SOUND-MCQs

Prepare thoroughly for NCERT Class IX Science Chapter 11 "Sound" with this expertly designed set of 50 MCQs. These multiple-choice questions cover every important topic, from the basics of sound production, properties of sound waves, pitch and loudness, to applications such as SONAR and ultrasound. Each question is followed by a detailed answer and explanation, making this resource perfect for practice, revision, and exam preparation. Whether you are a student seeking to score high, a teacher searching for ready-to-use assessments, or an exam aspirant aiming for concept clarity, these MCQs will help reinforce your understanding of sound in a comprehensive and easy-to-follow manner.

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SOUND

by Academia Aeternum

1. What is the unit of frequency?
2. Which is necessary for sound to travel?
3. What is the speed of sound in air at room temperature?
4. Which part of the ear vibrates to produce sound sensations?
5. Which property of sound is responsible for 'loudness'?
6. Which part of the ear converts vibrations into electrical signals?
7. Which medium allows sound to travel fastest?
8. What is the range of audible frequency for humans?
9. Which phenomenon is required for echoes?
10. Which application uses ultrasound?
11. What type of wave is sound in air?
12. Which term defines the time taken for one vibration?
13. What is the phenomenon of sound waves bouncing off a surface?
14. What determines the pitch of sound?
15. What happens to sound in vacuum?
16. What is the velocity of sound in water?
17. Which instrument is used to produce a pure note?
18. What produces the sensation of music?
19. What causes noise pollution?
20. Which organ is affected by loud sounds?
21. Which property of sound remains unchanged when it enters new media?
22. Which is NOT a source of noise pollution?
23. Which frequency is ultrasonic?
24. What does SONAR stand for?
25. In a sound wave, regions of high pressure are called:
26. How do plants react to sound?
27. What is ‘reverberation’?
28. Which statement about amplitude is correct?
29. Which sound property helps bats find food at night?
30. What is meant by the ‘period’ of a wave?
31. What type of wave can travel through solids, liquids, and gases?
32. What happens to wavelength if frequency increases?
33. Which component in sound determines ‘quality’ or ‘timbre’?
34. Speed of sound decreases with:
35. Which sound wave travels fastest?
36. What is the SI unit of sound’s loudness?
37. What is the minimum distance for an echo to be heard?
38. What does the term ‘pitch’ mean?
39. What is the principle behind the working of musical instruments?
40. What type of wave is produced by vibrating strings?
41. What is auditory fatigue?
42. What is meant by ‘rare factions’?
43. Sound cannot travel in:
44. What happens when sound travels from air to water?
45. Which component in the ear collects sound waves?
46. What is resonance?
47. What is the scientific term for ‘hearing’?
48. If amplitude doubles, loudness:
49. What is the effect of wind on the speed of sound?
50. What is the role of the auditory nerve?

Frequently Asked Questions

Sound is a form of energy produced by vibrating objects. These vibrations create disturbances in air, which travel as sound waves to our ears.

The main properties are amplitude, frequency, wavelength, speed, and timbre. These determine loudness, pitch, and quality of sound.

Vibrations in an object set the surrounding air molecules in motion, creating waves of compressions and rarefactions that travel as sound.

Frequency is the number of vibrations (oscillations) per second. Its unit is Hertz (Hz). It determines the pitch of the sound.

Sound waves with greater amplitude carry more energy and sound louder to our ears; smaller amplitude means quieter sounds.

Compressions are regions where air particles are close together, and rarefactions are where they are spread apart. Both travel as sound waves.

The ear collects sound waves, which make the eardrum vibrate. These vibrations are converted into signals sent to the brain.

Humans can typically hear frequencies from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz.

Ultrasound means sound waves with frequencies above 20,000 Hz. They're used in medical imaging, cleaning, detecting flaws in metals, and sonar.

Sound needs a material medium like air, water, or solids. It travels fastest in solids, slower in liquids, and slowest in gases.

At room temperature (25°C), sound travels at about 344 metres per second in air.

Molecules in solids are packed closer together, allowing sound waves to transfer energy more rapidly.

An echo is a reflected sound wave that returns to the listener after bouncing off a distant surface.

There must be at least 17 metres between the listener and the reflecting surface. Echoes occur when reflected sound reaches the ear after 0.1 seconds.

By using silencers, planting trees, soundproofing rooms, reducing sources of loud noise, and spreading awareness.

Noise is unpleasant and irregular, while musical sound is pleasant and regular with repeating patterns.

Reverberation is the persistence of sound in a space due to multiple reflections after the original sound has stopped.

A megaphone narrows and directs sound waves, making them travel farther and appear louder.

SONAR (Sound Navigation and Ranging) uses ultrasound to detect objects underwater by measuring reflected sound waves.

Bats emit high-frequency sounds and listen to their echoes to locate prey and avoid obstacles, a process called echolocation.

Excessive sound can cause hearing loss, stress, sleep disturbance, and other health problems.

Ultrasound scans create images of internal organs and monitor pregnancies, without using harmful radiation.

Ultrasound waves can penetrate tissues and reflect off boundaries between different tissues. Computers convert these echoes into images.

Pitch is how high or low a sound is; it depends on the frequency. Higher frequency gives higher pitch.

Quality or timbre depends on the waveform and presence of overtones or harmonics, making each sound unique.

By ringing a bell inside a jar and removing air, the sound fades, showing sound can't travel in vacuum.

A tuning fork is a metal instrument that vibrates at a fixed frequency when struck, producing a pure note.

Different shapes, sizes, and materials produce vibrations of different frequencies, resulting in different notes.

Musical instruments produce sound by vibration of strings, membranes, columns of air, or surfaces.

Musical sound is created by periodic, regular vibrations that form pleasing patterns and notes.

Frequency is measured in Hertz (Hz); loudness is typically measured in decibels (dB).

Compressions and rarefactions are regions of high and low pressure, respectively, created by vibrating objects as sound travels.

The speed of sound increases with temperature, as air molecules move faster and transmit vibrations more quickly.

Use earplugs, avoid loud areas, keep volume low on earbuds, and use soundproofing around noisy environments.

Sound can bounce off (reflection), be absorbed by materials (like curtains), or pass through (transmission) depending on the substance.

Animals use sound to find mates, warn of danger, claim territory, or navigate (echolocation in bats, dolphins).

Longitudinal waves are waves in which particle movement is parallel to wave direction, like sound waves in air.

Human ears cannot detect frequencies higher than 20,000 Hz, which is the range of ultrasonic sound.

Audible sounds are within human hearing range (20 Hz–20,000 Hz); sounds outside this range are inaudible to us.

Greater amplitude means louder sound, while smaller amplitude results in a softer sound to our ears.

Using oscilloscopes, ripple tanks, or computer-based simulations, sound waves can be displayed as graphs.

Sound requires particles to transfer vibrations. In vacuum, where no particles exist, sound cannot travel.

Devices like SONAR send out ultrasound waves and measure their reflections to detect objects and measure distances underwater.

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