Yes, and yes.
-- Whales can hear each other.
-- You can hear through motel walls, especially when you want to sleep.
Sound travels the best through a solid. Since the molecules in a solid are closer together than in a gas or liquid the sound waves don't have to travel as far to reach the next molecule.
Sound waves require a medium to travel through, such as solid, liquid, or gas, because they propagate by transferring energy from one particle to the next. In a vacuum, there are no particles for the sound waves to interact with and therefore they cannot propagate.
Sound travels through solid by causing particles to vibrate and pass energy to neighboring particles, allowing the sound waves to propagate. In liquids, sound travels by causing compression and rarefaction of the molecules within the medium. In gases, sound waves cause variations in pressure by compressing and expanding air molecules as they propagate through the medium.
Sound will not travel through a vacuum as it needs a medium which will allow vibrations.
Sound waves cannot travel through a vacuum because it needs a medium and a vacuum has nothing within it that can act as a medium.
Sound travels the best through a solid. Since the molecules in a solid are closer together than in a gas or liquid the sound waves don't have to travel as far to reach the next molecule.
Sound waves require a medium to travel through, such as solid, liquid, or gas, because they propagate by transferring energy from one particle to the next. In a vacuum, there are no particles for the sound waves to interact with and therefore they cannot propagate.
Sound travels through solid by causing particles to vibrate and pass energy to neighboring particles, allowing the sound waves to propagate. In liquids, sound travels by causing compression and rarefaction of the molecules within the medium. In gases, sound waves cause variations in pressure by compressing and expanding air molecules as they propagate through the medium.
Yes, it can propagate as long as there is a medium.
it depends on the sound you heard. ..if it is solid or liquid... but no DEFINITION....
Sound will not travel through a vacuum as it needs a medium which will allow vibrations.
Sound waves cannot travel through a vacuum because it needs a medium and a vacuum has nothing within it that can act as a medium.
Solid (such as metal) Liquid (such as water) Gas (such as air)
Mechanical waves, such as sound waves and seismic waves, require a medium (solid, liquid, or gas) to propagate. These waves rely on the vibration of particles in the medium to transfer energy from one point to another. Electromagnetic waves, on the other hand, can travel through a vacuum because they do not need a medium to propagate.
Sound is produced when a certain thing causes the gas, water, or solid around your ear to vibrate, which in turn, is then received by the ear drum. When you are in a vacuum, there is no gas, liquid, or solid that sound is able to travel by.
No. At least in a gas and liquid, mechanical waves, including sound, can only propagate as longitudinal waves.
A liquid