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Let's learn how sound travels and how humans hear.

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How does sound help us to communicate?

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How does sound travel?

Sound is caused by vibrations. These vibrations travel as waves through any medium:

Gas, liquid and solid particles, side by side and labelled.
Image caption,
Sound can travel through gas, liquid and solids.
  • sound travels best through solids as the particles are so close together
  • sound also travels well through liquids where the particles are a bit further apart
  • sound travels less well through gases like air where the particles are much more spread out
Gas, liquid and solid particles, side by side and labelled.
Image caption,
Sound can travel through gas, liquid and solids.

Most animals (including humans) use some form of sound to communicate with each other, from birds singing, to hippos bellowing, and cats meowing, to children chatting.

Solids

An adder snake in grass.
Image caption,
Snakes experience sound as vibrations coming up from the ground.

Although sound travels very well through solids, most animals communicate using sound waves through liquid (eg. water) or gas (eg. air).

Snakes don't have outer ears like we do. A snake's inner ear is connected to its jaw bone. This is very sensitive to vibrations that travel through the solid ground.

You can also learn how elephants use vibrations across solid earth to communicate, in our guide: How do plants and animals sense touch and vibrations?

An adder snake in grass.
Image caption,
Snakes experience sound as vibrations coming up from the ground.

Liquids

A humpback whale in the sea.
Image caption,
Humpback whales have been recorded communicating over thousands of miles!

Water is a good for sound waves to travel through.

For example, whales can communicate through thousands of miles of ocean.

A humpback whale in the sea.
Image caption,
Humpback whales have been recorded communicating over thousands of miles!

Gases

Two school children talking.
Image caption,
When we speak, sound vibrations travel through the air and can be detected by our ears

Sound also travels through air.

It doesn't travel as well as it does in gases and liquids but human speech and hearing are adapted for it.

Two school children talking.
Image caption,
When we speak, sound vibrations travel through the air and can be detected by our ears
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How do humans speak and hear each other?

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide 1 of 4, A girl speaks and sound waves emit from her mouth., Making sound Humans speak by pushing air out of our lungs through a pair of vocal folds in our windpipe. The vocal folds cause the air to start vibrating and the sound is shaped by the mouth into recognisable sounds such as speech. This sound is transmitted through the air as a wave.

How do humans hear? revision-guide

Find out how the ear and brain work together to let people hear.

How do humans hear?

What are the states of matter? revision-guide

Find out about the difference between solids, liquids and gases.

What are the states of matter?
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What happens when we have hearing problems?

Some people are not able to hear at all. Other people might not hear sounds as clearly, or might not be able to hear as many different sounds.

Sometimes hearing loss is caused by a problem with the ear itself or a problem with the sound-interpreting part of the brain.

People who are deaf, or partially deaf, have a range of tools to help them cope with not being able to hear:

Two men communicating in sign language.
Image caption,
Two people using sign language to communicate. British Sign Language (BSL) is a language just like English, Gaelic or French. There are many different types of sign language across the world, just like there are many different spoken languages.

Sign language

Some use sign language, which uses the hands, upper body and facial expressions to communicate.

Others learn to lip read.

Two men communicating in sign language.
Image caption,
Two people using sign language to communicate. British Sign Language (BSL) is a language just like English, Gaelic or French. There are many different types of sign language across the world, just like there are many different spoken languages.
A child wearing a hearing aid.
Image caption,
Hearing aids are used by people who have some level of hearing. They are fully removable.

Hearing aids

Some people wear hearing aids to sounds.

These tend to be used by people who have some hearing. Some make all sounds louder while others can be programmed to amplify specific sounds that the wearer does not hear very well.

Hearing aids are placed in the ear canal and can be removed by the user.

A child wearing a hearing aid.
Image caption,
Hearing aids are used by people who have some level of hearing. They are fully removable.
A child with a cochlear implant.
Image caption,
Cochlear implants are used by people who have little or no hearing. They pick up sounds and turn them into electrical signals that pass directly to the auditory nerve. The person has an operation to attach it.

Cochlear implants

Other people have fitted.

These tend to be used by people who are severely hard of hearing or deaf. The person is operated on to attach the implant. This bypasses the inner ear, picking up sound waves and passing them directly to the nerve leading to the brain.

A child with a cochlear implant.
Image caption,
Cochlear implants are used by people who have little or no hearing. They pick up sounds and turn them into electrical signals that pass directly to the auditory nerve. The person has an operation to attach it.

Hearing aids and cochlear implants don't always work and there can be bad side effects so some people choose not to have them.

Technology is always improving to support people with their hearing.

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How does human hearing compare to animal hearing?

Many animals have far better hearing than humans!

For example:

  • Dogs can hear much higher pitches than humans and can also hear things up to four times further away.

  • Bats and owls have also evolved incredibly sensitive hearing to help them hunt in the dark.

To find out more about animal communication check out these guides:

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Activity

Challenge

Try this communication experiment!

You will need

  • two paper cups with a small hole in each bottom

  • a long length of string

  • a partner

Sounds travel through solids (like string) more easily than gases (like air). Try making this string telephone and see how well sounds travel through different lengths of string.

Watch this video to find out what to do:

Watch and learn

Video

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Key words

鈥 To increase the volume or make a sound louder.

鈥 Sending and receiving information.

鈥 A substance that waves can travel through.

鈥 The tiny pieces of matter that everything is made up of.

鈥 A pattern of motion that transfers energy, such as sound, from one place to another.

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Quiz

Why not test yourself in our fun quiz!

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More on Light and sound

Find out more by working through a topic