How sound travels
How animals hear
Different Types of Sound
Ears! Ears! Ears!
Random Facts
100

What is a vibration?

When something moves back and forth very rapidly (sometimes so quickly that it cannot be seen by the human eye)

100

Name an animal that can hear a wider range of sounds than a human?

Elephant, bat, shark, dog

100

How does amplitude affect a sound?

The greater the amplitude the louder the sound

100

Does a sound wave get bigger or smaller when it enters the ear?

Smaller

100

True or False: Sound is a type of energy?

True

200

What is it called when sound travels through the air?

A sound wave

200

What adaptions help an elephant hear better than a human?

Large, funnel shaped ears

200

A high pitched sound is created by greater or fewer sound waves over a set time?

greater

200

What is the membrane in the ear that starts to vibrate called?

Ear Drum

200

What unit do we measure sound in?

Decibels

300

What does sound travel through fastest? A solid, liquid or gas?

Solid

300

From how far away can a shark hear low pitched sounds?

Two football fields

300

What is frequency?

The number of sound waves that happen in a set time.  This effects the pitch of the sound

300

What is the long, tube-shaped passage called that sound travels down once it enters your ear?

Ear canal

300

How can sound hurt or damage our ears?

Prolonged exposure to loud sounds can cause pain or a ringing in the ear. Loud sounds can even cause the ear drum to perforate (make a small hole in it).

400

What is it called when sound waves bounce off an object and travel back towards the original source?

Echo

400

How many ear canals does a shark's ear have?

3

400

Regular patterns in sound waves produce what type of sound?

A note

400

Which animal can make itself temporarily deaf?

bat

400

List reasons how sound helps us in our everyday life.

Communication, Learning, Safety, etc

500

In our coat hanger experiment, why did the sound change when we listened to it through the string and our fingers?

The molecules are closer together in a solid.  The sound is able to travel more effectively but the waves slow as they pass through so many molecules causing the pitch to get lower

500

What is the process that bats use to find prey in dark locations using sound called?

Echolocation

500

What is the pressure or amount of force that a sound wave has as it travels through a solid, liquid or gas called?

Amplitude

500

What is the sea-shell shaped part of the inner ear called?

Cochlea

500

Explain how sound is produced and how it travels to our brains.

Vibrations make sound waves which ripple through the air molecules.  These waves get smaller as they enter your ear and travel down the ear canal.  The vibrating air molecules cause your ear drum to vibrate and your brain turns these electrical signals into sound.