Can Sound Rise Like Heat? Searching for Answers...

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Sound does not rise like heat; it is characterized by pressure fluctuations in a medium, such as air, and propagates in all directions. Unlike heat, which involves chaotic particle movement, sound consists of directional wavefronts that disperse away from their source. However, in a temperature gradient, sound waves can bend toward cooler areas because the speed of sound varies with temperature, causing them to rise in warmer air. This bending effect can lead to sound waves traveling upward when the lower air is warmer. Understanding these principles clarifies the behavior of sound in different environmental conditions.
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i have been searching for something i am positively sure about but I've been told that i am wrong, i couldn't find anything on the internet...so i thought this to be the best way to find some answers to my question...

is it true that sound ...also rises up like heat...?


pleas answer :)

thanks in advance !
 
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No. Sound is due to pressure fluctuations in a medium, i.e. air. It is omnidirectional if left to its own devices. Think of a stone being dropped in water.
 
hmm, and yet sound carries energy (kinetic, of the moving particles) given while producing the sound.

unlike heat (chaotic movement), sound is directional movement, consisting of wavefronts, and does not stay in one place (sound is heard outside the room where it was produced, disperses away)
 
Wow, I actually find myself (sort of) disagreeing with a Science Advisor here. :wink:

In a medium with a temperature gradient (for example, a mass of air that is hotter at the bottom than the top), sound waves tend to bend toward the colder part. Why? Because the speed of sound varies with temperature! Cooler air conducts sound more slowly. Therefore, if air closer to the ground is warmer, then sound waves will bend upward. If air closer to the ground is cooler, sound waves will bend downwards, and will even bounce along the ground as shown here: http://www.physics.uiowa.edu/adventure/spr_2006/feb_4-06.html (scroll down to "refraction")
 
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