Without getting into technical details, the analogy of how a drum skin works to produce sound is a good one to help understand what is going on.
A drumskin that is too loose will have less impedance to resist the strike of the drumstick which can result in a loose, distorted sound. Tightening the drumskin produces a tighter, less distorted sound. How tight the drumskin should be is a matter of taste, however there is some point at which too little tension produces poor sound quality
Eletrical impedance in a circuit is like the tension on a drumskin. it enables voltage fluctuations to register and be transferred correctly. If impedance is too low, the effect can become similar to that loose drum skin and result in higher distortion ie less accurate detection and transmission of the input signal.
A drumskin that is too loose will have less impedance to resist the strike of the drumstick which can result in a loose, distorted sound. Tightening the drumskin produces a tighter, less distorted sound. How tight the drumskin should be is a matter of taste, however there is some point at which too little tension produces poor sound quality
Eletrical impedance in a circuit is like the tension on a drumskin. it enables voltage fluctuations to register and be transferred correctly. If impedance is too low, the effect can become similar to that loose drum skin and result in higher distortion ie less accurate detection and transmission of the input signal.