Sound waves are like invisible ripples that travel through air or other things, making things vibrate and letting us hear them.
Imagine you're playing with a jump rope. When you shake it up and down, it makes waves in the air, just like when you talk or laugh. These waves can go from one place to another, and when they reach your ears, you hear what’s been said or sung.
Ultrasound is like sound waves on super speed! It uses sound waves that are too high-pitched for us to hear, kind of like how a dog can hear sounds we can’t. These special sound waves go through the body and come back as echoes, letting doctors see what’s going on inside.
How it works
Think about throwing a ball into a pond. The ball makes ripples that spread out. If you throw a ball in one place and watch how the ripples bounce back, you can guess where the ball landed, or even what's under the water!
In ultrasound, sound waves are sent into your body. They travel through skin, muscles, and bones, and then come back as echoes. A machine listens to these echoes and turns them into pictures, just like watching ripples in a pond!
Examples
- Bats use sound waves to find their way in the dark.
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See also
- Ultrasound Explained - How does an ultrasound transducer work?
- How Does Ultrasound Physics - Transducer arrays Work?
- How Does Physics: Ultrasound Transducers ( Linear array, Curvilinear, Phased array) Work?
- What is Contrast-enhanced endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)?
- How Does Amazing Resonance Experiment! Work?