How does a sound change when its frequency increases or decreases?
Please reply thank you
Please reply thank you
I'm currently applying for a semester abroad at a college in the US. They require an "unofficial transcript" under "Previous College Information." What does this mean? Until now, I would have assumed that my current grades might be suitable for this.
At my school, the girls seem to hit on everyone and it's hard to concentrate. This sounds like a story from the Paulaner Garden, but it isn't, and it doesn't come from Saarland either.
I need the synopsis of chapter 1 of the book “The last children of Schwerborn”
There's a poster exhibition at our school, and one of them features these pictures I had to draw for the project. I find them embarrassing and totally shitty. Luckily, almost no one is looking at this exhibition anyway, but my daughter is going to my school's Christmas bazaar with me soon, and she'll definitely want…
The higher the frequency, the higher the sound.
Doubling the frequency means an octave higher. The scale is therefore logarithmic just like the dB scale. Interesting, huh?