A sound wave is continuous for as long as the sound vibrations are being made at its source.
The characteristics of a sound wave is the Amplitude, Frequency, Wavelength, time period, and velocity. The sound wave itself is a longitudinal wave that shows the rarefactions and compressions of a sound wave.
A sound wave's pitch is determined by its frequency; that is its cycles per unit of time. The sound wave's intensity or volume is determined by its amplitude; the maximum crest of a sound wave.
Nothing. That IS how a sound wave is propagated.
A sound wave is logitudinal because the motion of the medium (air) travels in the same direction as the wave (back and forth).
Mechanical wave needs a medium to travel. Examples :- Sound Wave, Seismic Wave etc.
No sound is a compression wave and is continuous. Music has elements... but that is another question entirely
No, a sound wave is a compressional wave.
No. A sound wave is a pressure wave.
yes a sound wave is a Compressional wave
Yes, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave.
Yes, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave, not a transverse wave.
No, sound is a longitudinal wave, not a transverse wave.
In signal processing, sampling is the reduction of a continuous signal to a discrete signal. A common example is the conversion of a sound wave (a continuous signal) to a sequence of samples (a discrete-time signal).
The amplitude of a sound wave is the same as its volume.
No, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave, not transverse.
The frequency of this sound wave is very near constant.
A quiet sound wave has lower amplitude and intensity compared to a loud sound wave. This means the vibrations produced by the quiet sound wave are less forceful and have less energy, resulting in a softer sound.