because there is water also moving in it and sound also moves in it so thats why water vapours affect our sound speed
Pressure does not make any change in the speed of sound But temperature affects it. Velocity is proportional to the square root of kelvin temperature Humidity also affects the speed of sound. Higher the humidity more the speed
The speed of sound through krypton at 30 deg C and a pressure of 1 atmosphere is 224 metres per second.
The speed of sound varies, depending on what material it goes through.
Yes, it affects the density of air and thus the speed of sound in air.
by causeing larger sound waves through objects
Speed affects the frequency and pressure affects the wavelength.
Pressure does not make any change in the speed of sound But temperature affects it. Velocity is proportional to the square root of kelvin temperature Humidity also affects the speed of sound. Higher the humidity more the speed
The speed of sound through krypton at 30 deg C and a pressure of 1 atmosphere is 224 metres per second.
Pressure has a direct relationship with the speed of sound, which in turn affects the frequency of a wave. As pressure increases, the speed of sound increases. This causes the wavelength to decrease, resulting in an increase in frequency. Conversely, a decrease in pressure would lead to a decrease in frequency.
It is an amazing fact that the speed of sound in air is a function of temperature only. Even very large pressure changes produce only very small changes in the speed of sound. The speed of sound in air is determined by the air itself. It is not dependent upon the sound amplitude, frequency or wavelength. Scroll down to related links and look at "Speed of sound - temperature matters, not air pressure".
The speed of sound in air changes clearly with temperature, a little bit with humidity − but not with air pressure (atmospheric pressure). The speed of sound c = 331.3 + 0.606 × ϑ m/s. At the temperature ϑ = 20°C the speed of sound is c ≈ 331 + (0.6 × 20) = 343 m/s.
The velocity of sound on the Moon's surface is about 1,092 meters per second, which is approximately 3.7 times slower than the speed of sound in air on Earth. This slower speed is due to the Moon's lack of atmosphere, which affects the transmission of sound waves.
There is a relationsship of speed of sound to the temperature but not to the atmospheric pressure.
The speed of sound on the moon is about 1,640 meters per second, compared to around 343 meters per second on Earth. This difference is due to the moon's lack of atmosphere, which affects the propagation of sound waves.
The speed of sound varies, depending on what material it goes through.
Air pressure does not affect transverse sound waves. The temperature is most important to do that. The speed of sound in air is determined by the air itself and is not dependent upon the amplitude, frequency, or wavlength of the sound. Look at the link: "Speed of Sound in Air and the effective Temperature".
The speed of sound is independent of pressure because changes in pressure do not significantly affect the density of the medium through which sound waves travel. Sound waves rely on the elasticity and inertia of the medium, rather than its pressure, to propagate at a constant speed.