It's a common misperception that the body of the guitar vibrates to create the sound. Actually it the column of sound around the guitar and in the guitar which vibrates to create the sound. When you vibrate the strings, the air around it vibrates causing the air in the guitar to vibrate.
The strings on the guitar vibrate producing noise, not the actual guitar itself.
yes, theoretically
Any frequency/note played by said bass guitar
Just like a guitar. The strings vibrate the bridge, the bridges sends the sound to the back of the guitar, the back sends it to the top and it loops.
Thinner
The strings on the guitar vibrate producing noise, not the actual guitar itself.
it doesn't
the strings vibrate and sound is made.
you hit them and they vibrate which causes an echo to go up the neck of the guitar and into the body.
The player makes the strings vibrate, which makes the body of the guitar vibrate, which makes the air vibrate. And vibrations in the air, at a certain set of frequencies, is what sound is.
I do not believe it is the case. The strings of a guitar vibrate in simple harmonic motion which are sine curves.
yes, theoretically
Any frequency/note played by said bass guitar
I now that it is the string ,reed ,skin and metal block.
Guitar strings, vocal cords, and tuning forks are common examples of things that vibrate. Vibrations produce sound waves that can be heard by humans.
A guitar produces sound by vibrating its strings when plucked or strummed. These vibrations are amplified by the body of the guitar, which acts as a resonating chamber, and the sound is projected out through the sound hole. The pitch of the sound is determined by the length, thickness, and tension of the strings.
Some things that vibrate include guitar strings, tuning forks, cell phones on silent mode, and vocal cords when speaking or singing.