Sound does indeed get quieter through medium. The level of loss depends on the medium that is used, and as the square of the distance from source.
Nothing, it merely just uses it as a form of transport from one place to another.
well sound actually always needs a medium so it can travel, in space there's is no sound because there isn't a medium it can travel through. but just about anything is a medium for sound. air is also a great medium, that's why were able to hear one another
Sound does move through space. It doesn't move though empty space, i.e. a vaccuum. In outer space there is a vaccuum (though not necessarily a perfect vaccuum).Sound is caused by vibrations in a medium such as air (or water or wood). These vibrations compress and rarefy the medium. The vibrations move through the medium as waves.In a vaccuum, there is no medium thus there is no sound.
Amplitude is a measure of the size of sound waves. It depends on the amount of energy that started the waves. Greater amplitude waves have more energy and greater intensity, so they sound louder. As sound waves travel farther from their source, the more spread out their energy becomes.
The wavelength is equal to the local velocity of sound divided by the frequency, As with light, there can be refraction when sound passes from one medium to another with a different sound velocity.
E.M. waves require no medium. Sound waves require a medium.
It gets louder or quieter.
When sound reaches a boundary between two different media, some energy is reflected back, some is absorbed as heat, and some is transferred through the new medium. The overall effect of this is that the sound is indeed quieter in the new medium than it was in the old.
Amplitude is typically represented as being the "height" of a sound wave. A sound that is louder will have a greater amplitude than a quieter sound.
It gets louder and then gets quieter
the harder you blow the louder the sound the softer you blow the quieter the sound hope this helps you ?!? xx
No,sound is louder and clearer when it travels through air.
There are a few reasons why sound gets quieter through solids than through air. Sound has a harder time moving through molecules that are so close.
The sound of a clarinet gets louder as the musician blows harder into it. Also, the musician tightens the mouth to make the sound more stable, so you can make it even louder.To make the clarinet go quieter, you do not blow as much air into the clarinet.
A speed can't be louder or less loud. The sound itself can be louder; or the speed can be faster.
I'm not sure if you are comparing your iPod to other ones, but in the 4th gen. they have louder speakers. If you are using a 3rd gen. then the sound would be a little quieter.
The speed of sound through the medium also increases.
almost all to do with the body. A ukulele is quieter than a guitar because it has less mass to vibrate, but material is also responsible.