Know that a medium is needed to transmit sound waves.
Sound is a vibration that travels through a medium (solid, liquid or gas) and reaches our ears. Think of a drum: when you hit it, the drum skin vibrates, pushing the air around it. That vibration travels as a wave until it reaches your ear.
Sound waves are longitudinal waves: particles of the medium move back and forth in the direction of the wave. The wave needs a material to push against; without a medium, there is nothing to transmit the vibration.
The speed of sound depends on the medium’s density (\$\rho\$) and bulk modulus (\$B\$):
\$v = \sqrt{\frac{B}{\rho}}\$
Because solids are dense but have a high bulk modulus, sound travels fastest in solids. Gases are less dense but also have a lower bulk modulus, so sound travels slower in air.
| Medium | Speed of Sound (m/s) |
|---|---|
| Air (at 20°C) | 343 |
| Water | 1482 |
| Steel | 5960 |
Space is a near-perfect vacuum; there are almost no particles to vibrate. Without a medium, the sound wave cannot propagate, so astronauts rely on radio (electromagnetic waves) to communicate.