A typical piano has a range of at least 7 octaves; for comparison, the range of human hearing is about 10 octaves.
No frequencies in that range appear on the list you provided with the question.
The frequency range of a baritone is from 110Hz-425Hz
A console piano is one type of vertical piano. Console pianos range in height from 40 to 44 inches. This is about the middle of height range of vertical pianos. The spinet piano is the shortest and the professional piano is the tallest.
It depends on what you mean by "the only ones possible." Sounds can be produced that are much higher or lower than a piano, both in and out of the range of human hearing. There can also be tones in-between a piano's notes. This is what happens when a piano becomes out of tune, the pitch flattens. There are different tunings and scales that utilize these other pitches, but the overwhelming majority of modern music uses the Equal-Tempered scale, which is what the piano uses.
Cello, short for violoncello.
frequencies that are out of normal hearing range.
they use frequencies in uhf range since animals dont make those sounds
Inaudible sounds are sounds that you cannot hear. Audible sounds are sounds that you can hear. Frequencies capable of being heard by humans are called audio or sonic. The range is typically considered to be between 20Hz and 20,000Hz.[3] Frequencies higher than audio are referred to as ultrasonic, while frequencies below audio are referred to as infrasonic
The frequencies of sounds that can be heard by most people are between 20 and 20,000 Hz. Sounds outside of this range are possible, but can no longer be heard by humans.
No. Painted turtles hear a smaller range of sounds than humans, only the low frequencies, with no capability for high pitched sounds.
Sounds in this range are known as ultrasound. They have frequencies from about 20 kHz to a few GHz. Even the sounds at the low-frequency end are beyond the ability of most people to hear.
The Human hearing range IS the sonic range. Sounds which fall under the ultrasonic range are sounds which emit a higher frequency then we can hear (ie. dogs hear within this range). Infrasonic sounds emit lower frequencies then we can hear. The human hearing range or 'Sonic' range is between 16- 20 000 Hz, though changes with age
there are an infinite range of frequencies limited only by the mechanical limitations of the medium creating and transferring it.
Hearing Range of frequencies for humar ears if from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz.
No, while a dog can hear ultrasound frequencies up to about 45KHz (normal human hearing is only up to about 20KHz) the frequencies made by ultrasound imaging machines are usually in the MHz range, far beyond a dog's hearing range.
No frequencies in that range appear on the list you provided with the question.
The human ear cannot detect all possible frequencies. It has evolved to detect frequencies of sounds that are the most useful to humans, and has a maximum frequency range of about 20Hz to 20kHz, which decreases as you get older, particularly at the higher end. Infrasonic describes sounds that are too low in frequency to be heard by the human ear, and ultrasonic describes sounds that are too high in frequency to be heard by the human ear. These sounds cannot be heard by the human ear because they are outside of its range of capability.