The sound of rain falling on your window pane can evoke feelings of calmness, coziness, and introspection.
The sound of rain through the window can evoke feelings of calmness, coziness, and introspection.
No, a feather falling through air would not make a sound because it is light and does not displace enough air to create vibrations that we perceive as sound.
speaking from experience from ww2 Southampton bombing raids; bombs traveling at or above the velocity of sound; make a screaming, or whistling sound. The better you hear them; the more certainty it is not falling on you. The one that hits you you will not hear; for it gets there before its sound. ----
I'll take a stab at answering your comment. Although, for future reference this is a website where you are supposed to ask questions, and there is no way to answer what you said. Although, I will try, The sound of a clad coins and a silver coin sound different when they hit a solid surface. Silver will kind of make a "tingy" sound, where as clad coins make more of a dull sound when they fall on a table or something similar.
The sound produced by a xylophone is typically bright and resonant, falling into the high-frequency range. It can vary in volume depending on how hard the keys are struck, but generally falls in the moderate to loud range.
The sound of rain through the window can evoke feelings of calmness, coziness, and introspection.
The sound of falling coins that what sound they make why don't you take some coins and drop them to find out.
Crashhhhhh!
Klink!
No, a feather falling through air would not make a sound because it is light and does not displace enough air to create vibrations that we perceive as sound.
Yes, a tree falling in the forest creates vibrations that can be interpreted as sound, even if there is no one there to hear it.
Yes, the falling tree will generate sound waves whether or not there is anyone there to hear them. Sound is a vibration that travels through the air, and the falling tree will create these vibrations regardless of whether someone is there to perceive them.
If the program you want the sound to be cut off on has a mute option, try muting the sound on just that program.
You know, I bet meteorites DO make sounds (inaudible to the unaided ear), and I wonder if we could learn something interesting about them or about the atmosphere by attempting to listen in. I like this question.
a "hiss" sound
Yes, it makes a sound. Sound doesn't come from hearing something, but from the result of something happening, created, or an event taking place.
speaking from experience from ww2 Southampton bombing raids; bombs traveling at or above the velocity of sound; make a screaming, or whistling sound. The better you hear them; the more certainty it is not falling on you. The one that hits you you will not hear; for it gets there before its sound. ----