It is to thin
check my answer
Yes, sound can pass through a string. When a string is plucked or strummed, it creates vibrations that travel through the string and create sound waves in the surrounding air. The sound waves produced by the vibrating string can then be heard by our ears.
it is produced by the string vibrating on the instrument when you strum it.
The vibrations from your voice hitting the can travels through the string to the other can.
Sound travels better through a string because the particles in a solid are more closely packed and can transmit vibrations more efficiently than in air. In air, the particles are more spread out, leading to greater energy loss and lower transmission of sound.
the vibration of the strings in the air makes the sound if you played them in space they wouldnt work because there is no where for the sound vibrations to travel it is echoed from the hollow part in the centre some of the instruments.
The hypothesis of a string phone experiment is that sound can travel through a taut string between two cups. This suggests that the vibrations produced when speaking into one cup can be transmitted through the string and heard on the other cup, demonstrating the concept of sound transmission through a medium.
The pitch is determined by by the frequency in which the string is swinging, which, in turn, is determined by the speed with which a wave can travel through the string. The higher the tension in the string is, the easier it is for a wave to travel through it, and if the speed of the wave increase, so will the frequency, and by default the pitch of the note. And vice versa. If I remember my physics correctly :)
Longitudinal waves travel on a string!
Yes. You can demonstrate this for yourself. Use a small nail or screw to make a small hole in the bottom of each of two empty tin cans. Thread a couple of inches of one end of a ten or twenty foot string into each of the tin cans, then tie a not into the ends of the string so that the ends of the string won't come back out of the tins. With a partner hold the tins so that the string is taut between you. One of you speak into his tin whilst the other listens. You should be able to hear that the voice is carried along the string.You can google for tin cans and string for pictures and more instructions.
This is a complex question - or rather the answer could be.In a violin for example, the strings rotate as well as vibrate.In a simple 'string and tin can phone" the waves are transverse waves carried by the taut string.Basically, your string can vibrate back and forth, normal to the string;or it may rotate round the axis along the string;or a mass may swing suspended by the string as in a pendulum.
Yes, sound can travel through metal strings. When a string is plucked, it creates vibrations that travel through the metal material and produce sound waves. The density and tension of the metal strings affect the speed and quality of the sound produced.