473
Sound
We live in a noisy World. The roar of city traffic, the
music from a piano, the bark of a dog, all come to our ears
as sound waves traveling through the air. sound is generated
when a disturbance sets air moving—for example, when
someone plucks a guitar string. We hear sounds when
sound waves—tiny vibrations in the air—strike our
eardrums. sound waves need a substance to travel through.
This substance may be a liquid, such as water; a solid, such
as brick and stone; or a gas, such as air.
sounds such as musical notes have a certain
pitch. a high-pitched sound makes the air vibrate
backward and forward more times each second
than a low-pitched sound. The
number of vibrations per
second is called the
frequency of the sound
and is measured in hertz
(cycles per second).
Humans cannot hear
sounds with frequencies
above about 20,000 hertz
or below about 30 hertz.
loudness and decibels
The sound of a train is louder
than the sound
of a whisper
because the train
produces larger
vibrations in the air.
The loudness of
sound also depends
on how close you are
to its source. loudness
is measured in decibels
(db). a jet airliner
taking off is rated at
about 120 db; the rustling
of leaves is about 33 db.
resonance
an object such as a glass gives out
a musical note when struck, because it has
its own natural frequency of vibration. if
you sing a musical note of this frequency,
the object vibrates at its natural frequency,
pushed by the sound waves that hit
it. This is called resonance. a
very loud sound can make a glass
resonate so strongly that it shatters.
sound Waves
a sound wave consists of air molecules
vibrating backward and forward. at each
moment, the molecules are crowded together
in some places, producing regions of high pressure,
and spaced out in others, producing regions of low
pressure. Waves of alternately high pressure and
low pressure move through the air, spreading
out from the source of the sound. These
sound waves carry the sound to your ears.
Region of high-
pressure air
Region of low-
pressure air
The distance from one region of
highest pressure to the next is called
the wavelength of the sound.
The higher the pitch, or frequency,
of the sound, the shorter
the wavelength.
The noise of the boat’s engine sends
sound waves through the water.
Harmonics
in a musical note secondary frequencies,
called harmonics, are mixed with the main
frequency. Harmonics are characteristic of
different instruments, which is why a note
played on a piano sounds different from the
same note played on a violin. Harmonics bring
life to the sound of musical instruments: an
electronically produced sound of a single pure
frequency sounds artificial and dull.
speed of sound
sound travels in
air at a speed of
about 760 mph
(1,224 km/h).
it travels more
slowly when the
temperature and
pressure of the air
are lower. in the
thin, cold air 7 miles
(11 km) up, the speed
of sound is about 620 mph
(1,000 km/h). in water,
sound travels at 3,350 mph
(5,400 km/h), much faster
than in air.
Find out more
ears
music
musical instruments
radio
ecHoes
if you shout in a large hall or near mountains, you can
hear your voice echo back to you. an echo occurs when
a sound bounces off a surface such as a cliff face,
and reaches you shortly after the direct sound.
The clarity of speech and music in a
room or concert hall depends
on the way sounds echo
inside it.
US_473_Sound.indd 473 22/01/16 4:48 pm