huh... it WOULDN'T make a sound.

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Yes, the impact would cause vibrations through the surrounding medium of air... but without somebody with ears and a brain to pick them up and assign meaning to them in the form of experiencing the sensation of "sound," vibrations are all it would be.
 
Now, say you have a vacuum chamber, and inside it you have a small metal weight suspended after pumping out all the way. You drop the weight. Do you hear the impact or not? Why?
 
Sound doesn't carry in a pure vacuum...there is no medium to transmit the vibrations.

In the setup you describe, though, there would be some vibrations transmitted through the base of the device, where the weight struck. There is the potential there to transmit sound, though granted much less of it than if there were an atmosphere to carry vibrations.
 
Sound doesn't carry in a pure vacuum...there is no medium to transmit the vibrations.

In the setup you describe, though, there would be some vibrations transmitted through the base of the device, where the weight struck. There is the potential there to transmit sound, though granted much less of it than if there were an atmosphere to carry vibrations.
Exactly. You'd hear the sound through the base, sort of like how you can hear the whine of jet engines even when you're high enough for the air to be too thin to effectively transmit sound - it travels through the metal.
 
It would be more helpful if we still had the ORIGINAL QUESTION. :p
Well, you'll need Deep Thought to construct a computer where organic life forms its processes, one powerful enough to calculate such a question.[/QUOTE]

Unfortunately, that consortium of highly influential psychiatrists paid me well to make sure that sort of thing DOESN'T happen.
 
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