vibrating reeds
your vocal cords vibrate to make you voice
Our ear drums are moved by the sound pressure. The sound pressure as sound field quantity is measured in pascals or newtons per square meters. Forget the sound intensity (acoustic intensity) as sound power quantity. Only noise fighters need that or if you measure earthquakes. This answer is very good, but, it needs a little bit more information the answer was mostly talking about eardrums so, we would need an answer talking about the topic. when a sound enters the ear canal it travels in and then the sound hits the eardrum and vibrates to make you hear the sound clearly. Then it fianlly it may pass by the anvil.
I dont think how far my answer is correct but, the amplitude of the sound produced at the centre of the drum is more when compared to its edges. this might be due to the tension in the leather surface of the drum and the law of vibrations.ie, towards the centre where at a particular point when moving away from the edges of the drum vibrates more than at edges. Here, the force of the stick( if a stick is used) with which the sound is produced must also be taken into consideration and also the make of the material with which the sound is being produced.
A lubricant and sound insulation.
Can you show me what sound bats make and yes they do make a sound.
vibration. all sound vibrates. if you whisper so quet the sound still vibrates.
it vibrates
No, not necessarily. In order for something that vibrates to make a sound, the vibrations need to create pressure waves in a medium, such as air, that can be detected by our ears. If the vibrations do not create these pressure waves, then no sound will be produced.
It vibrates. The vibrations move through the dtring, then though the air and into your ear. In the ear the eardrum vibrates.
An object makes a sound when it vibrates and causes the air particles surrounding it to also vibrate. These vibrations create waves that travel through the air until they reach our ears, where they are interpreted by our brains as sound.
In a radio, it is the speaker that vibrates to create sound. The electrical signals from the radio's circuitry are converted into physical vibrations by the speaker's diaphragm, producing audible sound waves.
It vibrates against the inside of the clarinet to make the sound.
when you blow the reed vibrates which produces sound and by covering up the holes you change the pitch. the more holes open the higher the pitch. hope that helps you!
The head of the drum vibrates. If you get some dry rice grains and put them on the drum head, they will move around.
When a rubber band is plucked or stretched and released, it vibrates back and forth rapidly. The vibration causes the molecules in the rubber band to collide, creating sound waves that travel through the air. This propagation of energy in the form of sound waves is how a rubber band generates sound when it vibrates.
the string, and the waves go into the body and reverberate around, and come out the f holes and make the sound.
Because it vibrates. Also different materials make different sounds.