CONCEPT: volume/amplitude can be affected by transmission medium, refraction and reflection.
when you strike one object with another, the sound created inside the solid object is louder that the same sound created in air
UNSW INTERACTIVE - Pitch, Loudness & Timbre
“Pressing our ear to a solid, for example, a door, allows us to directly hear the pressure waves travelling through the solid.”
Reference: Primary Connections
CONCEPT: Sound volume/amplitude can be affected by refraction and reflection.
When you put your cell phone on a table and when it vibrates its really loud compared to when its not on the table? Its because when the cell phone vibrates it forces the table to vibrate as well.
This is called forced vibration.
This is caused when an object of some type vibrates and hits or is sitting on another object which then starts vibrating the other object its sitting on by force, which also makes the sound of the vibrate louder because two things are vibrating.
Forced vibration is found in a lot of things because otherwise some things wouldnt be loud enough to hear without it. Like in a acoustic guitar, the strings wound be faint without the wooden body because therer would be no way of hearing a sound in front of large audiences, even small audiences. Wooden bodies to an instrument is always needed to hear the instrument clearly.
Source: https://thescienceclassroom.wikispaces.com/Sound
when you strike one object with another, the sound created inside the solid object is louder than the sound created in the surrounding air.
Sound 'coupling', also has a big effect: The technical term is 'mismatched impedances', but intuitively you may see how it is hard for air molecules to shake something of high density and vice versa. So, a lot of the energy gets trapped/reflected and never makes it from one medium into the other.
So, before we decide or set out to prove that solids are better conductors, first make sure that we aren't accidentally putting louder sound into the solids in the first place.
http://www.eskimo.com/~billb/miscon/miscon4.html#sound
—-