There is no material sound can go through the quickest. Sound always have the same speed.
Sound can travel through solids, liquids, and gases by causing the particles of the medium to vibrate. When a sound wave encounters a material, the particles in the material vibrate and transfer the sound energy through the medium. The denser the material, the faster sound will travel through it.
Sound can pass through some materials, like air and water, but it is blocked by others, such as solid objects like walls. The ability of sound to travel through a material depends on factors like the density and composition of the material.
no trust me there isn't don't make me go in to explaning it
To test which materials carry sound waves best for a science project, you can set up an experiment where you measure the sound transmission through different materials like metal, wood, plastic, and glass using a sound source and a decibel meter. Record the data and analyze which material produced the highest sound transmission. This will help you determine which material carries sound waves best.
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.
Sound can travel through solids, liquids, and gases by causing the particles of the medium to vibrate. When a sound wave encounters a material, the particles in the material vibrate and transfer the sound energy through the medium. The denser the material, the faster sound will travel through it.
Sound can pass through some materials, like air and water, but it is blocked by others, such as solid objects like walls. The ability of sound to travel through a material depends on factors like the density and composition of the material.
it allows sound to go through it
Sound travels faster through a solid than through a vacuum. In a solid, sound waves propagate through the material's molecules, leading to faster transmission. In a vacuum, there are no molecules to transmit sound, so it cannot travel at all.
A blackbird doesn't go "through the speed of sound", it moves through the air.
Yes sound can go through water because when you say hi under water you are producing air buble that make sound.
When sound waves go through liquids, they travel five times as faster than they do on land. When sound waves go through solids though, they don't go as fast.
no......... the speed changes as it goes through different materials example: when sound goes through air it is faster then when it transfers to go through water because water is more dense and there are more particles for it to have to pass through
Sound pressure goes e.g. through thin paper. Loudness is a problematic word in this case. Feelings are different from person to person. So don't talk of "measuring" the "loudness". You can really measure the sound pressure (amplitude) with a sound pressure level meter. Microphones and eardrums are only sensitive to the sound pressure.
vacuum
The speed of sound varies a lot, depending on the material through which it passes, and (to a minor degree) the temperature. In air, the speed of sound is about 330 meters/second, but in solids, the speed of sound can be several times larger than that. And yes, it is possible for an object to go faster than the speed of sound. Certain jet plains do that regularly.
I don't think it's easy to go through yourself. So it's like sound going through itself.