That's just physics for you. Higher pitch means higher frequency means more vibrations for one unit of time.
To create a higher pitch sound, the source of that sound has to vibrate more often.
The larynx (plural larynges), colloquially known as the voicebox, is much smaller.
Females make higher sounds than males because males have larger voicebox and longer vocal cords than females
Puberty u girls don't go through that and it's just how we are and I think girls voices are cute:)
The male has a lower tone voice and facial hair because their testosterone level is high.
Sounds like that answer would be the Vocal Chords.
Well, it's not necessary for the whole object to vibrate, but the part of it that's producing the sound does. Example: I'm not vibrating when I produce sound, but my vocal chords are, otherwise there's no sound. So the answer to what you're trying to ask is: No.
Songs sung by a voclist are considered music; because the vocal chords are making the sound, they are the instrument.
Sound is produced. Vocal cords vibrate and produce sound.
The pitch of someone's voice is controlled by the tension on the vocal chords
It can stick to the vocal chords and change the pitch at which they vibrate.
The pitch of your voice depends on how fast your vocal chords vibrate. The faster they vibrate, the higher the pitch. When you sing you use your muscles to force them closer together causing them to vibrate faster. When you are sick, your lymph nodes swell causing them to get closer and vibrate faster producing a higher sound.
the vocal folds are your vocal chords as air passes through the glottic opening (a fancy name for the space between the vocal folds) they vibrate hitting into echother creating sound
The human voice is the sound produced by the air that is pushed to vibrate the vocal chords.The modulation,pitch depends on the thickness,ability to stretch the vocal chords by muscles.Some are born with a vocal chord that produces good harmonics and the voluntary ability to adjust the harmonics by the modulation of sound produced naturally.Some can to some extent practice to modulate the vocal chord muscles but the length & size of the vocal chords matter.
Unlike mammals, birds do not have vocal chords, but instead possess a vocal organ called a syrinx (below the bird's larynx). The walls of the syrinx vibrate to produce sound.
Sounds like that answer would be the Vocal Chords.
Well, it's not necessary for the whole object to vibrate, but the part of it that's producing the sound does. Example: I'm not vibrating when I produce sound, but my vocal chords are, otherwise there's no sound. So the answer to what you're trying to ask is: No.
The vocal chords vibrate so that you can talk to people and communicate, even holler when you need help or just feel like it.
Your vocal folds (also called the ventricular folds) are toward the top of your larynyx, protecting your vocal chords. These folds help prevent you from breathing in solids. A very interesting effect is produced when you sing and you get these folds to vibrate. They will vibrate at half the speed of your vocal chords, and produce a sound an octave lower than the note you are singing with your vocal chords. This sounds much like a foghorn or a prolonged burp. The people most noted for producing this effect, theTuvans, call this effect kargyraa.
vocal chords
Your vocal chords,
Because Helium is lighter than the oxygen and other gases we breathe, when it passes through your vocal chords, it makes them vibrate quicker than the heavier gases like Oxygen-(8) and such. So because they cause your vocal chords to vibrate quicker, it tightens up your vocal chords and makes the pitch of your voice go up.