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Hi,

And if everything has a vibration and frequency, doesn't it mean that everything has a sound and movement?

PLEASE DO NOT ANSWER WITH LINKS.

Thanks.

2007-08-04 10:46:45 · 5 answers · asked by survey taker 2 in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

If it is so and if everything has a different frequency, is it the basis of String Theory?
"All the elementary particles are all strings vibrating in different harmonic modes."

2007-08-04 10:56:10 · update #1

5 answers

yes, according to the quantum theory, matter has wave nature also.but it is inversely proportional to mass, by a factor, planck's constant, whose value is 6.6 * 10^--34 J/s.
so for common objects this vibration is very very low.

2007-08-07 03:21:05 · answer #1 · answered by cool IITian 3 · 0 0

It means that one does not understand physics, for most part. Everything does not have a natural frequency of vibration. Some things have MANY different resonant frequencies. Some other things have basically no resonance whatsoever. They hardly conduct pressure waves, at all. The problem here is not that resonant vibrations don't exist. They do. But they can not be generalized.

2016-03-12 20:52:02 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Everything Is Vibration

2016-11-07 07:22:56 · answer #3 · answered by slayden 4 · 0 0

SCIENTIFICALLY, Yes.
Placed in the scope of "the big picture" and how these vibrations effect the surroundings, No.
There ARE some (measuring) devices that are so sensitive as to measure the molecular movements on the surface, but whether these molecular movements actually "effect" thier surroundings determines their motions.

2007-08-04 11:00:40 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Everything vibrates, but a vibration in a vacuum cannot generate sound. The vibrating thing must bump into other things, which bump into other things, which bump into other things, and so on, for it to make a sound.

2007-08-04 10:52:32 · answer #5 · answered by lithiumdeuteride 7 · 0 0

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