When sound dies away, the sound energy is gradually transformed into other forms of energy, such as heat energy due to friction between molecules in the medium through which the sound waves passed. Eventually, the sound energy dissipates and is no longer detectable as sound.
The missing 15 joules of energy could have been converted into other forms of energy, such as thermal energy, sound energy, or internal energy within the system. In any energy transformation, the total amount of energy remains constant, following the law of conservation of energy.
The loudness of a sound wave decreases as it travels away from its source due to the spreading out of energy in all directions. This phenomenon is known as sound attenuation, where sound energy is dissipated through interactions with the surrounding medium. Additionally, absorption, reflection, and scattering of sound waves by air molecules and obstacles in the environment contribute to the decrease in loudness.
When a pulse sent down a long string eventually dies away and disappears, its energy is typically converted into other forms, such as heat and sound. Friction between the string and the surrounding air causes the pulse to lose energy until it dissipates completely.
When a person dies, the energy in their body is released in the form of heat and is eventually transferred to the environment. This energy is not lost but is instead recycled and dispersed into the surroundings.
For one, as the sound spreads over a larger area, the intensity decreases. This is similar to a light becoming dimmer, the farther away you get away from the light source - the light, too, spreads over a larger area, so in both cases, less energy is available per unit area. On the other hand, part of any sound (or light, or other wave) will be absorbed - converted to other types of energy.
The energy in the sound's vibration dies down, until it is no longer audible.
The energy gets absorbed by the string, and will be converted mainly to heat.
It dies out
Much of the energy is consumed by decomposers.
The missing 15 joules of energy could have been converted into other forms of energy, such as thermal energy, sound energy, or internal energy within the system. In any energy transformation, the total amount of energy remains constant, following the law of conservation of energy.
The loudness of a sound wave decreases as it travels away from its source due to the spreading out of energy in all directions. This phenomenon is known as sound attenuation, where sound energy is dissipated through interactions with the surrounding medium. Additionally, absorption, reflection, and scattering of sound waves by air molecules and obstacles in the environment contribute to the decrease in loudness.
The energy is dissipated. That means it is absorbed, and somehow converted to other forms of energy. Typically, much of this dissipated energy gets converted into heat.
When a pulse sent down a long string eventually dies away and disappears, its energy is typically converted into other forms, such as heat and sound. Friction between the string and the surrounding air causes the pulse to lose energy until it dissipates completely.
The arms of the fork are oscilllating, so the energy exchange is between potential energy in the elasticity of the arms of the fork, and kinetic energy during that part of the cycle when the arms are moving. There is also a constant loss of energy to atmospheric damping as the sound dies away.
It dies or is too weak to run away from a predator.
It disappears until the tsunami dies away. I don't know what happens to a tsunami but this is what I think.
The Energy Never Dies. So baisically its the opposite to the end. As its never going to die and fade away