It makes a sound because it goes through your brain and your brain transfers it and tells it to you so you know what it is. So if you can hear it it is a sound.
No, sound requires a medium, such as air or water, to propagate as vibrations. These vibrations are created through the movement of objects or particles, such as vocal cords vibrating to produce speech or string instruments vibrating to produce music.
In a guitar, sound travels through the air inside the body of the guitar, as well as through the materials the guitar is made of, such as wood. The vibrations of the strings are transferred to the guitar body, which amplifies and projects the sound.
To make the volume of a vibrating object louder, you can increase the amplitude or size of the vibration. This will result in a greater displacement of the air particles, producing a louder sound. Additionally, you can position the vibrating object closer to a resonant surface, such as a wall or table, to amplify the sound.
in experience I'd say they just break when you try to put them in higher tunings, not sure about making the note higher. I bought a set of Yngwie Malmsteen signature strings the first time, stringed the guitar up , stretched the strings and so I clipped off the strings and the highest note the high E would go into was C. Shortening the string just makes it impossible to reach higher tunings as far as I know, almost smashed a 300$ guitar I owned .. but when that happened it was a long day of fixing guitars.
Yes, vibrating particles create sound waves. As an object vibrates, it causes nearby air particles to also vibrate, creating compressions and rarefactions that propagate as sound waves. Our ears detect these sound waves and process them as sound.
By vibrating, which induces vibration in the air, and sound is vibrations in the air.
The guitar makes sound when you pluck a string. The string vibrates down to the base of the guitar and travels in the hole, coming out as a sound we call a note.
A percussive sound when striking a string with a felt covered hammer ... the vibrating string resonates a particular pitch.
the frets make the guitar string make a different sound.
Different string instruments have different ways to make sound. Pianos hit the strings with a felt covered "Hammer", a Guitar creates a sound when the guitar player plucks a string. Either way, each string instrument makes sound by the vibration of the string.
The strings vibrate to make the sound.
A guitar makes sound and produces music by vibrating its strings when they are plucked or strummed. These vibrations travel through the guitar's body, which amplifies the sound. The sound is then projected out through the sound hole, creating music that we can hear.
I now that it is the string ,reed ,skin and metal block.
I now that it is the string ,reed ,skin and metal block.
get heavier gauge strings, than you can make it sound much louder
you can tighten or loosen your strings, causing the string make higher or lower sound. (Check guitar tuning)
Lower.