For something to resonate, it needs a force to pull it back to its starting position and enough energy to keep it vibrating.
The resonance occurs by the frequent vibrations from the two objects. Since hitting tissue paper which is not a very rigid object does not vibrate it does not resonate.
The body of a guitar is hollow to allow sound to resonate within it.
no it doesn't resonate really way
If it is the traditional sitar, yes there is a hollow to resonate the sound.
yes you can use metal strings and stuff like that
energy
. The amount of Force needed to make an object change its motion depends on the Mass of the object and the Force required
[object Object]
Yes!
A sound that bounces off of an object that allows other sounds to resonate.
No, the only thing required to make an object produce sound is to apply enough sudden force onto a minimally supported object, forcing it to dissipate that force all by itself. To do this the object vibrates, which produces sound.
Normal glass does not resonate and make a tone when tapping or rubbing with a moistened finger.Leaded glass & crystal will resonate and give a tone or ring when tapped.
Applying a force at the same rate as the natural frequency will cause resonance. If both the frequencies coincide with each other, they form a wave of double the amplitude. If the crest of one frequency and the trough of the other meet, they cancel out each other and the displacement is 0.
Answer:Obviously turning force is required to turn any object but to twist an object twisting force is required.
No force is required to keep an object in motion. Maintaining speed and direction seems to be "the natural thing to do" for any object. A force is required to CHANGE an object's velocity, whether you want to make it go faster, slow it down, or simply change the direction for a moving object.
Understand that there is no relationship between the amount of steering required and the distance you are from the object
Pavarotti's voice seemed to resonate endlessly in that cathedral.