Thats why I thought definition of sound and loudness would be nice. For human ear, 120db is too much. More than that, and damage occurs. And 120db isn't very "loud" actually. Jets produce more every takeoff.
I'm not sure, but afaik sound is result of change in pressure, not pressure level itself, and typical medium has limit to its compressibility. Air when compressed too much becomes liquid. Thats different medium. So definition of sound is needed. Wind can be very low frequency sound, but we call it mechanical motion of molecules.
Suppose soundwave in air with max intensity, I thought it would be limited by compressibility of air at wavefront, and that depends on speed of medium reaction, or speed of sound. Sonic boom is example of energy imparted to air, and air pressure at front depends on inertia of air ahead of it, else pressure would dissipate. Speed of sound also depends on density of medium, or its pressure level perhaps.
Seems to me, speed of sound determines max slope of wavefront, and velocity also defines kinetic energy carried. You know that low frequency sound to carry same energy as high frequency sound needs more amplitude. Imo, its because slope of wavefront is what defines "loudness". Sure, meteorite entering atmosphere can impart huge amounts of energy to air, but sound wave leaving it cannot be sustained in the medium. Thus, although pressure level at collision point is immense, its not exactly sound.
What limits mass in wavefront? I guess normal mass density of medium together with speed of sound. Slope of wavefront is limited by this speed, and amount of mass moved depends on that slope and time. You can move huge masses with more time, or less mass faster - frequency-amplitude dependance.
But I'm not very sure here. Perhaps someone who knows better could help us out.
As to limits of frequency, I guess so too. Lower limit depends on where we make distinction between sound and mechanical motion, upper limit is somewhat foggier to me. But if assume limited slope of wavefront, then higher frequency periodic motion results in reduced amplitudes. Higher limit is then defined by minimum possible amplitude, that is still meaningful as being sound. I know several (or even hundreds) MHz sounds can easily travel in air. Afaik even TV-sets used acoustic delaylines using sound to decode color signals. I believe there is limit, and it also depends on speed of sound, but I don't know how to find it. Maybe limit is somewhere where we stop calling it sound and start calling it heat.