The vocal cords or larynx --
To change your voice using a balloon, stretch a balloon and hold it near your mouth while talking or singing through it. The pitch and sound of your voice will be altered as the balloon vibrates with the sound waves passing through it. Experiment with different size balloons to achieve different effects.
No, not necessarily. In order for something that vibrates to make a sound, the vibrations need to create pressure waves in a medium, such as air, that can be detected by our ears. If the vibrations do not create these pressure waves, then no sound will be produced.
An object makes a sound when it vibrates and causes the air particles surrounding it to also vibrate. These vibrations create waves that travel through the air until they reach our ears, where they are interpreted by our brains as sound.
In a radio, it is the speaker that vibrates to create sound. The electrical signals from the radio's circuitry are converted into physical vibrations by the speaker's diaphragm, producing audible sound waves.
The vocal cords in your larynx (voice box) vibrate to produce sound when air passes through them. The vibration of these vocal cords causes changes in pitch and volume, creating different sounds that form speech.
a speaker uses a voice coil a coil copper wire and a magnet and pole to vibrate a cone
vibration. all sound vibrates. if you whisper so quet the sound still vibrates.
your vocal cords vibrate to make you voice
it vibrates
No, not necessarily. In order for something that vibrates to make a sound, the vibrations need to create pressure waves in a medium, such as air, that can be detected by our ears. If the vibrations do not create these pressure waves, then no sound will be produced.
To change your voice using a balloon, stretch a balloon and hold it near your mouth while talking or singing through it. The pitch and sound of your voice will be altered as the balloon vibrates with the sound waves passing through it. Experiment with different size balloons to achieve different effects.
It vibrates. The vibrations move through the dtring, then though the air and into your ear. In the ear the eardrum vibrates.
because when you hear your voice normally, the vibrations are going through your organs and bones (a solid). That sounds different then hearing a sound that vibrates through the air, and when you talk into a microphone, the sound vibrates through the air.
An object makes a sound when it vibrates and causes the air particles surrounding it to also vibrate. These vibrations create waves that travel through the air until they reach our ears, where they are interpreted by our brains as sound.
In a radio, it is the speaker that vibrates to create sound. The electrical signals from the radio's circuitry are converted into physical vibrations by the speaker's diaphragm, producing audible sound waves.
The strings.
If air passing through the glottis vibrates the vocal folds, it produces sound. The pitch and quality of the sound is determined by factors such as the tension and length of the vocal folds, as well as the rate of vibration.