If you keep digging deeper where do you think this will end up ?
Well, you know, I've given that some thought and I actually have a pretty real answer.
Once I realized that sound is propelled by heat, defining the nature of heat and how it accomplishes that feat seems to be the next logical step. But, by doing that exploration "right", I believe there will be answers to a lot of other things forthcoming from it.
This is extremely simple-minded but, it seems likely that "the" universe (the one we exist in) may well consist of nothing except, nothing (space), energy (in the form of matter, molecular vibreation and electromagnetic radiation...all of which eventually end up as matter) and gravity. At least when getting down to the atomic level. I'm sure things get really hinky at lower levels.
Sound propagation seems to be conceptually explainable by the transfer of energy by the vibration of the molecules from one to another. But, there are some paradoxes to it that need to be resolved by figuring out how a medium that is transmitting sound acts.
So, to answer your question: I see it as going into a discussion of how air (and then other materials) work, at the molecular level. Then I see it extending to how the heat propels the sound and then how the heat itself works and that will pretty much end it.
Perhaps it's naive' but, I'm not convinced that there isn't a fairly straightforward explanation of how
heat works. At least on the conceptual level.
For example, I had a glimmer of a flash of something that I believe must have been an epiphany for Einstein. That's pretty bold of me, huh? Of course, I'm no Einstein so, I got a muddled concept of it where it must have been a flash of inspiration for Einstein since it led to his equivalence of matter and energy.
Briefly, If atoms and molecules can transfer heat by collisions, there is a way to basically apply F=MA to describe the energy. But, if the molecules are vibrating at gigahertz rates (microwave frequencies), they must also be miniature radio transmitters, radiating some of the energy away as electromagnetic waves (radient heat). But, the amount of radient heat can be measured by the heating effect it has on other atoms and molecules. Because there is a defineable amount of heat in the radiated energy that can be related back to F=MA, and since radient energy is traveling at the speed of light, there must be a relationship between mass/energy and the speed of light.
For me, the glimmer stops there. For Einstein, I believe it led to e=mc^2. Of course, I could be completely wrong in my assumptions but,
something led Einstein to that formula.
The more I get into this the more convinced I am that a science book needs to be written that spells out these concepts, unencumbered by mathematical contrivances.