Has anyone answered your question? i am interested in the question as well.
No; the effect of temperature is rather small, insignificant for most purposes.No; the effect of temperature is rather small, insignificant for most purposes.No; the effect of temperature is rather small, insignificant for most purposes.No; the effect of temperature is rather small, insignificant for most purposes.
There are many different ways to get a noise vibration analysis. There are several places that could do this for you, depending on where you live, and they have specialized toolkits you can buy to test it (but they are rather expensive, starting in the $2,000.00 range.)
A well known, legal and rather dangerous chemical is hydrochloric acid.
sound is the vibration of matter that your ears are able to pick up with the eardrums and send to the brain which interprets what the sound is. Out in space if a vibration is caused by something there is no air for it to push along thus the vibration is limited to the thing doing the vibrating. If you were to have your space helmet against the thing making the noise or rather vibrating out in space you would hear it.
It is rather dangerous and best left to professionals.
Continuous vibration rather than motion, but not stationary. Unless the temp drops to absolute zero.
it will rather be possible for you not trying it
No the post is a rather moden idea.
the spolis system
The Spoil System
Sound in a hearing context (rather than a wave in a metal structure etc) is a pressure vibration in air. Space has no air.
It is less dangerous than taking codeine based cough syrups like broncleer as far as damage to the stomach lining is concerned. It however has a far more detrimental effect on the health of one's teeth as compared to other cough syrups. It is rather thin liquid and it fits in the gaps between teeth much easier.