No, mirrors do not reflect sound. Mirrors reflect light waves, but sound waves require a medium, such as air or water, to travel through. Sound waves do not bounce off mirrors as they are not capable of reflecting sound.
No, mirrors cannot reflect sound as they are designed to reflect light. Sound waves interact differently with surfaces compared to light waves, so while mirrors work for reflecting light, they do not work for reflecting sound.
Sound is to echo. Just like light bounces off surfaces to reflect, sound waves can bounce off surfaces and repeat in an echo.
An echo is created when sound waves reflect off a surface and return to the listener. In this process, the sound waves do not refract, but rather bounce off the surface at an angle equal to the incident angle.
The depth of water is typically measured using instruments like depth sounders, echo sounders, or sonar devices, which send sound waves through the water and measure the time it takes for the waves to reflect back. This information is then used to calculate the water depth based on the speed of sound in water.
No, mirrors do not reflect sound. Mirrors reflect light waves, but sound waves require a medium, such as air or water, to travel through. Sound waves do not bounce off mirrors as they are not capable of reflecting sound.
No, mirrors cannot reflect sound as they are designed to reflect light. Sound waves interact differently with surfaces compared to light waves, so while mirrors work for reflecting light, they do not work for reflecting sound.
Yes, they do.
Reflect
Sound is to echo. Just like light bounces off surfaces to reflect, sound waves can bounce off surfaces and repeat in an echo.
Reflect
Yes.
All solids can reflect sound. Different plastics reflect by different amounts. Sound waves are vibrations. They transfer energy to the solid when they hit it, and the particles of solid vibrate more, and can transfer this vibration back to the air.
Some surfaces reflect sound well, others don't.
Becuase sound can not go through solid objects.
An echo is created when sound waves reflect off a surface and return to the listener. In this process, the sound waves do not refract, but rather bounce off the surface at an angle equal to the incident angle.
Hard reflexions from walls reflect the sound and add it to the direct sound. That gives amplification of the total sound.