Sound is transmitted by particles (atoms or molecules) in a solid, liquid or gas colliding with each other. It is a wave which is created by vibrating objects and propagated through a medium (solid, liquid or gas) from one location to another. A vibrating source can be sound coming from a drum, speaker of a radio, the mouth of a person (vocal chord), a car engine, a plane above the sky and so on. Although sound is commonly associated in air, sound will readily travel through many materials that are solid, liquid and gas
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You cannot pass through solids as your physical form would not be able to move through them. Solids have a fixed shape and volume, which makes it impossible for objects to pass through them.
Sound waves can pass through solids, liquids, and gases. The speed and efficiency of sound transmission can vary between different substances, with solids generally transmitting sound waves more effectively than liquids or gases.
No, sound cannot travel through solids because the particles in solids are tightly packed and do not allow the vibrations of sound to pass through them like they can in liquids and gases.
Sound can pass through liquid by creating pressure waves that travel through the liquid molecules. These pressure waves cause the molecules to vibrate, transmitting the sound energy. The speed at which sound travels through liquid is faster than through gases but slower than through solids.
Sound travels through all matter but some materials either absorb sound, reflect sound, or just slow sound down.