CONCEPT: Sound - comparing pitch & volume.
CONCEPT: What is the difference between the loudness and pitch of a sound?
The pitch of the sound is the characteristic frequency of the the sound (measured in hertz) - the loudness is the amplitude or volume (measured in decibels).
The human ear is capable of detecting sound waves with a wide range of frequencies, ranging between approximately 20 Hz to 20 000 Hz.
The sensation of a frequency is commonly referred to as the pitch of a sound. A high pitch sound corresponds to a high frequency sound wave and a low pitch sound corresponds to a low frequency sound wave. Amazingly, many people, especially those who have been musically trained, are capable of detecting a difference in frequency between two separate sounds that is as little as 2 Hz.
Humans are equipped with very sensitive ears capable of detecting sound waves of extremely low intensity.
Since the range of intensities that the human ear can detect is so large, the scale that is frequently used by physicists to measure intensity is a scale based on powers of 10. This type of scale is sometimes referred to as a logarithmic scale. The scale for measuring intensity is the decibel scale.
Reference: http://www.physicsclassroom.com/class/sound/Lesson-2/Intensity-and-the-Decibel-Scale