Use carpets and curtains to absorb sound.
Install acoustic panels on walls and ceilings.
Add soft furniture to reduce sound reflection.
Use diffusers to scatter sound waves instead of letting them reflect directly.
Related Questions:
- Why does sound require a medium to travel?
- What is the effect of humidity on the speed of sound?
- What is the difference between audible, infrasonic, and ultrasonic sounds?
- What is the relation between frequency and pitch of a sound?
- Why do we hear sound more clearly at night than during the day?
- Why does sound travel faster in solids than in liquids and gases?
- Why are we able to distinguish between two sounds having the same loudness?
- Why does a vibrating mobile phone on a wooden table sound louder than when held in hand?
- Why do we see a batsman striking the ball before hearing the sound in a cricket stadium?
- How much does the intensity level increase when the intensity of a louder sound is double the intensity of the faintest audible sound?
- Two singers are singing together, each with an intensity level of 60 dB.
- If the pitch of a sound is increased, what is its effect on:
- Why don’t we hear the sound of a vibrating pendulum?
- Why can you hear two students talking in a corridor but not see them?
- How do curtains help reduce the loudness of sound?
- Explain how sound is produced and propagated.
- Describe the characteristics of sound and their significance.
- Explain SONAR and its applications.
- What is intensity of sound? What is the range of intensity of audible sound? Differentiate between loudness and intensity of sound.
- Differentiate between noise and music. Explain how noise is a nuisance.