A creature can detect very small objects, such as an insect whose length is approximately equal to one wavelength of the sound the bat makes. If a bat emits chirps at a frequency of 56 kHz, and if the speed of sound in air is 315 m/s, what is the smallest insect (in mm) the bat can detect? A Maving to another question will save this response. «< Question 11 of 25 >
Properties of sound
A sound wave is a mechanical wave (or mechanical vibration) that transit through media such as gas (air), liquid (water), and solid (wood).
Quality Of Sound
A sound or a sound wave is defined as the energy produced due to the vibrations of particles in a medium. When any medium produces a disturbance or vibrations, it causes a movement in the air particles which produces sound waves. Molecules in the air vibrate about a certain average position and create compressions and rarefactions. This is called pitch which is defined as the frequency of sound. The frequency is defined as the number of oscillations in pressure per second.
Categories of Sound Wave
People perceive sound in different ways, like a medico student takes sound as vibration produced by objects reaching the human eardrum. A physicist perceives sound as vibration produced by an object, which produces disturbances in nearby air molecules that travel further. Both of them describe it as vibration generated by an object, the difference is one talks about how it is received and other deals with how it travels and propagates across various mediums.
![A creature can detect very small objects, such as an insect whose length is approximately equal to one wavelength of the sound the bat makes. If a bat emits chirps at a frequency of 56 kHz, and if the speed of sound in air is 315 m/s,
what is the smallest insect (in mm) the bat can detect?
A Moving to another question will save this response
«< Question 11 of 25> >](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2Fe2685901-77f1-40d3-a3cc-3413f1c30c0b%2Fc9baf5aa-5f2d-49e5-aa8e-3cbf5503a31d%2Fphry468_processed.jpeg&w=3840&q=75)
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