Physics, asked by prateekgoel6236, 1 year ago

Find the range of wavelength corresponding to the frequency range in audible region

Answers

Answered by sam9922
0

The human ear responds to sounds with frequencies in the range from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz. This is called the audible range of the human ear. Examples of vibrating sources that produce sound in the audible range of frequencies are drums, guitar strings, tuning fork, human vocal cords and diaphragms of loudspeakers.

In audible sound waves whose frequencies are less than 20 Hz are in the infrasonic range. Sources of infrasonic waves include earthquakes, thunder, volcanoes and waves produced by vibrating heavy machinery. The hearing ranges of elephants and whales extend into the infrasonic region.

Frequencies above 20,000 Hz are in the ultrasonic range. The audible range of dogs, cats, moths and mice extends into ultrasound frequencies. They can hear very high frequencies that humans cannot.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Audible sound is defined as the sound which can be hear by a particular organism .

This means that the sound wave must have a frequency of 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz for humans.

This is the audibility range of humans.

However some other animals like dolphins , bats , etc. have more audiblity ranges and hence they can hear wide variety of sounds.

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