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SOUND, VIBRATION, AND RESONANCE

How does sound travel between mountains?

Sound waves travel through the narrow structure of the valley at 340 metres/second, bouncing back and forth within seconds, and return from the opposing rocks to create echoes. We can understand this…

HW-OBS-153911 1 minutes

Sound waves travel through the narrow structure of the valley at 340 metres/second, bouncing back and forth within seconds, and return from the opposing rocks to create echoes. We can understand this invisible movement only through the delay of the echo, the amplification or weakening of sound. If we could see sound waves, each cry would wind through the mountain like a red ribbon zigzagging in loops.

Scale 1m
Detection method Naked eye
Visibility 35%

How is this invisible signal measured?

The values below reflect the typical range of this phenomenon.

Visibility 35%
Duration Daytime
Detection Naked eye
Scale 1m

Signal signature

Visual representation — not scientific measurement data.

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