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Solids, then liquids, and lastly gasses.
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An insulator prevents the transmittance of energy across a medium. Sound, through the molecules in air, can transmit sound energy across distance. Since air can conduct sound, it is not an insulator.
sound passes fastest through glass
Think of a solid and there's your answer. Wood, metals, glass... Imagine putting your head on a solid, ear down, which materials would best transport the sound to you if someone tapped the same solid but a metre away? Those are the the solids that best transmit sound.
Sound will travel farther and fastest in water, followed by steel and the air would be slowest
A.Steel in cabinet B.Water in the ocean C.Air in your classroom D.Water in a swimming pool
solids.
Solids, then liquids, and lastly gasses.
The BBC has always been keen to transmit the best possible quality sound.
This is a homework question and Wiki will not do your work for you. Time to open the science book and start reading to answer the question.
Sound travels fastest, and best through a solid. eg. steel
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An insulator prevents the transmittance of energy across a medium. Sound, through the molecules in air, can transmit sound energy across distance. Since air can conduct sound, it is not an insulator.
sound passes fastest through glass
Sound will travel through all of those.
Aluminum is the most useful thing since sliced bread. The best conductor and fast to transmit data. If you use steel or something you'd have to wait about 5ms to get the sound through. I think Aluminum is about 1.5ms.