Drums produce sound through vibrations in the drum's surface when struck by drumsticks or mallets. These vibrations travel through the air as sound waves and are picked up by our ears, which then convert them into electrical signals that our brain interprets as sound. The size, material, and tension of the drum all impact the tone and volume of the sound produced.
Drums produce sound when they are struck by a drumstick or hand, causing the drumhead to vibrate. This vibration creates sound waves that travel through the air and reach our ears, allowing us to hear the sound of the drum.
The sound on a woodblock is produced by striking it with a mallet or drumstick. The type of wood used, the size and thickness of the woodblock, and the striking technique all contribute to the sound produced. The vibration of the woodblock creates the sound that we hear.
The science of drums helps us understand how percussion instruments produce sound through the study of acoustics and mechanics. It explores how vibrations, materials, and shapes affect the sound produced by drums and other percussion instruments.
Sound energy is a form of energy that we can hear. It is produced by vibrations traveling through a medium like air or water, which our ears can detect and interpret as sound.
Sound is longitudinal waves that you can hear. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longitudinal_wave
sound can be produced in any medium - air, water and solids too, but most of the sounds we hear are through air. Animals like dolphins produce sound in water and hear it there.
Drums produce sound when they are struck by a drumstick or hand, causing the drumhead to vibrate. This vibration creates sound waves that travel through the air and reach our ears, allowing us to hear the sound of the drum.
The vibrations (sound) of a beaten drum are sound waves. The frequency, of the produced sound waves, is what determines the pitch of the drum.
If you bang your fist on the table, there is a big 'thump'. This 'thump' is the noise you produced, and you can hear that 'thump'. Therefore, you can produce and hear a sound.
ear drums hurt
what physicalsingn did you abserve when you plucked each.did you hear any sound? what produced the sound?
Correction... The is Tonga, for the Tonga people of Zambia and Zimbabwe
I believe you meant Cajon, which is a percussion instrument consisting of a box and a few strings on the upper corners. The Cajon makes a sound just like all other drums you can play, you hit it. The vibrations exit the sound hole in the back and you hear the sound. The same thing goes for the snare part of the Cajon. You hit where the snares are located and the snares vibrate, releasing the sound you hear when you hit the drum.
The sound on a woodblock is produced by striking it with a mallet or drumstick. The type of wood used, the size and thickness of the woodblock, and the striking technique all contribute to the sound produced. The vibration of the woodblock creates the sound that we hear.
Your brain makes the sound in your head and therefore, you have that kind of thought.
It's not the sound intensity I (acoustic intensity) as sound power quantity, it's the sound pressure p as sound field quantity, which moves you ear drums. I ~ p²
According to my opinion sound card is located towards the dorsal side slightly beneath the neck region.Because of the vibration produced in the sound box it produces the sound of different intensities,which we hear.