the sun sound like a bunch of people screaming as they are getting killed my a phychio killer on a major rampage massacre. and if you get too close to it you will be shot 999,999,999,999,999 miles away going at 999trillion mph
Sound cannot travel through the vacuum of space, so we cannot hear nuclear explosions on the sun from Earth. Sound requires a medium to travel through, like air, and space is empty. Additionally, the sun's explosions produce vibrations in the form of electromagnetic waves, which we can detect but not hear as sound.
We can't hear nuclear explosions from the sun because sound cannot travel through the vacuum of space. Sound waves require a medium, like air or water, to propagate, but space is mostly empty. Additionally, the sun's explosions release energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation, mainly light and heat, rather than sound waves.
No im afraid not.That would be Heat energy because it is over 100,000oF. Up there so the wind would carry sound waves from another area to your current position.So basically it would be the wind
Some alliterations about the sun include "sizzling sun," "scorching sun," "shining sun," and "sunny skies." Alliterations are a literary device where consecutive words in a sentence begin with the same sound. In this case, the repeated sound is the "s" sound in words describing the sun.
The sun is situated in outer space, which is a vacuum. Sound does not travel through a vacuum, so from where we sit, the sun is silent. It makes no noise. If you (impossibly) were sitting on the sun, it would be very noisy indeed, with enormous pressures and continual explosions like Hydrogen bombs. Your ears would be destroyed in microseconds by the intensity of the noise. The sun does make a lot of a different kind of noise. This is electronic noise. The sun makes noise across the whole radio frequency spectrum, which can be picked up on radios.
Some words that sound like "shun" but have a different spelling include "churn", "run", and "sun".
No, the word "sun" does not have a long vowel sound. The "u" in sun is pronounced as a short vowel sound.
In Swahili, the "S" sound is pronounced like the "s" in "sun" or "sit." It is clear and sharp without any added emphasis.
Sound waves cannot travel through space because space is a vacuum, meaning there is no medium (like air or water) for sound waves to travel through. Since the Sun is in space, the sound of an explosion produced by the Sun cannot be heard on Earth.
The letter "U" in "sun" has a short U vowel sound.
A big explosion that never stops.
The word "sun" has a short vowel sound.
Funny but back at Sun Records Elvis was asked the same thing. Who do you sing like? Elvis said i don't sing like any body. Well who do you sound like? He said he didn't sound like anyone.Elvis had his own sound . Thank God that he did.
Sound waves require something to travel through like air or water. The waves travel through this substance and into your ear, vibrating the eardrum. In the vacuum of space, there simply isn't enough of anything for the sound waves to travel through.
Hristos is pronounced as "HRIS-tos" in English. The "H" is pronounced like an "h" sound in "hello," and the "s" is pronounced like an "s" sound in "sun."
No, the word "sun" does not have the short sound of U. It has the short sound of the vowel U as in "fun" or "cut."
The sound-alike for sun is son. Example: I told my son to get out of the hot sun.