Resource: Sound Waves Underwater: True or False
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Teachers' Domain, Sound Waves Underwater: True or False, published February 20, 2004, retrieved on ,
http://www.teachersdomain.org/resource/phy03.sci.phys.mfe.under/
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Sound waves move faster through a denser medium partly because energy is more easily passed, or conducted, between tightly packed molecules. This helps explain why the speed of sound in water is about five times faster than the speed of sound in air. Interestingly, sound can't travel at all in space because space is a vacuum containing no molecules, or almost none. Electromagnetic waves, such as light and radio waves, can travel through empty space because, unlike sound, they are self-sustaining, and no material or medium must vibrate for them to exist.
Perhaps even more influential than a conducting medium's density is its elasticity. Elasticity refers to how well a medium can return to its original form after being disturbed. Generally speaking, the stronger the bond between a medium's molecules, the higher its elasticity. At the particle level, molecules bounce right back to their original positions after an applied force is removed. Because the molecules in such highly elastic materials as steel transfer energy more efficiently, sound waves travel at higher speed through them.
The fact that water is a relatively good sound conductor explains why many marine animals have adapted to life underwater in ways that emphasize sound. Dolphins and whales, probably more than any other marine animals, have developed a sophisticated use of sound. Not only do they hear extremely well, but many have also evolved vocalizations specialized for communication, navigation, and locating food. Fish also make sounds underwater.
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Source: NOVA: "Submarines, Secrets and Spies"
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