Sound Travels through air at 340 ms<sup>-1</sup>, the speed at which sound will travel through a different medium is dependant upon the elasticity of the medium.Originally posted by Constip8edSkunk
sound waves are longitudinal, ie the direction of oscillation is the same as the direction of propagation...they travel at 300 something ms^-1 (just google it)
Polarisation is a property of a transverse (not longitudinal) wave, which describes in which plane in 3D space the wave is oscillating. If the wave oscillates in only one direction (e.g. up & down) then the wave is said to be polarised. On the other hand if it oscillates in more than one direction (i.e. in multiple planes), then the wave is unpolarised.Can some1 plz explain what polarisation is?