abelthayil
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Why can't sound pass through closed doors?
All those silly people knocking on doors, thinking that you can hear it on the other side. Laughable!abelthayil said:Why can't sound pass through closed doors?
A.T. said:All those silly people knocking on doors, thinking that you can hear it on the other side. Laughable!
abelthayil said:Why can't sound pass through closed doors?
The answer is actually already given in the OPs question itself:chrisbaird said:I vote the answer given by johng23 as the best one so far.
If the speed of sound would be the same in air and door, there would be no reflection.If sound travels faster through solids then why can't we hear through doors?
abelthayil said:Why can't sound pass through closed doors?
A.T. said:The answer is actually already given in the OPs question itself:
If the speed of sound would be the same in air and door, there would be no reflection.
YummyFur said:I was only musing a few days ago why sound is able to pass through not just one but a series of rigid barriers. And not just pass through but still maintain fine detail for example in the modulations of the human voice. So I also found the premise of this thread to be puzzling.
Can you have reflection, if the speed of propagation is the same in both media?rbj said:it's not so much the speed of propagation being different that causes reflections. it's the difference in the characteristic impedance of propagation. reflections happen when that parameter changes suddenly.
Yes, in principle, if they have different densities. The acoustic impedance of the medium is Z=cρ where c is the speed of sound and ρ the density. The reflection coefficient depends on the difference between the impedance of the two media.A.T. said:Can you have reflection, if the speed of propagation is the same in both media?