How Sound Travels
Sound: How Sound Travels
How Sound Travels
How Sound Travels
NCERT anchor
Looking Around 2 — About Me / Games We Play. Hearing calls and whistles across the playground links to how sound moves through the classroom's "About Me" senses topics.
What you'll learn
- Sound is made when something vibrates (shakes quickly).
- Sound travels through air from the source to our ears.
- Sound also travels through water and solids (like a wall or a string telephone).
- Sound becomes fainter the farther away you are from it.
Key concepts
Verbal: When you speak, your throat vibrates; the vibrations move through the air to reach a friend's ears.
Symbolic: Vibration -> travels through air/water/solid -> reaches ear -> we hear sound.
Level 1 — Sound needs vibration
A guitar string vibrates when plucked, sending sound through the air.
Level 1 — Sound travels through air
We hear a friend calling across the playground because sound moves through the air to our ears.
Level 2 — Sound through solids and water
Tapping one end of a table lets a friend feel/hear it at the other end; fish can sense sounds made in water.
Level 2 — India
Hearing a temple bell from far away, or a train whistle heard before the train is seen, both show sound travelling through air over distance.
Worked example
Why does a friend's voice sound fainter when they stand farther away?
Step 1 — The voice makes the air vibrate near the mouth.
Step 2 — As sound travels farther, it spreads out and grows weaker.
Step 3 — By the time it reaches distant ears, it sounds fainter.
Answer: Sound gets fainter as distance increases.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Sound only travels through air | Forgetting solids and water | Sound also travels through walls and water |
| Sound travels instantly with no distance effect | Ignoring fading with distance | Sound gets fainter farther away |
| Sound needs no vibration | Vibration is the source of all sound | Every sound starts with something vibrating |
Quick check
- What makes a sound when you pluck a rubber band?
- Why can you hear a friend shout from across the field but softer than up close?
- Name one way sound can travel besides through air.
Stretch: Make a simple string telephone with two cups and a string. What do you notice about the sound?
Revision tip: Tap on a table and place your ear near the other end — notice how the tap feels and sounds.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on How Sound Travels.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- NCERT anchor
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
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