Sort of like the set up chain reaction of dominoes. One falls, collides with the one next to it, which falls and collides with another and so on. Energy is transported along with many of them, before it eventually disappates into something else. The dominoes would be analogous with matter in this case; atoms, molecules etc.
Yes. Sound is produced by vibrating matter, such as a string or arts of the inner ear, so it cannot travel if there is no matter to vibrate.
Sound waves can travel through any compressible material (which means any real material), be it solid, liquid, or gas. Sound waves cannot travel through a vacuum.
sound energy require some kind of material to travel through and they cant move through a vaccum
Anything. Although some substances such as carpet or anything fluffy will absorb the sound. It will still travel through, just not as loud as it was the side the sound occurred. Also, the substance might be too thick to travel all the way through, such as a foot thick wall. It might just stop in the middle or end up being to soft or quiet to hear. Your Welcome
Sound travels in waves through a medium, such as air or water. When something makes a noise, like a person speaking or a bell ringing, it creates vibrations that move through the medium and reach our ears, allowing us to hear the sound. Sound travels at different speeds depending on the medium it is traveling through, with air being a common medium for sound to travel through.
there is no air in a vaccum. and sound needs air for the sound waves to travel through.
Through waves
Sound requires a medium, such as air or water, to travel as it relies on the vibration of particles within the medium to propagate. In a vacuum, there are no particles for sound waves to interact with and transmit energy, which is why sound cannot travel through it.
Sound waves travel through matter. Our atmosphere is a mixture of gases which is a form of matter. Sound waves will travel through our atmosphere, even if there is no human ear to receive it.
A vacuum is a region empty of matter through which sound cannot travel. In a vacuum, there are no particles to transmit sound waves, so no sound can be heard.
Sound cannot travel through a vacuum, such as in outer space. "Sound" refers to waves of compression which travel through matter. When there is no matter, there can be no such waves, and therefore no sound.
I'm pretty sure they can travel through matter It depends on the matter, but many materials will transmit sound.
Sound waves can travel through any matter- liquid, gas or solids. The denser the matter, the faster the sound travels. It cannot travel through vacuum- a vacuum is an absence of matter.
A mechanical wave, such as a sound wave, can only travel through matter because it requires a medium to propagate. Electromagnetic waves, such as light, can travel through both matter and empty space.
Sound can travel through any state of matter, including solids, liquids, and gases. The speed of sound can vary depending on the medium it is traveling through, with sound traveling fastest through solids and slowest through gases.
Sound waves travel through the three states of matter (gas, liquid and solid) by vibrations.
Sound travels through matter as transverse pressure waves.