There is currently no commercial airliner which can travel at that speed.
No, X-rays do not travel at the speed of sound. X-rays are a form of electromagnetic radiation that travel at the speed of light, which is much faster than the speed of sound.
The speed of sound does not travel. In the event that an airplane's airspeed is below Mach-1, the speed of sound is faster than the speed of the airplane. On the occasion and at the moment when the true indicated airspeed of an airship or an airplane is in excess of Mach-1, the airplane is at that time traveling faster than the speed of sound.
The sound barrier
No. Light travels at about 875 thousand times the speed of sound.
It was the same speed. It generally travel with 340ms-1 speed.
There is currently no commercial airliner which can travel at that speed.
No, X-rays do not travel at the speed of sound. X-rays are a form of electromagnetic radiation that travel at the speed of light, which is much faster than the speed of sound.
We can use ultrasonic planes. They can travel with that speed.
At the temperature of 20°C the speed of sound is 343 m/s.
The speed of sound does not travel. In the event that an airplane's airspeed is below Mach-1, the speed of sound is faster than the speed of the airplane. On the occasion and at the moment when the true indicated airspeed of an airship or an airplane is in excess of Mach-1, the airplane is at that time traveling faster than the speed of sound.
No, the speed of sound is not dependent on frequency. It is determined by the medium through which the sound waves travel.
The sound barrier
No. Light travels at about 875 thousand times the speed of sound.
It was the same speed. It generally travel with 340ms-1 speed.
They don't really travel at the same speed, but, on television, the distance they travel is so short, that the difference between the speed of sound and the speed of light is almost non-existant.
No. The fastest speed a tornado has peen known to travel is 73 mph, about 1/10 the speed of sound. The fastest wind speed ever recorded in a tornado was 302 mph, still less than half the speed of sound.
Speed has nothing to do with where you are. You can travel below the speed of sound pretty much anywhere.