Science, asked by gargivashistha, 5 months ago

describe an experiment to show that sound cannot travel through vacuum

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Answered by Anonymous
3

Answer:

The experiment is done by placing an electrical bell in the bell jar. As the air is pumped out of the sealed bell jar, the sound from the bell jar fades. ... However, the sound is not audible to our ears because of the vacuum inside the jar. This demonstrates that the sound wave cannot travel through vacuum.

Explanation:

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Answered by Anonymous
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Connect the bell to the battery so that it starts ringing. Arrange the bell jar around the bell and connect it to a vacuum pump.

Start the vacuum pump so that it starts evacuating air from the bell jar. Keep on observing the sound of the ringing bell all the time.

We observe that we keep on hearing the sound of the bell after the bell jar is kept over it. As the air inside the bell jar is slowly evacuated, the sound becomes dimmer and dimmer after sometime we cannot hear it at all.

But the bell still vibrates.

Thus we conclude that the bell reaches us through the air in the bell jar.

When the vacuum pump removes air from the bell jar, the sound does not reach us even thought the bell is vibrating

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