Sound waves, like all other waves, are transmitted through a medium by having the particles in the medium actually collide with each other, transmitting the vibration even further. The speed of the wave is proportional to the number of collisions, so the more collisions that can be made the faster the wave can travel. Solids by definition have the closest packed particles, so there can be more collisions in this phase, meaning that solids also have the fastest sound waves. Likewise, gasses have the most spread out particles, so their infrequent collisions mean that gasses have the slowest sound waves. Liquids are halfway between solids and gasses in terms of particle packing, so their speed is in between.
For example, sound travels at around 343 m/s in the air, 1,484 m/s in water, and 5,120 m/s in solid iron!
Sound can travel through any state of matter, including solids, liquids, and gases. The speed of sound can vary depending on the medium it is traveling through, with sound traveling fastest through solids and slowest through gases.
The speed of sound is slowest in gases, as the molecules in gases are further apart and less tightly bound compared to liquids and solids.
Sound travels slowest through gas, as molecules are farther apart compared to liquids and solids, leading to decreased speed of sound waves passing through.
sound will travel through air (gas), the slowest. Because the molecule sin the air are farther apart. Actually rubber it will travel through rubber the slowest. Air is second slowest then water and then granite was all I learned . Also Saltwater is faster then water becaus e there more salt so air goes through it faster.
Yes, sound waves travel slowest through gases compared to liquids and solids. This is because gases have lower density and slower molecular movement, which results in a slower propagation of sound waves.
Sound can travel through any state of matter, including solids, liquids, and gases. The speed of sound can vary depending on the medium it is traveling through, with sound traveling fastest through solids and slowest through gases.
The speed of sound is slowest in gases, as the molecules in gases are further apart and less tightly bound compared to liquids and solids.
Sound travels slowest through air because the particles in the air are spread apart.
Air.
Sound travels slowest through gas, as molecules are farther apart compared to liquids and solids, leading to decreased speed of sound waves passing through.
sound will travel through air (gas), the slowest. Because the molecule sin the air are farther apart. Actually rubber it will travel through rubber the slowest. Air is second slowest then water and then granite was all I learned . Also Saltwater is faster then water becaus e there more salt so air goes through it faster.
Sound travels slower through less dense matter because sound is the result of molecules hitting each other. When there are fewer molecules for the vibrating molecules to bump into, sound travels slower.
there is no air in a vaccum. and sound needs air for the sound waves to travel through.
Yes, sound waves travel slowest through gases compared to liquids and solids. This is because gases have lower density and slower molecular movement, which results in a slower propagation of sound waves.
Yes it does,all the molecules are packed together.
Well sound would travel the slowest - i.e not at all - in a vacuum. However, for simplistic terms, rubber is actually the slowest that sound will travel through of common objects. I don't know but something like sodium at 3K might be a lot slower.
The speed of sound depends greatly on the substance through which the sound waves travel. The speed of sound through air is faster than through other more dense gases such as carbon dioxide, but slower through lighter gases such as hydrogen. The speed of sound, only a little more than 1,000 feet per second through dry air, is almost a mile per second (amost five times faster) through water, two miles per second through copper, and more than three miles per second through steel.