Sound

Season 01
Episode 12
Duration 23:09
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⭐ Interactive Lesson ⭐
Interactive Science Lesson

Sound

Based on Bill Nye the Science Guy · Season 1, Episode 12 · 22 min

Every day your ears are flooded with music, talking, sirens, and laughter. But what actually is a sound? It is entirely invisible, yet it can travel across huge distances, rattle the windows of your house, and even let you hear things around corners! Let us explore the invisible world of vibrations and waves.

Step 1 of 6 · Engage
Engage

What Exactly Are You Hearing?

Explore

Put Your Instincts to the Test

Think about what you already know about music and noises. Pick an answer for each question, then see if your instincts were right.

What must happen for any sound to be created in the first place?
What makes a sound incredibly high pitched like a referee whistle?
What physical part of your body acts like a drum to catch invisible sound waves?
Explain

Understanding the Science

Let us break down the invisible waves, vocal cords, and echoes with Bill Nye the Science Guy.

Key Concepts

Vibration

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Sound Wave

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Medium

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Vacuum

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Pitch

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Frequency

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Eardrum & Cilia

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Echo

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Try It: The Interactive Audio Visualiser

Take control of the invisible forces of sound! Press the Play button below to generate a real audio tone. Use the custom orange sliders to adjust the frequency for pitch and the amplitude for volume. Listen to the physical sound change while you visually compare how the air molecules squeeze tightly together and spread far apart!

Elaborate

Apply Your Knowledge

Let us see if you can match these wave properties to the sounds they create.

Match the Concepts

Click an object to select it, then click the matching description to place it.

Items
Very Fast Vibrations
Very Slow Vibrations
Tall Wave Amplitudes
Short Wave Amplitudes
Creates a high frequency wave resulting in a high pitched sound like a whistle.
Creates a low frequency wave resulting in a low pitched sound like a bass drum.
Contains a lot of energy, resulting in a very loud volume.
Contains very little energy, resulting in a quiet whisper.

Real World Challenge

Imagine you have been hired to design a professional recording studio for a famous musician. Knowing how sound waves bounce off hard surfaces, what specific materials would you put on the walls and ceilings to stop annoying echoes and keep outside noises from getting in?

Science Update

What Has Changed Since This Episode Aired

This episode first aired in the 1990s. While sound waves still bounce and vibrate the exact same way, modern engineers have invented brilliant new technologies to manipulate those invisible waves!

Evaluate

Test Your Understanding

Answer these questions and get instant feedback. How many can you get right?

Reflection

Think about all the different sounds you can make with your mouth, lips, and vocal cords. If you had to describe what a sound wave is to someone who had never heard one before, what analogy or comparison would you use?