Yes
No, soundwaves do not require a medium to travel through in a vacuum. In a medium like air or water, soundwaves propagate by creating compressions and rarefactions in the molecules of the medium, allowing the wave to be transmitted.
A compression wave is another name for a longitudinal wave.
Yes, sound is a longitudinal wave.
The number of soundwaves, or any type of wave, is known as the frequency. You can use the V=Fλ equation to calculate the other properties of a wave (V = wavespeed, F = Frequency and λ = wave length). So really, if you change the frequency of a wave, you also change the wavespeed and the wavelength, as they are directly related by this equation.
Yes, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave.
longitudinal wave
eardrum
No
Soundwaves - 1983 was released on: USA: 30 March 1983 (San Francisco, California)
No.
Soundwaves are typically invisible to the human eye as they are a type of mechanical wave that travels through a medium such as air or water. We perceive soundwaves through our sense of hearing when they cause vibrations in our eardrums, which are then processed by our brain as sound. Specialized equipment like oscilloscopes or spectrograms can be used to visualize soundwaves as waveforms or frequency patterns.
No, soundwaves do not require a medium to travel through in a vacuum. In a medium like air or water, soundwaves propagate by creating compressions and rarefactions in the molecules of the medium, allowing the wave to be transmitted.
The cast of Soundwaves - 1983 includes: Steven Kirk as Himself - Host Dennis Willis as Himself - Host
?? soundwaves?
Talking and listening.
That would be frequency.
The loudness of a sound is directly proportional to the amplitude or intensity of its soundwaves. This means that the greater the amplitude of the soundwave, the louder the sound will be perceived.