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Sound F 50-53. What Makes Sound? Sound is provided by making something move back and forth  vibration Many of the vibrations are too fast for you to.

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Presentation on theme: "Sound F 50-53. What Makes Sound? Sound is provided by making something move back and forth  vibration Many of the vibrations are too fast for you to."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sound F 50-53

2 What Makes Sound? Sound is provided by making something move back and forth  vibration Many of the vibrations are too fast for you to see but sometimes you can feel it (example: a bat hitting a ball)

3 Energy transfer If you pluck a guitar string you can see it moving back and forth; you provided the energy necessary for this vibration Vocal cords in your throat vibrate when air moves past them allowing you to speak Not all instruments rely on strings to make their sounds

4 InstrumentType of VibrationExample BrassVibrating AirTrumpet or Tuba WoodwindsVibrating Reed Vibrating Wind Oboe or Clarinet Flute or Piccolo PercussionVibrating SurfaceDrums or Piano StringsVibrating StringsGuitar or Violin

5 Sound waves Sound is a vibration that travels through matter (anything that takes up space) − When a string vibrates, it makes molecules of gases in the air next to it vibrate, − the molecules squeeze together then spread apart − these molecules make the molecules next to them vibrate as well

6 − A vibration that spreads away from a vibrating object is as sound wave − it carries the energy from the vibrating object outward in all directions (F51)

7 Sound Waves Compression  the part of the sound wave where the molecules are crowded together Rarefaction  the part of the sound wave where the molecules are spread apart

8 Compression Rarefaction

9 What else can sound go through? You can hear sounds in the air; when sound waves reach your ear they make parts in the ear vibrate since air is a mixture of gases, you can conclude that sound travels through gases in the form of a sound wave

10 Solids You can tell that sounds travel through solids by putting your ear onto a tabletop; if someone taps on the other end it is easier to hear with your head on the table rather than in the air If you want sound to travel through a thick solid or to be louder, you must apply more force Liquids You can hear sound through liquids although it may seem somewhat distorted


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