Sound 1
Sound 2
Sound 3
Sound 4
100

An example of a type of longitudinal wave

Sound wave

100

Pitch is dependant on

Frequency

100

When a firetruck is moving and its siren is working, an observer behind the firetruck will hear

A lower pitch

100

A nerve that carries signals of sound waves from the cochlea to the brain

Auditory nerve

200

The section of a longitudinal wave where air particles are close together and there is a lot of pressure

Compression

200

The section of a longitudinal wave that has low pressure and particles are further apart

Rarefaction

200

This part of the ear acts as a funnel and catch sound waves and pass down the ear canal

Pinna

200

When you have a higher frequency how does the wavelength change?

It is shorter

300

A section of a wave that measures from the resting position to the crest or the trough

Amplitude

300

The medium where sound moves the fastest

Solid

300

When you have a lower frequency how does the wavelength change?

It is longer

300

This part of the ear presses against the cochlea in the inner ear

Stirrup

400

Something that causes particles to move

Vibrations

400

The section of a wave that measures from crest to crest or from trough to trough

Wavelength

400

When a firetruck is moving and its siren is working, an observer in front of the firetruck will hear

A higher pitch

400

The part of the ear which is a tunnel that sound waves can travel to get to the middle ear

Ear canal

500

If a wave moves at a speed of 5 waves per second, what is the frequency?

5 Hertz

500

The medium where sound moves the slowest

Air/gas

500

This part of the ear receives sound waves and translate them into something the brain can understand.

Cochlea

500

The change in wave frequency between a wave source and its observer

Doppler effect