um...It hasn't been quite determined yet. I think they are Still trying tofigure it out but if you were to ask me I would say no you can not change the pitch of sound
Trumpets produce sounds by buzzing your lips into a mouthpiece connected to the trumpet. the faster you buzz your lips, the higher pitch the sound, the slower, the lower. the pitch can also change by pushing down the valves in different combonations
like i know....
no, tuned means you change the note or pitch pitch means how high or low somethings sound is.
The pitch is determined by how high the sound is.
Two notes that sound the same in pitch but have different names are 'enharmonically equivalent'. E.g. F# and Gb sound the same but they are written differently.
Every sound vibrates with a particular fundamental frequency. When you change the wavelength of a sound, you change the pitch of a sound.
You have to amplify the sound.
The so-called pitch of the sound would change. A sound with a higher frequency is said to have a higher pitch.
Change the frequency.
Change the frequency.
When the frequency of the vibrations that produce the sound change. Higher frequencies -> higher pitch. OR if the source of the sound is moving towards or away from you -> Doppler effect.
In sounds with higher pitches, the compressions that make up the sound are closer together; when the pitch is lower, they are farther apart. The wavelength of a sound, which is the distance from one compression to the next, is the speed of sound divided by the sound's frequency (pitch).
The frequency of the vibrations. Sound frequencies are directly related to the perceived pitch.
To make sound frequency change alter the pitch.
Whenever the frequency of a sound wave changes, regardless of what caused it to change, the change is perceived as a change in the pitch of the sound.
A change in pitch.
When the source of a sound moves, the frequency noted by the observer will change. This is an example of Doppler's law. answer: its pitch appears to change.