example. It has the same word sound, but different meaning/spelling altogether.
5 hours 57 minutes.
no, the mountains are 40 miles farther west of pueblo
NO Mishon did not steel Chris brown's music if he did then some of Mishon's music would sound just like Chris brown's muisc.
315/45 = 7 ft./sec
Dulcimers are strung with steel strings. It would be possible to use nylon strings, but it would not have the same sound.
Because they're familiar but sound "wrong." Any song, not just children's songs, sounds "creepy" if played slowly. Also, you're most likely to hear a children's song played slowly in a horror movie, where the dissonance would serve to make it "creepy" even if it were played at normal speed.
That depends on what you mean by most easily. If you mean the speed of sound. Solids like steel Certainly beat air(steel around 6000m/s air 330m/s). If you mean how much damping occurs , that would be a completely different topic.