There is no such temperature.
the speed of sound of water at 25 degrees centigrade is 1497 m/s.
If by bike you mean bicycle then: Yes if you increase your speed or the intensity for that matter then your heart rate will also increase.
The pulse is a measure of the heart rate.
I presume you mean, "Does caffeine speed up your heart rate?" Then... idk look it up
Between 3200 and 3600 m/s, the closer together the particles are in a substance are, the faster sound can travel through it. This is why these values are much higher than the 343 m/s, the speed of sound in air.
The speed of sound through the medium also increases.
If the source of a sound is moving towards you, then the pitch of the soundyou hear is higher than the pitch of sound that the source is actually emitting.The rate of speed doesn't matter.BTW ... this also happens if you are moving toward the source.
The waves compress which causes a lower tonal quality.
The speed of sound is approximately 767 mph at sea level. To break the sound barrier, an object would need to travel faster than this speed, so it would have to be moving faster than 767 mph.
Supersonic speed is a rate of travel of an object that exceeds the speed of sound. At the beginning of 20th century, the term supersonic was used as an adjective to describe sound whose frequency is above the range of normal human hearing. Speeds greater than five times the speed of sound are often referred to as hypersonic.
No, the speed of sound is faster in solids.
There is no special name for the speed of sound at sea level, because the sea level and every other air pressure high up in the mountain has nothing to do with the speed of sound. Scroll down to related links and look at "Speed of sound - temperature matters, not air pressure".There is no special name for it.By the way, the speed of sound has nothing to do with the sea level.The speed of sound has much to do with the temperature.At 20° Celsius the speed of sound is 343 m/s.
The most relevant answer to this question is medium, the most prime factor affecting the rate of sound travel is the medium which carries the sound waves, sound is fastest in solids and slowest in viscous fluids.
Propagation rate of burn exceeds the speed of sound ... i.e. it's a sonic boom.
Rate is another word for speed. It is the speed.
The rate at which a wave travels is called its speed. This speed depends on the medium through which the wave is moving - for example, sound waves travel faster in water than in air. The speed of a wave is typically measured in meters per second.
The speed of light is much greater than the speed of sound.